Jack Shadbolt, Night Garden Transformations, 1973-89, archival
pigment print of lithographs, 39.5 x 63 x 1 in., Collection of Artists for
Kids and the Gordon Smith Gallery, reflected in Alex Gibson, Image of a
Garden Lattice, 2026, stainless steel, 72 x 108 x 0.05 in., Courtesy of the
Artist.
Photograph by Dylan Maranda
Curated by: Andrea Valentine-Lewis, Curatorial Fellow
Featuring Artwork by: Corey Bulpitt, Andrew Dadson, Alex Gibson, Chantal Gibson,
Tiziana La Melia, veto monteiro, Bill Reid, Jack Shadbolt, Gordon Smith,
Manuel Axel Strain, Isabel Wynn
In One Hundred Artists Deep, eight local artists were invited to create new work in response to artworks from the Artists for Kids Permanent Collection by founders Bill Reid (1920–1998), Jack Shadbolt (1909–1998), and Gordon Smith (1919–2020). Each of these artists left an enduring legacy, not only through their artistic practices but through their deep commitment to arts education.
Over the course of their lives, Reid, Shadbolt, and Smith taught and mentored thousands of young artists and apprentices. Their ideas, values, and approaches to making continue to circulate -- sometimes visibly, sometimes quietly -- through subsequent generations of artists.
The eight participating artists were selected for the strength and diversity of their practices, as well as for their sensitive and intuitive approaches to art-making. They were invited to respond to works by Reid, Shadbolt, and Smith from the Artists For Kids Collection, with full freedom in how that response took shape. The historical works and the contemporary responses are presented together in the gallery, creating a space for conversation across time.
The exhibition’s title is drawn from a phrase that Smith often used, saying he was “a hundred artists deep” and stood “on the shoulders” of artists past and present. Every artist emerges from a layered history of influence - artistic, personal, familial, educational, and cultural. One Hundred Artists Deep reflects on this accumulated inheritance and the many ways artistic knowledge is carried forward.