Alison Cooley

Writer, Curator, Educator

  • Toronto ON CANADA

Alison Cooley is a joint winner of the 2014 Middlebrook Prize.

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Biography

Alison Cooley is a critic, curator, and educator currently based in Toronto. She holds a BA in Studio Art and Art History from the University of Saskatchewan, and an MA in Art History from York University. She was the 2014 recipient of the Middlebrook Prize for Young Canadian Curators, and a 2015 resident in the Banff International Curatorial Institute’s Critical Art Writing Ensemble. Her writing has appeared in FUSE, Canadian Art, Blackflash, and the Journal of Curatorial Studies, among other publications.

Industry Expertise

Writing and Editing
Fine Art
Research

Areas of Expertise

Art History
Museum Education
Contemporary Art
Curatorial Projects

Accomplishments

Middlebrook Prize for Young Canadian Curators

2014-01-01

Awarded for the exhibition I'm Feeling Lucky.

Banff International Curatorial Institute Residency

2015-04-20

Research-based "Critical Art Writing Ensemble" thematic residency at the Banff Centre

Education

York University

M.A.

Art History

2013

University of Saskatchewan

B.A.

Studio Art and Art History

2010

Articles

Nature-Culture Dialogue Dominates MOCCA's Neo-Baroque Show

Canadian Art

2014-03-27

It’s a bit of a tease. As winter clings to Toronto, spring begins to emerge underneath. In our fortress of concrete and skyscrapers, grasses force their way through cracks in sidewalks, pollen threatens its return, traces of bird calls are heard amid raccoons screeching, and road salt continues its inexorable chewing-through of boots, pavement and cars.
In this way, spring is a return of the undead. And in MOCCA’s latest exhibition, “Misled by Nature: Contemporary Art and the Baroque,” the infringement of the environment on human infrastructure, both menacing and majestic, is made material.

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Tatiana Grigorenko and Zoë Heyn-Jones: The Disappeared

Gallery 44

2015-01-16

How does the body disappear? Perhaps you were taught this way, as I was: Do you have a compost at home? What happens when you put a banana peel in your compost? It breaks into tiny pieces which become the soil. Bacteria, worms, and fungus chew it into smaller and smaller pieces, so that soon it looks just like everything else. We call it decomposition. This is what happens to the body. It goes away, but we remember. In the work of Tatiana Grigorenko and Zoë Heyn-Jones, the body disappears more insidiously. As the body is made absent, so too is memory: the archive of physical presence is expunged.

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Sarah Anne Johnson and the Public Lives of Private Images

Blackflash Magazine

2015-01-15

Who are Sarah Anne Johnson’s images for? When Winnipeg photographer Sarah Anne Johnson’s most recent Toronto exhibition, “Wonderlust,” opened in the spring of 2014, she stated that her goal was to “explore the internal world of sexual intimacy. To show what it looks and feels like.” Johnson promised an exhibition of something private—personal, vulnerable, risky—an ambitious attempt to transmit a sense of this tenderness through the media of the photograph.

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