Ingrid Baxter Explained

Ingrid Baxter
Birth Place:Spokane, Washington
Known For:Conceptual artist, photographer
Movement:Conceptual art

Ingrid Baxter is a conceptual artist, a co-founder of N.E. Thing Co. and founder of Deep Cove Canoe and Kayak Centre in Deep Cove, North Vancouver where she currently operates.[1]

Life and career

Baxter was born in Spokane, Washington in 1938 under the name of Elaine (later changed to Ingrid).[1] [2] She studied classical piano performance at the University of Idaho and graduated with a Bachelor of Art in 1960.[3] While studying she met artist Iain Baxter and they married in 1959. She then taught at Washington State University in Pullman, Washington along with her husband.[4] Iain, Ingrid and John Friel established the art group "IT" but it only lasted one year before Iain and Ingrid split off to form N.E. Baxter Thing Co. This was later changed and legally established in 1967 to N.E.Thing Co. to maintain anonymity.[5] Ingrid and Iain went on to have two children, who would travel with them for art projects.[6]

After the couple split, Ingrid moved on to get her master's degree and founded the Deep Cove Canoe and Kayak Centre, which has been running for over 35 years.[7] It has grown substantially with more than 60 employees facilitating the Deep Cove location.

N.E. Thing Co.

See main article: N.E. Thing Co.. Iain and Ingrid Baxter worked collaboratively to form N.E.Thing Co. They set up their company with a research department, a projects department, a photo department, a things department and so on. The Baxters played upon situationists' ideas and incorporated Henri Lefebvre's philosophies into everyday life.[8] Their art practice often involved inviting other artists, curators, and officials over to their home and studio in North Vancouver for social gatherings or to stay for periods of time. Because their income was becoming more unstable, they built a restaurant called "Eye Scream" as a survival technique and art project. The project brought them into more debt and the two ended up splitting because of the trauma. When Ingrid and Iain divorced in 1978, the company also disbanded.

Many years after the split of N.E.Thing Co. in 2018, the MacKenzie Art Gallery exhibited a response to one of the N.E.Thing Co. exhibitions "Celebration of the Body" from 1976.[9]

Honours

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ingrid Baxter. Ruins in Process: Vancouver Art in the Sixties. April 3, 2013.
  2. Web site: Iain Baxter&. Baird. Daniel. March 27, 2013. The Canadian Encyclopedia.
  3. Book: MacDonald, Colin. "A Dictionary of Canadian Artists" A-F Revised and Expanded. Canadian Paperbacks Publishing Ltd.. 1997. 0-919554-21-0. Ottawa. 205.
  4. Book: Iain Baxter&: Works 1958–2011 . Art Gallery of Ontario . Moos, David . 2012 . Toronto, Ont. . 41 . 0864926464.
  5. Web site: IAIN AND INGRID BAXTER / N.E. THING CO.. www.leftmatrix.com. March 9, 2019.
  6. Smith. William. April 2014. Corporate Aesthetics: Ingrid Baxter of N.E. Thing Co.. Art in America.
  7. Web site: Deep Cove Kayak Centre. Deep Cove Kayak. en. March 9, 2019.
  8. Web site: Siting the Banal: The Expanded Landscapes of the N.E. Thing Co.. Shaw. Nancy. 1993. Vancouver Art in the Sixties.
  9. Web site: The MacKenzie and New Dance Horizons present "Re: Celebrating the Body". January 23, 2018. Galleries West.
  10. Web site: Members since 1880 . Royal Canadian Academy of Arts . September 11, 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110526215339/http://www.rca-arc.ca/en/about_members/since1880.asp . May 26, 2011 .