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Charlotte Lindgren (born 1931) is a Canadian sculptor-weaver, installation artist, photographer and curator. Lindgren gained worldwide fame for innovative weaving due to the response to her distinctive installation ''Aedicule'' in the 1967 ''International Biennial of Tapestry'' in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her architectural textile works — usually large — are single woven planes that transform into three-dimensional forms. They explore the interplay between positive and negative spaces, allowing for dramatic shadows and movement. Lindgren has represented Canada abroad many times, and in 2002 was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II's Golden Jubilee Medal. She lived in Winnipeg from 1956 to 1963, then in 1964 moved to Halifax. She lives today in Nova Scotia.


Career

Lindgren was born in Toronto, Ontario, and received an undergraduate education and learned to weave at the University of Wisconsin, Michigan (B.Sc.) in the United States.A Dictionary of Canadian Artists, volumes 1-8 by Colin S. MacDonald, and volume 9 (online only), by Anne Newlands and Judith Parker National Gallery of Canada / Musée des beaux-arts du Canada In 1952 she married Ed Lindgren. The couple lived in Toronto; Winnipeg; Fargo, North Dakota; and Halifax, and had two children, Eric and Jennifer. By assisting and sharing ideas with her husband, an architecture student and later practitioner and professor, Lindgren complemented her science background with a knowledge of architecture, a field that would strongly influence her art. In Winnipeg to which she moved in 1956, she got a part-time job as Design instructor at the University of Manitoba (1957-1963). In 1964 she won a scholarship to the Haystack Mountain School of Crafts in Deer Isle, Maine to work with Jack Lenor Larsen. Larsen was so impressed by the originality of Lindgren's work that at the end of her time at Haystack, he lent her an 8-harness loom, and told her to go to her new home in Halifax and weave. She began to create her sculptural weaving work would take fine art weaving in a new direction, because of its three-dimensionality. In 1965, she received a Canada Council Arts Scholarship to visit weavers in Finland, Sweden and England. In 1978, Lindgren travelled to Pangnirtung, Baffin Island, as a Canada Council Visiting Artist. From 1978 to 1981 she served as Art Consultant to the Pangnirtung Tapestry Studio, where she encouraged new artists and introduced a numbered-edition system. Lindgren also served as curator for the conceptual ''Knot Exhibition'' (1997) at Halifax's Mary E. Black Gallery. It invited viewer participation, and included the living knot garden of Peter Klynstra (1944-2010).. She has taught or given guest lectures at many institutions, including the Ontario College of Art, the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (now NSCAD University), the Banff Centre for the Arts, the University of Manitoba, the Philadelphia College of Art and, as a Fellow, at the Royal College of Art in London, England. She served on the executive of the Canadian Artists Representation ( CARFAC) and as vice-president of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. She was a member of the Canada Council Arts Advisory Panel and juried Canada Council bursaries.Who's Who in Canada 1994 The Charlotte Lindgren fonds is in
Library and Archives Canada Library and Archives Canada (LAC; french: Bibliothèque et Archives Canada) is the federal institution, tasked with acquiring, preserving, and providing accessibility to the documentary heritage of Canada. The national archive and library is th ...
.


Work

Lindgren’s work differs from traditional weaving in its use of materials and the way it approaches three-dimensional form. While a standard loom has four harnesses, Lindgren used one made to her own specifications — with 16 harnesses and two back tension beams. When weaving, her process involves testing what the possibilities could be when not as restricted by the traditional loom. Along with black wool chosen for its visual clarity, she might use monkey hair, and lead wire and plastic that reflected currents in 20th century modernism. In 1965, Carol Fraser wrote about the experimentation visible in each work by Lindgren. A 1980 work, ''Windjammer'' (Robert McLaughlin Gallery, Oshawa) (linen, acrylic), took Lindgren in a new direction: it was her first work to be attached to a plastic sheet and cantilevered from the wall.


