Innovative Threads: Contemporary Weaving
Explore Alberta Craft’s national exhibition, Innovative Threads: Contemporary Weaving, highlighting the work of twenty-one Craft artists across Canada.
Explore Alberta Craft’s national exhibition, Innovative Threads: Contemporary Weaving, highlighting the work of twenty-one Craft artists across Canada.
Join the Alberta Craft Calgary Gallery in celebrating our newest SPOTLIGHT exhibition Moonlight by Natali Rodrigues
Join the Alberta Craft Calgary Gallery in celebrating our newest SPOTLIGHT exhibition by Patrick Moskwa.
Join Alberta Craft Calgary Gallery in celebrating our newest SPOTLIGHT exhibition by Kari Woo Emerging - Little by Little
Celebrating the creativity, innovation and skill of emerging, Canadian Craft artists, Coming Up Next is an exhibition of works selected from a diverse variety of approaches, mediums, and regions.
Join Alberta Craft Calgary Gallery in celebrating our newest SPOTLIGHT exhibition Offering for a Seasoned Soul by Kim Burns
Minutiae is a fascinating display of miniature artworks created by 53 artists across Canada. Come and explore this unique exhibition and discover the magnitude in the minutest of details.
Join the Alberta Craft Calgary Gallery in celebrating our newest SPOTLIGHT exhibition Osteomancy by Jennifer Illanes
Ornament & Crime celebrates adorned, decorated, patterned and ornamented excess. 46 artists from across Canada are featured in this hyperbolic spectacle of exaggerated adornment.
Join the Alberta Craft Calgary Gallery in celebrating our newest SPOTLIGHT exhibition by Linda Duthie.
Join the Alberta Craft Calgary Gallery in celebrating our newest SPOTLIGHT exhibition by Laura Olive
Lael Chmelyk's exhibition Haptic Rituals, travels to our Calgary Gallery.
The Alberta Craft Awards acknowledge individuals and groups who make significant contributions to Alberta’s Craft culture.
Check out our latest SPOTLIGHT “Dawn of the Ancient Future” by Ananda Skywalker
Check out our latest SPOTLIGHT “Rough Around the Edges”, unconventional ceramics by Daniel Labutes
The Portage College Native Arts & Culture Program: Legacy of Graduates exhibition celebrates recent graduates from this program showing works that broach contemporary issues in traditional materials and art forms.
Inspired by a need to go back to her childhood roots, Calgary glassblowing artist Mandy Patchin created a collection of astoundingly life like glass vegetables.
Please join the Alberta Craft Gallery and the six featured artists to see their creations inspired by natural spaces and natural materials as they make art as a dialogue with the Rotary Park community space.
Calgary artist Shona Rae’s exhibition Converse Subversives, uses narrative, figurative sculptures to engage traditional myths, fairy tales, folklore, ancient artifacts and personal history.
This collection of summer hats and headpieces highlights traditional millinery techniques in vintage and modern hat styles with a contemporary aesthetic.
Form(ed) is a solo exhibition of works by Carissa Baktay on display at the Alberta Craft Council’s Gallery in Calgary from May 6 – June 24, 2023.
Join the Alberta Craft Gallery in celebrating our newest SPOTLIGHT exhibition by Deanne Underwood.
This Spotlight contains a collection of works that Graham Boyd had been working on over the last year. The work focuses on the formal and sculptural side of hand made glass objects, highlighting their form, colour, surface, and silhouettes.
Our SPOTLIGHT exhibit highlights work by new Alberta Craft Council members and members producing experimental work.
Albirda is a celebration of the fascinating creatures of flight that live in and migrate through Alberta.
Gardening is a passion for many people, a way to create a sanctuary, grow food, or simply to make their living space a little greener. It is also a hobby that has gained popularity over the events of the past few years. This series by Stephanie Elderfield is a celebration of the pastime, with each miniature tool crafted in precious metals and fine woods to replicate their larger counterparts. Every piece in the collection is made using similar techniques to those used during construction of the full-size versions. The miniaturization of these tools allow them to become portable tokens of an enjoyed activity, and a fun conversation starter.
