Germaine Koh

Germaine Koh (born 1967) is a Malaysian-born and Canadian conceptual artist based in Vancouver. Her works incorporate the artistic styles of neo-conceptual art, minimalism, and environmental art, and is concerned with the significance of everyday actions, familiar objects and common places.[1][2]

Germaine Koh
Born1967 (age 5354)
George Town, Malaysia
NationalityCanadian
EducationUniversity of Ottawa
Hunter College
OccupationConceptual artist
Years active1991-present
RelativesGraham Verchere (nephew)
AwardsVIVA award
Websitehttp://www.germainekoh.com/

Koh is an independent curator and partner in the independent record label weewerk.[1] She also used to be an Assistant Curator of Contemporary Art at the National Gallery of Canada.[1] Her exhibition history includes the BALTIC Centre (Newcastle), De Appel (Amsterdam), Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal, Para/Site Art Space (Hong Kong), Frankfurter Kunstverein, Bloomberg SPACE (London), The Power Plant (Toronto), Seoul Museum of Art, Artspace (Sydney), The British Museum (London), the Contemporary Art Gallery (Vancouver), Plug In ICA (Winnipeg), Art Gallery of Ontario (Toronto), and the Liverpool, Sydney and Montréal biennials.[1]


Early life and education

Koh was born in George Town, Malaysia.[3] She emigrated to Canada with her family at the age of two and was raised in Armstrong, British Columbia.[4][5] Koh received her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Studio in 1989 and Theory and History of Art in 1990 at the University of Ottawa.[6] She later obtained a Master of Fine Arts in 1993 from Hunter College in New York.[5]

Personal life

Koh has 25 years of leadership with non-profit organizations.[7] She has been coaching roller derby since 2010.[7] In 2015, Koh established the program for a new competitive team, the Terminal City B-Sides.[7]

She was the Chef de Mission of Team Canada Roller Derby from 2017-2018, where she was responsible for the team's strategic vision and organizational development.[7]

Koh has a multi-sport background which includes five years of experience playing for the varsity badminton team at the University of Ottawa. She also played roller derby for five years under the derby name "PLAYER 1" before captaining the Terminal City All-Stars.[7]

Art career

Koh's work draws the use of everyday objects and familiar concepts in order to examine how people interact with those they encounter while moving through the world.[3][5] For example, her piece "Call", is an old telephone in a public space. When the phone is picked up it randomly dials a number of a participant that has agreed to have conversations with strangers at any time of the day.[8]

There isn't a typical "Germaine Koh" piece - she utilizes many different materials for every piece she creates, yet each piece encompasses an ideology, perhaps best said by Koh herself in a Rhizome.org interview:[9]

I would characterize my work as a whole as an attempt to be attentive to the poetics of daily life by focusing on those phenomena that shape everyday experience, often slightly below the threshold of notice (and, yes, value)

Artistic styles and works

Germaine Koh, Knitwork, 1992, unraveled used garment reknit into growing object. This view: 1998 Biennale of Sydney

Koh’s work encompasses the artistic styles of conceptual art, environmental art, and minimalism.[10] In an on-going work titled Knitwork (1992-present), Koh unravels used garments and re-knits the materials into one larger and constantly evolving object.[11] This piece demonstrates characteristics of environmental art through Koh’s use of recycled materials and the ways in which she turns used and discarded items into a working piece of art.[10] In a similar artwork called Lumber (1991-1994, dispersed 2002), Koh makes use of flexible pieces of recuperated lumber glazed with oil and marine varnish to be installed alongside select architecture.[12] Various projects by Koh are also collaborative or rely on the active participation of its audiences. One example of such works include an art gallery titled “ad hoc gallery” which was put on display in collaboration with Geoffrey Brown from 1993-1994.[13][14] An example of one which incorporates its participants into the art piece itself is League, which began in 2012 and is categorized as a “participatory project.”[15] Koh describes League as “an open group of people who gather regularly to play sports and games invented or conceived by members of the community… The project is founded in a belief in the value of emergent behaviour and the process of making sense of things.”[16] Koh emphasizes games, sport, and play as forms of problem-solving which focus on the mental over the physical and the processes of learning, adapting, and evolution through iteration as central to the overall concept of the project.[16]

