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Iain Baxter
- Vancouver / Windsor, Ont.
 Iain
Baxter came to British Columbia in 1964 and from there built an
enviable world-wide reputation as an artist specializing in photo
conceptualism - a form of art that emphasizes ideas over images.
This was the
first global art movement of the post Second World War, and Mr.
Baxter led what became known as the Vancouver School, a generation
of photo-conceptual artists whose works are appreciated and prized
around the world.
Mr. Baxter is
Canada's first conceptual artist, making innovative use of photography
and pioneering the use of plastics in art. His highly regarded conceptual
installations and environmental projects have earned him the label
the Marshall McLuhan of the visual arts. His works are in the Vancouver
Art Gallery, the Belkin Gallery, the National Gallery of Canada,
the Art Gallery of Ontario, Museum of Modern Art, N.Y., Los Angeles
County Museum of Art and the Gemeentemuseum in The Hague.
Mr. Baxter was
born in England, came to Canada at age one, studied in the United
States and Japan before choosing British Columbia as his home. He
taught at U.B.C., Emily Carr College, S.F.U, where he designed the
university logo and set up Visual Arts in the Centre for Communications
and the Arts. From his base in Vancouver, he traveled to lecture
elsewhere in Canada, the United States and Europe.
Now, retired
from his academic career, Iain Baxter remains active as an artist.
He is an Officer of the Order of Canada and has received the Order
of Ontario, honorary doctorates from UBC and the University of Windsor,
the Governor General's Award in Visual and Media Arts, the Canada
Council Molson Prize for the arts and the Gershon Iskowitz Prize
- both for Lifetime Achievement.
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