Canadian curator and professor based in Vancouver, BC (born 1950)
Scott Watson
Born Donald Scott Watson
1950 (age 74–75)Education BA, MA (UBC) Known for curator, writer
Scott Watson (born 1950)[ 1] is a Canadian curator , writer, and researcher based in Vancouver , British Columbia .[ 2] Watson was the Director/Curator of the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery at the University of British Columbia from 1995 to 2021.[ 3] [ 4] As faculty in the Department of Art History, Visual Art and Theory at the University of British Columbia , he helped initiate the Critical Curatorial Studies program at UBC in September 2002.[ 5] Through his research and publications, he has acted as a champion of contemporary Vancouver artists.
Career
Watson was trained in art history and received his BA and MA at UBC.[ 2] He was initially a fiction writer and published two books, "Stories" (1974) and "Platonic Love" (1981). In 1980, he was hired by the Vancouver Art Gallery.[ 6] In 1985, he curated the Young Romantics painting exhibition and in 1990, published a monograph on Jack Shadbolt .[ 7] In 1989, he was hired by the University of British Columbia (UBC) gallery.[ 6] In 1995, he became the first director/curator of the gallery. He retired in 2021.[ 8]
Curatorial projects and research
Watson's research and curation focuses primarily around topics related to contemporary art , art theory and criticism, twentieth-century art history, and curatorial studies. His curatorial projects have appeared across Canada including at the Vancouver Art Gallery , Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery, and Artspeak in Vancouver and internationally in Berlin , Antwerp , and London .[ 9]
Notable curatorial projects
Queer Landscapes (1991) at Artspeak[ 10]
Thrown: Influences and Intentions (2004) of West Coast Ceramics[ 11] [ 12]
Rebecca Belmore : Fountain (2005) for the Venice Biennale Canadian Pavilion[ 13] [ 14]
Intertidal: Vancouver art & artists (2005-2006) at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Antwerp[ 15]
Stan Douglas: Inconsolable Memories (2005-2006) at the Tate Modern [ 16] [ 17]
Exponential Future (2008) at the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery[ 18] [ 19]
Jack Shadbolt: Underpinnings (2009) at the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery[ 20] [ 21]
Mark Boulos (2010), a solo exhibition at the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery[ 22] [ 23] [ 24]
Letters: Michael Morris and Concrete Poetry (2012) at the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery[ 25] [ 26]
Image Bank (2019) at the KW Institute for Contemporary Arts [ 27]
Selected publications
Awards and honours
an invitation to the UBC Chancellor's Circle (2005).[ 2]
UBC Dorothy Somerset Award for Performance Development in the Visual and Performing Arts (2005)[ 2]
Alvin Balkind Award for Creative Curatorship in British Columbia Arts (2008)[ 28]
Hnatyshyn Foundation Award for Curatorial Excellence in Contemporary Art (2010)[ 29]
References
^ "The Art of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution" . Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery .
^ a b c d "persons AHVA - The Department of Art History, Visual Art & Theory" . ahva.ubc.ca . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "Scott Watson | The Social Justice Institute" . grsj.arts.ubc.ca . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ Gallery, Belkin. "Scott Watson" . vancouverartinthesixties.com . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "Scott Watson | Artspeak" . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ a b Turner, Michael. "Renowned Curator Scott Watson Retires" . Preview, 2021. Retrieved 24 September 2022 .
^ "Scott Watson" . Figure 1 Publishing . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "Scott Watson Steps Down at the Belkin" . Galleries West . 2021-07-12. Retrieved 2022-01-26 .
^ Godley, Elizabeth (March 19, 1987). "Watson resigns from post with art gallery". The Vancouver Sun . pp. C5.
^ Madill, Kevin John; Watson, Scott; Rimmer, Cate (1991). Queer Landscape . Kevin John Madill, Kevin John Madill, Scott Watson, Cate Rimmer, Cate Rimmer. Vancouver, BC: Artspeak Gallery. ISBN 978-0-921394-11-2 .
^ "Thrown: Influences and Intentions of West Coast Ceramics" . Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "A licence to kiln" . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "From the Archives: Rebecca Belmore - Canadian Art" . canadianart.ca . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "The Poetics of History: An Interview with Rebecca Belmore" . bordercrossingsmag.com . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "INTERTIDAL: VANCOUVER ART & ARTISTS" . www.e-flux.com . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ Tate. " 'Inconsolable Memories', Stan Douglas, 2005" . Tate . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "Pictures at an exhibition ..." www.yorku.ca . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "Exponential Future" . Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery presents Exponential Future - Announcements - Art & Education" . www.artandeducation.net . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "Jack Shadbolt: Underpinnings" . Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "Jack Shadbolt Art Show!" . Vancouver Is Awesome . 7 May 2009. Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "Mark Boulos" . Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "Mark Boulos | AHVA - The Department of Art History, Visual Art & Theory" . ahva.ubc.ca . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "Vancouver – Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery | esse arts + opinions" . esse.ca . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "Letters: Michael Morris and Concrete Poetry" . Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ " "Letters: Michael Morris and Concrete Poetry" at Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery" . www.artforum.com . January 2012. Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "Image Bank" . KW Institute for Contemporary Art . 2019-03-26. Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "Balkind Prize Recipients in the Visual Arts | Vancouver BC" . The Jack and Doris Shadbolt Foundation . Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
^ "UBC Morris and Helen Belkin curator Scott Watson nabs Hnatyshyn prize" . The Georgia Straight . 2010-12-01. Retrieved 2021-04-20 .
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