Koh combines both making use of discarded or found items and active participation in a project called Sightings (1992-1998), which involved the commercial printing and publishing of images found in public as postcards.[17] These postcards closely interacted with the individuals they reached, drawing emphasis on the ideas of making art out of common everyday objects and experiences as well as recognizing the uniqueness of common places.[18]

Other projects

In addition to her artistic work, Koh is co-founder of the Toronto-based record label and artist-management company Weewerk.[3][19] She is also an athlete. Koh played varsity volleyball and badminton at the University of Ottawa and is a former captain of roller derby team the Terminal City All-Stars. Her interest in the relationship between creativity and athleticism resulted in the creation of The Koh-Verchere Award for Athletic and Creative Excellence, an Emily Carr University of Art and Design student award,[20] and the establishment of Vancouver's League.[21][22] Koh was part of the design team for the No. 2 Road North Drainage Pump Station[23] in Richmond B.C., which was awarded the Public Works Association of British Columbia 2018 Project of the Year award.[24] In 2018, Koh became the first artist-in-residence in the City of Vancouver engineering department.[25]

Solo Exhibitions

  • Home Made Home, Evergreen Cultural Centre, September 14 - November 4, 2018[26]
  • Home Made Home, Richmond Art Gallery, June 17 - August 26, 2018, Curated by Nan Caponga.[27]
  • Home Made Home, Kelowna Art Gallery, Kelowna BC, Curator: Liz Wylie.[28]
  • Lively Objects: Enchantment and Disruption, Museum of Vancouver, August 16, 2015[29]
  • FUSE, Vancouver Art Gallery, November 29, 2013[30]
  • Culture + Community Symposium, Vancouver, October 26, 2013[31]
  • Germaine Koh: Weather Systems, Kamloops Art Gallery, Kamloops April 6 to June 15, 2013[32]
  • Germaine Koh - Knitwork; Germaine Koh/Gordon Hicks - There|Here, Galerie B-312, Montreal 2012[33]
  • The Haunting, Invaliden 1 Galerie, Berlin, 2010[34]
  • Fallow, Charles H Scott Gallery, Vancouver BC, Feb-Mar 2009[35]
  • Germaine Koh, Catriona Jeffries Gallery, Vancouver BC, Apr-May 2008[36]
  • Overflow, Centre A, Vancouver BC, Jan-Feb 2007[37]
  • Germaine Koh: Call and Relay, Video Pool, Winnipeg MB, Oct-Nov 2007[38]
  • Germaine Koh, Ottawa Art Gallery, Ottawa ON, Aug-Oct 2006[39]
  • Relay: an intervention into the fabric of the BALTIC building, BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, July - September 2005[40]
  • Marks and Relay, Tate Biennial, Tate Liverpool, Liverpool, England, 2004
  • Germaine Koh: about around, Gallery One One One, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba November 30, 2001 - January 11/12, 2002[41]
  • Germaine Koh, Contemporary Art Gallery, Vancouver May 5, 2001 - July 15, 2001[42]
  • Germaine Koh: Shell, Catriona Jeffries Gallery, Vancouver, BC, Jan-Feb 2005.[43]
  • Angel Row Gallery, Knitwork, Sep-Nov 2005. PDF
  • Germaine Koh: Shell, Para/Site Art Space, Hong Kong, 2004
  • Germaine Koh: Opening Hours, McMaster Museum of Art, Hamilton, ON, 2002.
  • Germaine Koh, Catriona Jeffries Gallery, Vancouver, BC, Apr-Jun 2002.
  • Knitwork, The British Museum, London, UK, Feb-Apr 2002. Performance/installation related to conference "From Material Things: art and artefact in the 21st century". Curator: James Putnam & Gabriela Salgado.[44]
  • Germaine Koh: Around/About, Contemporary Art Gallery, Germaine Koh, Vancouver, BC, May-Jul 2001. Curator: Keith Wallace.[45]
  • Solo Exhibition, Watch, Toronto, ON, 5-7 Feb 2001. Curator: Barr Gilmore.
  • Southern Alberta Art Gallery, Germaine Koh: Knitwork, 1997.
  • Knitwork, 1996.
  • Knitwork, 1995.
  • Knitwork/Tricot-âge, Sep-Nov 1993.

