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The Art Gallery of Alberta respectfully acknowledges that we are located in Treaty 6 Territory and Region 4 of the Metis Nation of Alberta. We respect this as the traditional and contemporary  land of diverse Indigenous Peoples including the Plains Cree, Woodland Cree, Beaver Cree, Nitsitapi/Blackfoot, Métis, Nakota Sioux, Anishinaabe/Saulteaux/Ojibwe and Dene Peoples. We also acknowledge the many Indigenous, Inuit and Métis people who make Alberta their home today.

Benjamin Oswald

EDMONTON, AB  |  A recipient of the Robert Weghsteen Memorial Award in ceramics, Benjamin is a graduate of the Emily Carr University of Art & Design with a Masters in Fine Art. His practice involves the creation of vessels and sculture and is an examination of their spaces and interactions. 

Benjamin has won awards both provincially and internationally for his work and recently completed a residency at the International Ceramic Research Centre in Skælskør, Denmark. He currently works as a professional artist and arts educator on Treaty 6 Territory. 

Some of Benjamin's work was included in the AGA exhibition Between Things: Alberta Ceramics which is on display from September 2, 2023 to March 3, 2024. 

From the Artist

"My work situates itself at the intersections of art, design, and contemporary craft and investigates themes such as inner and liminal space as well as resonance and repetition. I make work using minimalistic aesthetics and industrial processes to produce carefully profiled objects with the traces of the hand removed. This homage to a more reductive and design-based process speaks to my desire to tease out the underlying structure of a thing and then see it multiplied and reworked in combinatory ways to produce rhythms, contrasts or acts of excavation.

Ceramic vessels have a well developed vocabulary referencing the human body. For example, a vase has a foot, belly, shoulder or neck. I'm interested in the ceramic vessel’s symbolic connection to the body and I scale vessels in relation to my own body as I build them. While the exterior of the vessel is well defined, the inside of the vessel is not and is frequently referred to as the void or something to be filled. One of the questions in my work looks at the void and what is (or was) there or what we imagine to be there. In this way I ask questions about that liminal space between surface and void, light and darkness, material and immaterial, presence and absence, and body and soul as a means of exploring the concept of innerspace in addition to many unanswerable existential questions."

Hours

Monday: closed
Tuesday: closed
Wednesday: 11am-5pm
Thursday: 11am-7pm
Friday: 11am-5pm
Saturday: 11am-5pm
Sunday: 11am-5pm

Admission

* Restrictions apply. Please see our Hours and Admissions page.

AGA members
$Free
Youth 0-17
$Free
Alberta students 18+
$Free
Out-of-province students
$10
General admission
$14
Seniors 65+
$10

Location

2 Sir Winston Churchill Square
Edmonton, Alberta
Canada T5J 2C1

780.422.6223
info@youraga.ca

Directions

The Art Gallery of Alberta respectfully acknowledges that we are located in Treaty 6 Territory and Region 4 of the Metis Nation of Alberta. We respect this as the traditional and contemporary  land of diverse Indigenous Peoples including the Plains Cree, Woodland Cree, Beaver Cree, Nitsitapi/Blackfoot, Métis, Nakota Sioux, Anishinaabe/Saulteaux/Ojibwe and Dene Peoples. We also acknowledge the many Indigenous, Inuit and Métis people who make Alberta their home today.