Our SPOTLIGHT exhibit highlights work by new Alberta Craft Council members and members producing experimental work.
Craft and Science explores the interesting ways that science and craft intersect. Both fields rely on creative problem-solving skills, research, specialized training, traditional and innovative techniques and methodologies, imagination, and curiosity to fuel the search for answers. Science not only serves as a source of inspiration - scientific methods and principals are used every day by craft artists in the processes and creation of their work. Likewise, artists are called upon to find creative solutions and alternative perspectives in laboratory and research settings.
Participating artists: Anna Heywood-Jones, Amanda McKenzie, Crys Harse, Charles Lewton-Brain, Cora Woolsey, Jane Kidd, Karen Wall, Leah Kudel, Mackenzie Roth, Mireille Perron, Nancy Oakley, Sarah Ritchie, Tanya Doody, Teresa Johnston, Tricia Wasney.
Has the pandemic left you with the need for some comic relief? We invited Fine Craft artists working in all traditional and contemporary craft media to join in the fun and to create their interpretations of kitsch craft.
Kitsch: Craft So Bad That It’s Good is a group exhibition of works from Alberta Craft Council members. Creators responded from across the province to kitsch it up with humorous works that and will make you laugh and cringe all at once - crossing lines and breaking rules.
Craft artists working in all traditional and contemporary craft media were invited to create their interpretations of kitsch craft; Craft that shares a knowing wink with the viewer, craft that wears kitsch on its velour sleeve as a rhinestone badge of honor, craft that’s appeal is found in its bad taste and ironic value.
Stuck indoors during the covid winter, artists turned to their resourceful natures to design and create objects responding to our strange covid times and using materials that were readily at hand in their covid hideouts! Many of the participating artist created new one of kind objects unlike anything you have seen in the Alberta Craft Council before.
Kitsch: Craft So Bad That It’s Good subverts the rules around good taste, and crosses the line, making you laugh and cringe all at once! The resulting exhibition is exciting, curious, challenging, eccentric and hilarious!
Participating artists: Abby Light, Ananda Holdsworth, Breanna Barrington, Hellen Beamish, Annette Ten Cate, Carly Hines, Ciara Jayne, Corinne Cowell, Dale Learner, Donna Brunner, Ellie Shuster, Emily Nash, Erik Lee, Erika Dueck, Jennea Frischke, Jennifer Hartley-Illanes, JoAnna Lange, Kaleb Romano, Karla Mather-Cocks, Susan Kristoferson, Laura O'Connor, Lauren Chipeur, Margaret Hall, Matt Gould, Matthew O'Reilly, Meghan Wagg, Mireille Perron, Pour Celine Frit, Puck Janes, Rochelle Hammond, Ruth-Anne French, Sandra Lamouche, Sara Norquay, Sara Young, Sarabeth Carnat, Shona Rae, Siri McCormick, P. Susannah Windrum, William Miles.
Read the review of Kitsch: Craft So Bad That It’s Good published by Galleries West.
Jewellery is one of humankinds earliest known expressions of creative endeavour beyond mere survival. How does the ready availability of DIY jewellery kits, and other such products that create widespread accessibility to jewellery making, affect the artists who participate in and advocate for the handmade economy as skilled and trained makers?
What happens to the independent maker; to craft and the status of the handmade when a niche skill set such as jewellery making is subject to the generalization and globalisation of the marketplace? Alternately what happens to notions of jewellery when they can be influenced by a surplus of generic materials and processes beyond the traditional ones?
This exhibition is a compelling cross-section of interdisciplinary art jewellery practices in the region. These artists each navigate and activate different intersections between artist, educator, entrepreneur, studio jeweller, academic and parent amongst other roles and influences.
Curated by Kari Woo
Participating artists: Sarah Alford, Devon Clark, Jamie Kroeger, Louise Perrone, Lyndsay Rice, and Kari Woo.