Amalie Atkins

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Amalie Atkins is a Canadian artist making use of film, fabric-based sculpture and performance.[1] She currently resides in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.[2]

Her most recent artworks have been short silent films set to music.[2] Atkins's films are either shown alone or within an installation.[2]

Atkins grew up in rural Manitoba, from where she still draws inspiration citing the landscape of her youth as a significant influence.[1] Fiber art was Atkins' area of study when she undertook her undergraduate degree at the Alberta College of Art and Design, where she graduated with distinction in 2001.[3][1]

Career

Her work has been exhibited across Canada and the USA.[1] A dreamlike or fairy-tale character is often attributed to Atkins's work. Repeated motifs include loose teeth, the colour red, fields of snow, and bicycles. Women on journeys are equally a recurring theme in her work as are vast landscapes inspired by her experience of the Canadian prairies.[1]

Atkins' early short films were shot on Super 8 while the most recent Three Minute Miracle was shot on 16 mm film. Using film as a support and textiles contributes to the many textural references in Atkins's work. The work Three Minute Miracle was largely inspired by different fibre-focused projects she had previously undertaken.[1] Atkins's participated in "Oh Canada" at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (MASS MoCA) which showcased over 60 artists, showing her film "Three Minute Miracle".[4] The aim of the exhibition was to create a dialogue about contemporary art made in Canada.[4]

In 2003 she founded the Bike Ballet Club: a cycling trio.[5] She is the co-founder and an active member of the Optronic Eye Film Club.[5]

In 2013 she was nominated for the Sobey Award.[6]

In 2025 she directed the documentary film Agatha's Almanac, aboout her elderly aunt Agatha Bock.[7] The film won the juried award for Best Canadian Feature Documentary at the 2025 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival.[8]

Exhibitions

Oh, Canada, MASS MoCA[9]

Dreamland: Textiles and the Canadian Landscape, Textile Museum of Canada[9]

They Made a Day Be a Day Here, Art Gallery of Grande Prairie[9]

where the hour floats, Art Gallery at the Evergreen Cultural Centre, Coquitlam, BC[10]

The Diamond Eye Assembly, Remai Modern, Saskatoon, SK[11]

Festivals

Awards

References

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