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Okanagan gallery gets a splash of colour

Two Canadian artists are taking their explorations of colour to another level
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Summerland鈥檚 Robert Dmytruk sits in a studio surrounded by his creations. (Submitted Photo)

Colour plays a crucial role in most visual art, but two Canadian artists are taking their explorations of colour to another level.

Summerland鈥檚 Robert Dmytruk and Edmonton鈥檚 David Cantine have come together for an exhibit titled COLOR+, which will be on display at Headbones Gallery in Vernon.

The two artists take colour as their primary subect of inquiry - though their works present two radically different viewpoints on the topic.

Cantine has been exploring colour for decades. His best-known work is a series that began as a painting of two apples and their shadows, which has since evolved into a minimalist still-life of four coloured circles in a rectangular frame. Cantine has been working within that same template for 40 years, exploring with each new iteration 鈥渢he very essence of colour, which is colour鈥檚 variance and relational impact,鈥 as stated in a press release.

Cantine鈥檚 dedication to the apple paintings was inspired by historical Italian painter Giorgio Morandi, who likewise spent a lifetime painting repeated versions of the same still-life.

Cantine taught drawing to fine arts students at the University of Alberta for over 30 years. One of those students was Robert Dmytruk.

Dmytruk鈥檚 take on colour is about an openness to change, in contrast to Cantine鈥檚 preciseness and use of repetition. His patterned sculptures and collages appear to 鈥渞elinquish control and fancy.鈥

COLOR+ opens at Headbones Gallery Saturday, Aug. 10 from 2-5 p.m, where people are welcome to come and meet the artists. The exhibition closes Sept. 28.

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Brendan Shykora
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Brendan Shykora

About the Author: Brendan Shykora

I started at the Morning Star as a carrier at the age of 8. In 2019 graduated from the Master of Journalism program at Carleton University.
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