Selected exhibitions

In 1965, her exhibitions included solo shows in New York City, at the Confederation Centre Art Gallery in Charlottetown, PEI, and at the University of Manitoba. In 1966, she exhibited at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, in ''Charlotte Lindgren: Woven Hangings'' held at the Winnipeg Art Gallery and in ''Threads of History'', an American Federation of Arts exhibition that would tour major American galleries from 1966 to 1969. In 1967, Lindgren's work ''Winter Tree'' (1965, Confederation Centre Art Gallery) (148 x 73 cm), a wire hanging composed of a complex single woven form with a tight circular base and a series of loose threads above, suggesting the branches of a tree, was featured in Expo 67's Canadian Fine Crafts exhibition. Her sculptural weavings were also displayed alongside other visual arts at the Art Gallery of Ontario's ''Perspectives 67'' where she won a prize for her innovative approach to textiles. Also in 1967 her textile sculpture ''Aedicule'' (mohair, wool, synthetic, silk), which invited people to come in and be seated, inspired by a building - a kind of amphitheatre - she had seen in Otaniemi, Finland, designed by architect
Alvar Aalto Hugo Alvar Henrik Aalto (; 3 February 1898 – 11 May 1976) was a Finnish architect and designer. His work includes architecture, furniture, textiles and glassware, as well as sculptures and paintings. He never regarded himself as an artist, see ...
, attracted notice at the ''International Biennial of Tapestry'' in Lausanne, Switzerland. In 1980 the
Art Gallery of Nova Scotia The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia (AGNS) is a public provincial art museum based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. The art museum's primary building complex is located in downtown Halifax and takes up approximately of space. The museum complex compr ...
held the exhibition ''Charlotte Lindgren: Fibre Structures'' that are now part of the Gallery's Permanent Collection. In 1989, the Art Gallery, Mount Saint Vincent University (MSVU) organized ''Charlotte Lindgren: Winter Wraps'', curated by Elizabeth Jones, a photographic study of urban and winter gardens, especially the practice of tree wrapping in Japan, Canada and England. In 1998, Ingrid Jenkner for the MSVU Gallery curated the exhibition ''Charlotte Lindgren: Winter Gardens'', 30 of Lindgren's colour photographs resulting from a 1995-96 train journey, during which she photographed private and public gardens at each stop and in 2014, the MSVU Gallery included her work in ''Big in Nova Scotia''. In 2022, she was included in the major travelling show ''Prairie Interlace'', organized by Nickle Galleries in Calgary and the
MacKenzie Art Gallery The MacKenzie Art Gallery (MAG; french: Musee d’art MacKenzie) is an art museum located in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. The museum occupies the multipurpose T. C. Douglas Building, situated at the edge of the Wascana Centre. The building hol ...
, Regina.


Selected public collections

Her work is in the collections of such galleries and institutions as the
Art Gallery of Nova Scotia The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia (AGNS) is a public provincial art museum based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. The art museum's primary building complex is located in downtown Halifax and takes up approximately of space. The museum complex compr ...
; Confederation Centre Art Gallery; the Robert McLaughlin Gallery; Winnipeg Art Gallery, and the Canada Council Art Bank, among other distinguished collections such as that of the Assn. Pierre Pauli, Switzerland.


Commissions

Among Lindgren's most notable works in the 1970s were two commissioned pieces — a metalized plastic sculpture for the Canadian Pavilion at Expo 70 in Osaka, Japan; and a cylinder (wool, steel) for the Canadian Broadcasting Company building in Montreal. The latter — one of several large black cylinders in Lindgren's oeuvre — is 30 feet long with a four-foot diameter, and can be viewed from three storeys.


Awards and honours

*Critic’s Choice award at ''Visua 66'', at Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, 1966; *''Child'', a wall hanging of a young girl with golden braids, shown at the Art Gallery of Ontario, won first prize in Fine Crafts at ''Perspective 67'', an exhibit that showcased the winners of Canada’s Centennial Year national competition, 1967; *prize in Canada Crafts '67 Competition; *Member, Royal Canadian Academy of Arts and served as its Vice-President (1978-1986); *Fellow, at the Royal College of Art in London, England (1983); *Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal, 2002.


Community Activism

In 1983, Lindgren led protests against the construction of proposed high rises around Halifax’s authentic Victorian public garden, which resulted in height limitations and setback requirements and the founding of The Friends of the Public Gardens.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Lindgren, Charlotte 1931 births Artists from Toronto Canadian textile artists Canadian weavers Women textile artists Living people Canadian women artists 20th-century Canadian women artists Members of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts Canadian photographers Canadian women sculptors