Details:
① Artwork:
Memory Palace Landscape (Cornell Print)
The artist produced these prints during a printmaking professorship at Cornell University, where her goal was to incorporate several printmaking processes into each work. In this series, she’s etched into copper plates while adding watercolor monotypes, bringing together needle-fine lines with bold areas of transparent color.
Robin Cameron works in a wide range of media, such as ceramics, brass sculptures, films, drawings, cyanotypes and prints. She often uses traditional media unconventionally to explore the boundaries of time, systems of thought, and identity.
Specs:
③ Artist:
Robin Cameron works in a wide range of media, such as ceramics, brass sculptures, films, drawings, cyanotypes and prints. She often uses traditional media unconventionally to explore the boundaries of time, systems of thought, and identity.
Robin Cameron was born in 1981 in British Columbia, Canada, and lives in New York City, NY. Cameron received her MFA from Columbia University in New York City, NY (2012) and her BDes from the Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design in Vancouver, Canada (2004).
Cameron’s list of exhibitions includes What a Long Strange Trip at Analog Diary in Beacon, NY (2022); O le beau le beau le beau at David Petersen Gallery in Minneapolis, MN (2022); Something About the Shortest Distance at Peep Projects (two-person show) in Philadelphia, PA (2021); Anarchy of the Imagination at Kerry Schuss Gallery in New York City, NY (2021); Clearing the Air at the Southampton Arts Center in Southampton, NY (2021); Memory Palace at Franz Kaka (solo) in Toronto, Ontario, Canada (2021); and Shift Key at MoCA Toronto (online video screening) in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
She has also been the recipient of many awards, grants, and residencies, such as the Urban Glass Scholarship (2019), the Tasmeem Doha VCU Qatar Teaching Residency Workshop (2019), the Offshore Residency in Athens, Greece (2018), a Canada Council Research & Creation Grant (2018), the Wingate Printmaking Residency (2018), an Ontario Arts Council Grant (2014), and a Banff Center Summer Residency (2011).