Group exhibitions

  • City of Vancouver Engineering Artist in Residence, 2018-2020.[46]
  • Public Volumes. Small Arms Inspection Building, Mississauga, 2019. Curator: Noa Bronstein.[47]
  • Kuenstlerhaus Palais Thurn & Taxis, Silvrett Atelier Montafon 2018. Bregenz AT, 2019.
  • Afterlives, Or Gallery, November 25, 2017- February 3, 2018[48]
  • Persistence, Vancouver Art Gallery, June 24, 2017- October 1, 2017[49]
  • This is it with it as it is, group exhibition at AHVA Gallery, November 23, 2016- January 14, 2017[50]
  • (im)mobile exhibition, Haus für Kunst Uri, March 5 - May 15, 2016[51]
  • (im)mobile, two-person show with Edith Flückiger, Dalhousie Art Gallery, Curator: Mireille Bourgeois & Chantal Molleur October 17- November 30, 2014[52]
  • Les matins infidèles: l'art du protocole, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Curator: Bernard Larmarche November 2013- September 2014[53]
  • Scotiabank Nuit Blanche" one A: 'Restaging the Encounter', Curator: Candice Hopkins, City of Toronto, October 5, 2013[54]
  • There/Here: Germain Koh and Gordon Hicks, Surrey Art Gallery, Surrey, BC, 2011. Participants: with Gordon Hicks. Curator: Jordan Strom.
  • Sorting Daemons: Art, Surveillance Regimes & Social Control, Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Kingston, ON, Jan-Apr 2010. Participants: with Ian Verchere. Curator: Jan Allen & Sarah E.K. Smith.
  • Luminato Festival of Arts + Creativity, Luminato Festival 2009, Toronto, ON, Jun 2009.
  • How Soon Is Now, Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver, BC, Feb-May 2009. Curator: Kathleen Ritter.
  • Here Now or Nowhere, Prairie Art Gallery, Grande Prairie, AB, Jan 2009. Art in public places. Curator: Micah Lexier.[55]
  • Schematic: New Media Art from Canada, [space], London, UK, Nov-Dec 2008. Curator: Michelle Kasprzak, Gillian McIver & Heather Corcoran.
  • All Together Now: Recent Toronto Art, Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, ON, Nov 2008-Spring 2009. Installation of works from the permanent collection. Curator: Michelle Jacque[56]
  • Untethered, eyebeam, New York, Sep-Oct 2008. Curator: Sarah Cook[57]
  • This Particular Day of June, Or Gallery, Vancouver, BC, May-Jun 2008. Curator: Jonathan Middleton.
  • On Being An Exhibition, Artists Space , New York, Oct-Dec 2007. Curator: Joseph del Pesco
  • Ingenuity Festival, Ingenuity Festival 2007, Cleveland, OH, 2007. Curator: Steve Dietz
  • f.city, Folly, Lancaster, UK, Sep-Oct 2006.
  • 2004 Sobey Art Award Exhibition, Mackenzie Art Gallery, Regina, SK, Jul-Sep 2006.[58]
  • Territory, Artspeak and Presentation House Gallery, Vancouver, BC, Jun-Aug 2006.Curator: Melanie O'Brian & Helga Pakasaar.
  • Temporary Import / Vorübergehende Einfuhr, Art Forum Berlin, Berlin, Sep 2005. Curator: Susanne Titz.
  • 2004 Sobey Art Award Exhibition, Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art, Toronto, ON, Sep-Nov 2005
  • 2004 Sobey Art Award Exhibition, Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, Victoria, BC, Jul-Aug 2005.
  • L'envers des apparences, Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal, Montreal, QC, Summer 2005. Curator: Gilles Godmer.[59]
  • 2004 Sobey Art Award Exhibition, Yukon Arts Centre, Whitehorse, YK, Mar-May 2005.
  • 2004 Sobey Art Award, Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Exhibition, Halifax, NS, Oct-Dec 2004.
  • Sense, Edmonton Art Gallery (now Art Gallery of Alberta), Edmonton, AB, Sep-Nov 2004. Curator: Catherine Crowston.
  • Entre ciel et terre - Biennale nationale de sculpture contemporaine 2004, Galerie d'Art du Parc, Trois-Rivières, QC, Jun-Aug 2004. Curator: Gaston St-Pierre.

