David Buchan (artist)

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Born
David William Buchan

(1950-02-11)February 11, 1950
Grimsby, Ontario, Canada
DiedJanuary 5, 1993(1993-01-05) (aged 42)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
EducationB.A. Honours, York University, Toronto (1988–1972)
AwardsCanada Council Artist Studio in Paris (1982)
David Buchan
Born
David William Buchan

(1950-02-11)February 11, 1950
Grimsby, Ontario, Canada
DiedJanuary 5, 1993(1993-01-05) (aged 42)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
EducationB.A. Honours, York University, Toronto (1988–1972)
AwardsCanada Council Artist Studio in Paris (1982)

David William Buchan (11 February 1950 – 5 January 1994) was a Canadian artist who was part of the alternative art scene. He was also a graphic designer.[1]

Buchan was born in 1950 in Grimsby, Ontario, Canada.[2] He graduated with a B.A. Honours from York University in Toronto in 1972.[3][4] Buchan lived in Montreal, Quebec, from 1972 to 1975 where he became fascinated with vintage clothes, particularly suits, which he began to collect.[1] He returned to Toronto in 1975, quickly became involved with General Idea[1] and from 1975 to 1985, he managed the art bookstore of Art Metropole[4] which the group created. He also added to its archives and collection.[1] His collection of fashion developed into Modern Fashions, a series of black-and-white photographs, which he exhibited in many venues from 1976 on, and which mutated into different series, and eventually, into his slide shows and performance pieces.[1] Buchan died in Toronto in 1993 of HIV/AIDS-related causes.[1] The artist's archives are held by the Library & Archives of the National Gallery of Canada as part of the Art Metropole Collection.[4]

Work

During the 1970s and 1980s, Buchan's work combined fashion, performance, and multimedia art[5] with a camp (style) sensibility. A 1978 performance piece, Fruit Cocktails, featured the persona "Lamonte del Monte" which Buchan would continue to use into the future. The name of the performance and the persona itself referenced a popular brand of canned fruit and the company that produced it: Del Monte Foods. Buchan also created photo-text pieces that parodied old advertising and commented on popular culture.[4][3]

In the mid-1980s, Buchan started making cibachrome transparencies and prints, and duro-transparencies, often large ones. These also frequently referenced advertising and historical artwork.[4]

Solo exhibitions

  • 1979, "Modern Fashions," Glenbow Museum of Art, Calgary, Alberta[6]
  • 1980, "Modern Fashions," Art Gallery, Mount Saint Vincent University, Halifax, N.S.[6]
  • 1980, "Modern Fashions," Canadian Cultural Centre, Paris, France[6]
  • 1980, Art Gallery, Student Union Building, Edmonton, Alberta[6]
  • 1981, Gallery 76, Toronto, Ontario[6]
  • 1981, "Modern Fashions," I.D.A. Gallery, York University, Toronto, Ontario[6]
  • 1981, "Modern Fashions," Southern Alberta Art Gallery, Lethbridge, Alberta[6]
  • 1981, "Modern Fashions," Mercer Union, Toronto, Ontario[6]
  • 1981, "Roots, Lamonte Del Monte's Family Tree," YYZ, Toronto, Ontario[6]
  • 1984, A Space, Toronto, Ontario[6]
  • 1987, Cold City Gallery, Toronto, Ontario[6]
  • 1988, "David Buchan"; Canadian Youth, Western Front Society, Vancouver, B.C.[6]
  • 1988, "On the Rocks," Cold City Gallery, Toronto, Ontario[6]
  • 1989, Galerie SAW, Ottawa, Ontario[6]
  • 1993, "David Buchan: Inside the Image," The Power Plant, Toronto[7]
  • 1994, "Quotation: Re-presenting History," Winnipeg Art Gallery, Winnipeg[6]
  • 1996, "David Buchan: Man-About-Town," Grimsby Public Art Gallery, Grimsby[6]
  • 2012, "An Introduction to the Language of Partial Seduction: Works by David Buchan," Art Museum at the University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario[1]

Group exhibitions and performances

Buchan participated in many group international exhibitions in Stuttgart, West Germany (1983); London, England (1991); and New York (1991). His performances, though mostly in Canada, also took place in Vienna; Brussels; Frankfurt; and Basel.[6]

Collections

References

Bibliography

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