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

 

 

Fall of Water (2007)

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The Fall of Water (2006-07) The availability of water, the source of life itself, is in crisis. And this crisis is global. The idea of the global and the problem of representing water lead the artists to look at paintings. While there are many representations of the sea and rivers, none adequately represented water as a living or symbolic entity. One painting stood out, however, even though it had little to do with water directly. It was Pieter Bruegel’s 1562 painting The Fall of the Rebel Angels, which depicts the struggle between the Archangels and Lucifer, and, in Bruegel’s time, referred to the Counter-reformation. What intrigued the artists was the liquid quality of the composition and figures.
Characters representing the global breadth of water politics have replaced the Archangels in the Bruegel painting. In the middle, replacing Saint Michael, is an Andean indigenous woman, referencing to the successful fight against water privatization in Cochabamba, Bolivia. On the left side is a South Asian woman referencing to the struggles against the damming of the Narmada River in India. On the right is a Canadian environmentalist defending Canada’s vast water resources. Activists of various nationalities and cultures have replaced the remaining angels. The abusers below cover the ground from oil companies to industrial polluters, water bottlers, dam builders, privateers, agribusiness types, the military, politicians and corporate thieves, and include dead fish, oil covered birds, drought, disease, and e-coli with the occasional unsuspecting victim floating among them.
The project was assembled digitally. Each character was photographed separately, digitally manipulated and then assembled into the final image. Some of the characters were either constructed as a prop and photographed or were created out of photographic elements.


Carole Condé + Karl Beveridge

Toronto | Canada mail: condebev AT web.net