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Tim Whiten: Life & Work
By Carolyn Bell Farrell
Tim Whiten (b.1941) is one of Canada’s most important and revered artists, renowned for his innovative drawings, performance installations, and evocative cultural objects using human skulls, hair, and teeth, as well as wood, mirror, and glass. His celebrated works engage with ritual, myth, and alchemy to explore the depths of the human experience, inviting audiences to reflect on processes of transformation and change.
Born in a poor Black suburb of Detroit, Whiten overcame oppressive economic and social conditions to become an award-winning artist and educator. He experienced firsthand the impact of the Vietnam War, in which he served, and the violence, racial segregation, and riots at the height of the civil rights movement. Immigrating to Canada in 1968, Whiten became a founding member of York University’s Faculty of Fine Arts, where he taught for close to forty years, influencing and inspiring generations of Canadian artists.
In Tim Whiten: Life & Work, author Carolyn Bell Farrell traces the artist’s trajectory from his earliest years growing up in Inkster, Michigan; to his extraordinary exploration of materials and philosophical frameworks; to his critical success in the art world, including winning the Gershon Iskowitz Prize at the AGO in 2022 and a Governor General’s Award in Visual and Media Arts for Artistic Achievement in 2023.
Developed through extensive research and dialogues with the artist, his colleagues and former students, contemporary curators, and others in his circle, Bell Farrell tells the remarkable story of how Whiten’s expansive practice has altered the landscape of contemporary visual art in Canada.
$40 CAD
ISBN 978-1-4871-0355-2
Hardcover | 8 x 11 | 124 pp