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Michael Snow

Artist Info
Michael SnowCanadian, 1928 - 2023

Michael James Aleck Snow (1928- ) is a Canadian painter, sculptor, filmmaker, photographer and musician. Born in Toronto on December 10, 1928, he was educated at Upper Canada College and subsequently at the Ontario College of Art (1948-1952). After travels in Europe (1953-54) he worked for Graphic Films in Toronto (1955-56), producing his first independent film A-Z. His first solo exhibition as a painter was at the Greenwich Gallery in Toronto in 1956. Between 1961 and 1967, mostly while living in New York, Snow produced work in the Pop-art mode based on the silhouette of a young woman, entitled Walking Woman, probably his most widely recognized creation. A series of 11 stainless steel sculptures of the image was created for the Ontario pavilion at Expo 67 and is now in the collection of the Art Gallery of Ontario. After moving to New York in 1964, he made films regarded as Minimalist, such as New York Ear and Eye Control (1964) and Wavelength (1966-67). Returning to Toronto in 1972, Snow worked mainly on cinematic and photographic projects including ‘Rameau’s Nephew’ by Diderot (Thanx to Dennis Young) by Wilma Schoen. His work is concerned with the nature of media themselves, with perception and with the interrelation of language, sound and meaning. Snow has been the subject of exhibitions and retrospectives in Toronto, Vancouver and Paris.

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8 x 10
Michael Snow
1969-1999
Photograph
61-62
Michael Snow
1961-1962
Painting
432101234
Michael Snow
1969
Installation
Aluminum and Lead
Michael Snow
1968
Sculpture
Atlantic
Michael Snow
1967
Sculpture
Blews
Michael Snow
1960
Blue Monk
Michael Snow
1960
Sculpture
Colin Curd About to Play
Michael Snow
1953
Painting
Colour Booth
Michael Snow
1959
Sculpture
Conception of Light
Michael Snow
1992
Photograph
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