Earthly Delights Power or Glory at the Art Gallery of St. Albert

Earthly Delights

Artist(s): Debbie.Lee Miszaniec

Date: November 8 to January 24

Exhibition Space: Staircase Feature Exhibition

In-Person tour: Friday, December 12 at noon 

On the surface, Debbie.Lee Miszaniec’s Earthly Delights is the height of temptation – luscious donuts, seductive cupcakes and feasts for the eyes and mind. She spends hours painting the golden flakes on the pastry, or a glistening fatty sausage. Debbie.Lee’s expansive banquet scenes reference historic foods, feasts, figures and artworks.

Stewing within the work deeply questions our contemporary obsession with food, diet culture and body size. Health and wellness ideas are conflated with images of thin and fit bodies. We use virtuous language in refusal, graciously declining the temptations of food.

There are still health concerns for individuals struggling to balance the health consequences of obesity against the health consequences of long-term weight loss efforts. As someone coping with that legacy, I am challenging myself to talk about it through my work,” Debbie says.

Image credits: Debbie.lee Miszaniec, Debbie.Lee Miszaniec, Power or Glory, 2024, oil and canvas with sculpture; Portrait of the artist, in the style of Titian by Courteney Miszaniec and Logan Miszaniec, 2024.

 

Mini Donut Service

Mini Donut Service, 11″ x 14″ o/c, 825 CAD

Wouldn’t we all like a mini donut service? I started this painting at the Calgary Stampede last summer during my engagement painting live and meeting the public in the Western Oasis. Of course, the way I work these days I knew there was no way I would be completing it in that 2 hour session, especially since I did more talking than painting. Which is as it should be, plenty of time to paint back in the studio. Or so I thought. Turns out that painting larger than life triptychs exploring the life cycle of diet culture can definitely take over your life and studio. So January of 2024 finally saw the completion of this lovely little painting of the famous stampede midway treat, the Mini Donut, together with a vintage book of Robert W Service’s western poetry. Enjoy this compilation of progress pics below. Want to buy this painting? Let me know!

One and Three Pears

One and Three Pears (after Kosuth). Digital Photograph, Debbie.lee Miszaniec

Besides being a little shout out to an OG conceptual artist, Joseph Kosuth, this photo represents the process I went through to create Restrained, a stuffed pear tied to its seat with measuring tapes, which you can see now at the Okotoks Art Gallery in What You Do To My Body (and Mind) until March 22nd 2024. Referencing Kosuth’s One and Three Chairs (1965) I’ve presented the real pear, the paper pattern made from the real pear, and the small scale model testing the pattern for the larger finished pear. Below you can see the pear in situ:

Photo by Amir Said for the Western Wheel.

Check out Restrained in What You Do To My Body (& Mind) before March 23rd 2024 at the Okotoks Art Gallery:

Review for What You Do To My Body (& Mind) at the Okotoks Art Gallery

Photo by Amir Said for the Western Wheel

So despite the bitter cold (high of minus 27 Celsius) I was pleased to chat with a good group of Art goers, both local and from Calgary, during the opening on Saturday January 13th. I also had the opportunity to chat with Amir Said from the Western Wheel about the show for his review. You can read it by clicking on the image below:

Click here to read the article:

The exhibition runs until March 22 2024. For more information visit: https://www.okotoks.ca/your-community/living-okotoks/community-event-calendar/debbielee-miszaniec-what-you-do-my-body-and

Meet me at the Okotoks Art Gallery Saturday January 13th 1-3 PM!

Debbie.Lee Miszaniec: What You Do To My Body (and Mind)

Saturday, January 13, 2024 – 10:00am to Saturday, March 23, 2024 – 5:00pm

“visions of sugarplums danced in their heads…”
Just in time for the post-holiday New Year resolution season, Debbie.lee Miszaniec presents a lush abundance of Dutch baroque-inspired still-life paintings of ‘forbidden foods’ in the Okotoks Art Gallery. The exhibition focuses on the psychological struggle between the body’s needs and the mind’s direction when pursuing weight loss. A soft sculpture, tortured by these sweet sights, sits caught in the struggle between nature and diet culture.
 
Debbie.lee Miszaniec is an Alberta artist working in Calgary. She holds a BFA (2008) from the Alberta University of the Arts. Her paintings draw from her observations of the human experience, history and society as well as her own experience as a working-class Western female artist.

Exhibit type Visual Arts

Location Small Gallery

Event type Art Gallery

Contact Okotoks Art Gallery (403) 938-3204

Location Okotoks Art Gallery

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Earthly Delights: Energy Requires Mass

Energy Requires Mass, 30″x40″ o/c, Debbie.lee Miszaniec

Welcome to the tenth instalment of a series of blog posts going more in-depth into the thoughts and ideas behind each of the paintings in the Earthly Delights series. The series is based on my experience navigating health and diet culture as a long term participant. You can read the full background by following the link to that blog post below:

Project Background: You can read more about the project background here.

I set the final feast in this series in front of the sculpture in Calgary of the Famous Five, Women Are Persons!, by Barbara A Paterson. The Famous Five were the Albertan women who brought the Persons Case before the Supreme Court of Canada, recognizing that women were indeed persons under the British North-America Act 1867.

In the suffrage movement women used food and the role of hostess, keeper of the hearth and nourisher, as a tool in the push for women’s right through pink teas, suffrage teas and lunch rooms where they could fundraise, promote and strategize for women’s rights.

However it seems today food has been turned against us. Rather than being the fuel that allows us to accomplish great things, it is the thing we fear. We must limit what we eat to fit the image of the thin, the fit, the ambitious, the hard working, the responsible, the smart, the good woman. In starving our bodies into conformance we spend our time and energy focused on controlling food and controlling our behaviours. We are obsessed with the thought and image and preparation of food we cannot allow ourselves to have. There is no need for anyone else to assert control over us, we are contained, neutralized by our own hand.

It is not only a gendered issue, diet culture targets men as well as women, all ethnicities and economic groups in western influenced culture, but women have been the most prevalent targets, and the most ironic as the keepers of the cook pot.

Energy Requires Mass is a question. Placing the feast on the end of the teeter totter reminds us that in order to have the energy to move the world, we need mass to convert. We need to eat. We need to decide, do we want to look like we can do great things, or do we want to do great things?

The Work In Progress – Slideshow