Carole Conde + Karl Beveridge - Artists

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Film – Portrait of Resistance
About Condé + Beveridge
Bio and CV

Condé + Beveridge

Carole Condé and Karl Beveridge have collaborated with various trade unions and community organizations in the production of their staged photographic work over the past 30 years.

Their work has been exhibited across Canada and internationally in both the trade union movement and art galleries and museums.

NEWS

AGO Artists in Spotlight. Interview with Wanda Nanibush

Online: https://ago.ca/events/art-spotlight-carole-conde-karl-beveridge

 

Pandemic Gardens: Resilience Through Nature; Embassy Cultural House, London, ON.

Online exhibition: https://www.embassyculturalhouse.ca/pandemic-gardens.html

 

Governor General's Award in the Visual and Media Arts, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, Oct. 13, 2022 to Jan. 29, 2023

 

 

Bio and CV

Carole Condé and Karl Beveridge
Canadian artists Carole Condé and Karl Beveridge moved to New York City in 1969, and soon were at the centre of the burgeoning conceptual art movement. In 1975, they joined the Art & Language journal The Fox (with Joseph Kosuth and Ian Burn) and picketed the Museum of Modern Art to protest its lack of inclusion of women artists, while critiquing the apolitical minimalism of Donald Judd. This ferment culminated in a major museum show, It’s Still Privileged Art, at the Art Gallery of Ontario in 1976, just prior to the artists’ return to Toronto in1977.

By the late 1970s, Condé and Beveridge  drew a focus on various issues that were urgent within the trade  union movement. Their method of working dialogically with their subjects was invented for the landmark 1981 project Standing Up, and has been refined in numerous subsequent collaborations. In the past three decades, over fifty solo exhibitions of Condé and Beveridge’s work have been presented at major museums  and art spaces on four continents, including: the Institute of Contemporary Art (London, UK); Museum Folkswang (Germany); George Meany Centre (Washington); Dazibao Gallery (Montreal); Centro Cultural Recoleta (Buenos Aires); Art Gallery of Edmonton; and the Australian Centre for Photography (Sydney).

Equally, and congruent with the artists’ commitment to accessibility, their work has been displayed in a host of non-art and public settings, such as union halls, billboards, bus shelters and bookworks. The artists continue to work and live in Toronto.

condebeveridgecv2022


Carole Condé + Karl Beveridge

Toronto | Canada mail: condebev AT web.net