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              <text>Royal Academician, Sculptor&#13;
&#13;
Nationality: British&#13;
RA Schools student from 30 July 1901 to July 1904&#13;
&#13;
Elected ARA: 25 April 1929&#13;
Elected RA: 23 April 1936&#13;
Elected Senior RA: 1 January 1952&#13;
&#13;
Preferred media: Sculpture</text>
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              <text>16--?</text>
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                <text>Bolognese, Giovanni</text>
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              <text>Glenn Howarth was born in 1946 in Vegreville Alberta. He completed his Bachelor of Fine Arts at the University of Victoria in 1970. Following graduation he worked as an art critic, initially for the Montreal Star and in 1971 for the Victoria Daily Times. Howarth began to paint full-time in 1973 after a period of study and work in Europe. Howarth became a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts in 1978. In the early 1980s, he became interested in the use of computer generated art and by 1983, he was so well renowned in the field that he was chosen as Canadian Commissioner at the XVII Sao Paolo Biennale and had his works shown along with three other Canadian computer artists.&#13;
&#13;
Howarth taught extensively across Canada and until recently he was an instructor at the Victoria College of Art and Design. Howarth's work is represented in such collections as the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, the Vancouver Art Gallery, the Glenbow Museum, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, and the University of Victoria Art Collections.&#13;
&#13;
In the final decade of his life Howarth painted scenes of BC, tondos filled with friends and acquaintances and large scenes of nudes in the landscape.</text>
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              <text>Stettin, Prussia</text>
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              <text>Herbert Siebner was born in 1925 in Stettin, Germany. He trained at the Atelier Richter in Stettin and at the Berlin Academy. In 1954 he moved to Canada. Siebner's works follow in the tradition of the German Expressionists with whom he studied and his artistic practice has largely focused on the shape and form of the human figure.&#13;
&#13;
Siebner has held teaching appointments at the Universities of Washington, British Columbia, Alberta, and Victoria and been featured in over 100 solo exhibitions in Europe and North America. His paintings, murals, and prints are represented in museums and collections worldwide. Siebner has also been the recipient of an extensive list of awards such as the Reid Award for Graphics in 1956 from the Canadian Society of Painters, Etchers and Engravers and the BC Sculpture Award in 1957. He is a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of the Arts and a founding member of the Limners Siebner was a founding member of the Limners, a group of Victoria artists that came together to support, exhibit, and discuss their works. His works are found in permanent collections in Berlin, Seattle and Canada.</text>
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              <text>Graham Cantieni, an Australian painter, draughtsman, and sculptor, was born in Albury, Australia in 1938.&#13;
After completing a degree in education in 1958, Cantieni moved to Canada in 1968. Starting in the 1970s, he participated in numerous exhibitions both in Canada and abroad. After earning a master’s degree in art history at Concordia University (1987), he taught at the Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières from 1989 to 2003. His paintings, drawings, and sculptures are in various collections, including those of the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal, the Musée d’art de Joliette, and the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec. &#13;
He currently lives and works in Montréal.</text>
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              <text>Eva Campbell was born in Ghana to a Ghanaian mother and a Barbadian father and spent her childhood in Barbados and Jamaica. She studied painting at the College of Art in Ghana (BA) and the University of Victoria (MFA). Eva has had numerous art exhibitions in Canada, the United States, Ghana, Barbados and Britain. Currently she is the visual arts teacher at Lester B. Pearson College of the Pacific in Victoria, British Columbia, where she enjoys sharing her knowledge with students from around the world. For further information about Eva, visit &lt;a href="http://www.evacampbell.ca"&gt;evacampbell.ca&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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              <text>July 27, 2018
https://vancouversun.com/news/local-news/obituary-ulli-steltzer-photographer-with-a-social-conscience </text>
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              <text>A native of Frankfurt, Germany Ulli Steltzer emigrated to the United States in 1953. She taught music in Massachusetts, then worked in a photo lab in New York. She opened a photo studio in Princeton, New Jersey and began photographing migrant workers for the Department of Labor and Industry which lead to other assignments focusing on the rural and urban poor, and assignments for Time magazine. In 1972, she moved to Vancouver and began producing photographic books about Canadian native peoples in the Arctic and B.C., Mayans in Guatemala and new immigrants to California. Her work has been widely exhibited.</text>
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              <text>Windsor Utley was an accomplished American artist, musician, teacher and gallery owner. Born in Laguna, California in 1920, Utley attended Pomona College and the University of Southern California. A classically trained flautist, he moved to the Pacific Northwest in the early 1940s to perform with the Tacoma Symphony in Washington.&#13;
&#13;
Utley did not begin painting until he was 19 years old. He was influenced by Mark Tobey and later Kandinsky in New York. He entered and was accepted into the 1944 Annual Exhibition of Northwest Artists at the Seattle Art Museum and later that year won first prize in the Tacoma Watercolor Exhibit. Utley later became the head of the art department at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle.&#13;
&#13;
Windsor Utley has been celebrated as a member of the Northwest School, but lived at times in California, Washington, New York, and Canada. He also spent two years in Italy, living and working in Siena and Florence. He opened Utley's Art Galleries in Seattle in 1966, then in Victoria, British Columbia in the 1970s. He moved the galleries to Laguna Beach, California in 1983 and re-opened them in Seattle in 1987.&#13;
&#13;
Windsor Utley died in Seattle on 8 April 1989 aged 69. His work is in many private and public collections including the Seattle Art Museum, British Columbia Provincial Collection, Victoria, Duveen-Graham Gallery, New York, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond and the University of Washington.</text>
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              <text>&lt;p&gt;Kay Fallows Hargreaves is a UVic Visual Arts alumna (1969) and a B. Ed (UBC 1974). A founding member of the "Studio Group" she worked with Jan Zach and Herbert Siebner. 1981-83 directed the "Fallows School of Fine Art" and taught at Camosun College for 13 years. Her work is also held at the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria where she had a solo exhibition in 1970.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;In the series “Creation”, it is the paradox, a nervous line that hovers momentarily between micro and macro cosmos, between life and death, between past and present, coupled with choice, those footprints left through time in man’s history, that form the essence of my “colour metaphors”.&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;span style="float:right;"&gt;-- Kay Fallows Hargreaves, 1981&lt;/span&gt;</text>
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