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==Career==
==Career==
Director of the Carleton University Art Gallery, Ottawa, since 2005, Diana Nemiroff has numerous exhibitions to her credit, including the ground-breaking ''Land, Spirit, Power: First Nations at the [[National Gallery of Canada]]'' (1992), [[National Gallery of Canada]], Ottawa (co-curated with [[Robert Houle]] and Charlotte Townsend-Gault ), which was the National Gallery’s first major exhibition featuring the accomplishments of a new generation of Aboriginal artists. Other exhibitions include ''Crossings / Traversées'' (1998), National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, which examined the theme of [[globalization]] and [[migration]] in [[contemporary art]]; and Melvin Charney and Kzrysztof Wodiczko (1986) for the 42nd [[Venice Biennale]]. <ref>{{cite web|title=Diana Nemiroff Biography|url=http://www.banffcentre.ca/faculty/faculty-member/4102.mvc|publisher=Banff Centre|accessdate=7 April 2012}}</ref>
Diana Nemiroff has been the Director of the [[Carleton University]] Art Gallery in Ottawa since 2005. Nemiroff has numerous exhibitions to her credit, including the ground-breaking ''Land, Spirit, Power: First Nations at the [[National Gallery of Canada]]'' (1992), [[National Gallery of Canada]], Ottawa (co-curated with [[Robert Houle]] and Charlotte Townsend-Gault ), which was the National Gallery’s first major exhibition featuring the accomplishments of a new generation of Aboriginal artists. Other exhibitions include ''Crossings / Traversées'' (1998), National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, which examined the theme of [[globalization]] and [[migration]] in [[contemporary art]]; and Melvin Charney and Kzrysztof Wodiczko (1986) for the 42nd [[Venice Biennale]]. <ref>{{cite web|title=Diana Nemiroff Biography|url=http://www.banffcentre.ca/faculty/faculty-member/4102.mvc|publisher=Banff Centre|accessdate=7 April 2012}}</ref>


Nemiroff has also won recognition for her writing on such artists as [[Eric Cameron]], [[Jana Sterbak]] and [[Nancy Spero]], which have appeared in several catalogues and monographs.
Nemiroff has also won recognition for her writing on such artists as [[Eric Cameron]], [[Jana Sterbak]] and [[Nancy Spero]], which have appeared in several catalogues and monographs.

Revision as of 05:05, 17 April 2012

Diana Nemiroff is a Canadian curator and art historian in the field of contemporary art.

Career

Diana Nemiroff has been the Director of the Carleton University Art Gallery in Ottawa since 2005. Nemiroff has numerous exhibitions to her credit, including the ground-breaking Land, Spirit, Power: First Nations at the National Gallery of Canada (1992), National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa (co-curated with Robert Houle and Charlotte Townsend-Gault ), which was the National Gallery’s first major exhibition featuring the accomplishments of a new generation of Aboriginal artists. Other exhibitions include Crossings / Traversées (1998), National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, which examined the theme of globalization and migration in contemporary art; and Melvin Charney and Kzrysztof Wodiczko (1986) for the 42nd Venice Biennale. [1]

Nemiroff has also won recognition for her writing on such artists as Eric Cameron, Jana Sterbak and Nancy Spero, which have appeared in several catalogues and monographs.

In 2012, Diana Nemiroff was the recipient of the Governor General's Award in Visual Arts.[2]

References

  1. ^ "Diana Nemiroff Biography". Banff Centre. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
  2. ^ "Carleton's Diana Nemiroff Awarded 2012 Governor General Award in Media and Visual Arts". Carleton University. Retrieved 7 April 2012.