Legacy and influence

The project by Koh and Geoffrey Brown titled “ad hoc gallery” received a review from Gunter Nolte, Visual Arts Department Head at University of Ottawa, as he comments “They are making an enormous contribution to the community art scene. They are so committed they finance the gallery from their own jobs.”[60] An aspect of the City of Vancouver’s engineering art residence is bringing the community together to determine what they would like to see happen for buildings, pipes, public spaces, and also demolitions.[60] An example of this would be the “sewer time capsule” which was created on July 13th, 2019.[60] This brought together members of the community to paint on a pipe that was then used as sewer upgrades in the area which would stay in use for the next hundred years.[60] Koh herself said “The community can always feel like they had a little part to play in the infrastructure that lies below their street, and it’s a concrete connection with sewer works that also serves to demystify infrastructure.”[60]

Awards

In 2004, Koh was a finalist for the Sobey Art Award and in 2010 she won a VIVA Award in recognition of her outstanding achievement as a mid-career artist in British Columbia.[5]

Publications

Germaine Koh (2001), Germaine Koh and Keith Wallace, Contemporary Art Gallery (Vancouver, BC). ISBN 9780920751800[61]

Germaine Koh/Stall (2004), Germaine Koh, Para/Site Art Space (Hong Kong).[62]

Overflow: Germaine Koh (2007), Germaine Koh, Centre A - Vancouver International Centre for Contemporary Asian Art (Vancouver, BC). ISBN 9780973271157[63]

Opening hours: Germaine Koh (2002) Steven Reinke and Rosemary Heather, McMaster Museum of Art (Hamilton). ISBN 9781894088367[64]

References

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  2. "Germaine Koh : Around About". Gallery One One One. Retrieved 4 October 2020.
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  4. Mayer, Marc; Brayshaw, Christopher (14 October 2002). "Fresh Eyes". TIME Magazine Canadian edition. pp. 58–65.
  5. Cramp, Beverly (December 31, 2012). "GERMAINE KOH: Brewing up conceptual art". gallerieswest.ca. Galleries West. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved March 8, 2015.
  6. "GERMAINE KOH". germainekoh.com. Retrieved 2020-03-10.
  7. "Staff profile: Germaine Koh — Team Canada Roller Derby". www.teamcanadarollerderby.com. Retrieved 2020-03-10.
  8. "Koh projects > Call". Archived from the original on 11 June 2010. Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  9. Kabatoff, Mathew. "Interview with Germaine Koh, January 1, 2001". Archived from the original on 2006-05-14. Retrieved 2006-09-04.
  10. Laurence, Robin (May 19, 2001). "Work and words go up in smoke". The Globe and Mail.
  11. "GERMAINE KOH". germainekoh.com. Retrieved 2020-03-09.
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  13. Baele, Nancy (February 13, 1994). "Gallery gives showcase for ad hoc spirit". The Ottawa Citizen.
  14. "GERMAINE KOH". www.germainekoh.com. Retrieved 2020-03-09.
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  20. staff writer (2014-04-24). "ian verchere and germaine koh the creative edge". ecuad.ca. Emily Carr University of Art and Design. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 8, 2015.
  21. Stewart, Megan (September 16, 2013). "All the kids are doing it". Vancouver Courier. Vancouver. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 8, 2015.
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Further reading

  • Cook, Sarah; Miessen, Markus; Koh, Germaine (2013). Germaine Koh : Weather Systems. [Kamloops, British Columbia]: Kamloops Art Gallery. p. 39 pages : illustrations (colour) ; 38 cm. ISBN 9781895497816. OCLC 829422055.
  • Kingwell, Mark (2008). Opening Gambits: Essays on Art and Philosophy. Toronto: Key Porter Books. pp. 116–117. ISBN 978-1-55470-073-8.
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