Artist Talk: Jenn Law - August 29, 2022

Print London invites you to join us for an Artist's Talk by artist and writer Jenn Law on Monday, August 29th at 7:00pm (EDT).

As part of its programming for The Ontario Miniature Print Exhibition (TOMPE2022), PRINT LONDON will present a virtual artist talk by Canadian artist and TOMPE2022 Juror, Jenn Law, on Monday, August 29th, 2022, at 7:00 p.m.

One of the three Jurors for this national printmaking exhibition, Law will speak about her practice as an independent artist, writer and work as co-founder of an experimental publishing platform.

Jenn Law is an artist, writer, and editor living in Toronto. Working across print, clay, and animation, Law’s practice explores language ecologies, the historical archive/library, literary objects, and processes of material storytelling. She holds a PhD in Anthropology from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, UK, a BA in Anthropology from McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, and a BFA from Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario. Law has exhibited her work internationally, including exhibitions in Canada, the United States, Australia, Taiwan, Spain, and the United Kingdom. In addition, Law has published widely on contemporary art and print culture, and has worked as a lecturer, curator, and editor in Canada, the UK, and South Africa. She is the co-editor of Printopolis, published in 2016 by Open Studio, Toronto, and contributed to such publications as Craftwork as Problem Solving: Ethnographic Studies of Design and Making (2016) and Printmaking in the Expanded Field (2017). In 2017, Law co-founded the experimental publishing platform Arts + Letters Press and is the co-editor of the journal art + reading.

A recording of Law’s talk can be accessed on Print London’s YouTube channel.

PRINT LONDON would like to thank the following sponsors for generously supporting The Ontario Miniature Print Exhibition (TOMPE2022):

Museum London
Satellite Project Space
Fanshawe College School of Design
London Arts Council through the City of London’s Community Arts Investment Program