Rydel Cerezo, Maria-Margaretta, Parvin Peivandi Selected for 2021 BAF Residency Program

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The artists and recent 全民彩票 grads are among six emerging artists who will work in-residency toward shows at the Vancouver non-profit arts organization this year.
A trio of 全民彩票 alums are among the six emerging artists to be selected for the Burrard Arts Foundation鈥檚 2021 Residency Program.
Rydel Cerezo (BFA 2019), Maria-Margaretta (BFA 2018) and Parvin Peivandi (BFA 2012) will join Karin Jones, Sara Khan and Kriss Munsya in working in residency toward exhibits at the Vancouver non-profit arts organization this year.
In a news release, Burrard Arts Foundation (BAF) founder and director Christian Chan says the program aims to make art 鈥渁ccessible, relevant, and approachable鈥 for Vancouver audiences.
鈥淎s we continue to nurture accessibility through our Residency Program, we will continue to push the dial towards a more culturally connected Vancouver,鈥 he adds.
The first exhibitions in the series 鈥 Rydel Cerezo鈥檚 and Kriss Munsya鈥檚 鈥 open at the BAF on April 22. Both artists have been working in residency for weeks toward these shows.
鈥淒uring his residence at BAF, Cerezo is researching notions of
unbelonging and betrayal, drawing on Jack Halberstam鈥檚 iconic reframe of
the term 鈥榝ailure,鈥欌 Mallory Gemmel on Rydel.
Rydel himself, in on his upcoming exhibition, explains his work in New Ending is both building on the artistic inquiry he has established in his practice to date, and 鈥渁ging it up,鈥 to make it more contemporary.
鈥淚鈥檓 actually interested in this idea of a coming-of-age story that rejects heteronormative notions of time,鈥 he says in the video. 鈥淚 think queer time is a very interesting thing to explore, especially in a coming-of-age story.鈥
BAF program coordinator Ada Dragomir, in to New Ending, notes Rydel鈥檚 work provides rich territory for viewers to explore.
鈥淐erezo鈥檚 photographs are sentimental, family-oriented, and intuitive, pointing to the beauty, brutality, and awkwardness of both failure and coming of age,鈥 Ada writes. 鈥淒eeply embodied and deeply personal, New Ending summons in viewers an uncomfortable physicality, inviting us to recognize that in discomfort and unbelonging 鈥 in failure 鈥 is a door to another kind of possible.鈥
Each year, the BAF鈥檚 provides six artists with tailored support, including studio space, resources such as a materials budget and an honorarium, and connections to the Vancouver artistic community including possible mentors, buyers, and dealers. An exhibition in the BAF gallery follows each residency, which typically lasts ten weeks.

Maria-Margaretta, Go Help Grandma With The Dishes, 2020. Rubber gloves, seed beads, fringe.
In a recent exhibition at Macauley & Co Fine Art's Telephone Gallery, , Maria exhibited a number of works that form part of her thesis research as a graduate student at OCAD University.
鈥淭hese works are an auto-ethnographic investigation into Indigenous storytelling and the familiar object through the lens of my Michif identity,鈥 she writes in an introductory text for the show. 鈥淯tilizing family stories, personal experience, and the everyday as a place of exploration. While claiming sovereignty over the documentation of my stories through satirical intervention. Highlighting the importance of objects as transformative motifs; carrying and retelling stories for past, current, and future ancestors.鈥
Artist Jack Kenna, who presented Maria's show at Telephone Gallery, writes that the works in A Brief Retelling operate 鈥渋n subtlety and humour, asking us to look again, and think again. Out of a reverence for everyday objects and the stories they hold, Maria鈥檚 work pulls at the tangled strings of old family histories and fictions: at once humorous and interrogative.鈥

Parvin Peivandi, Standing beside who I am steel. Nomadic Iranian rug. Exhibition view, School of the Art Institute of Chicago MFA Show, 2019.
Born and raised in Iran before immigrating to North America, interdisciplinary artist studied art education at the University of British Columbia and completed the MFA program at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago following her graduation from Emily Carr in 2012. Parvin's diverse practice includes sculpture, installation, ceramics, textiles, media and performance art.
According to her artist's statement, Parvin's work 鈥渆xpresses a nomadic journey parallel to her own life experience as an immigrant artist: moving from one place to other, deconstructing the old patterns and constructing the new hybrid identity. Employing geometric forms as the common abstract language in artistic practices of diverse cultures, Peivandi aims to bring a middle ground for understanding the others by exploring the endless possibilities that form our communications.鈥
The 2021 Residency Program artists will exhibit at BAF throughout 2021, and into January, 2022. The Residency Program is supported by the Chan Family Foundation and the City of Vancouver Cultural Grants Program.