Teaching Practice
Sylvia Grace Borda has been an artist and Research Associate at Emily Carr University of Art and Design, Vancouver, a past Honorary Visual Arts Fellow (2008-16) and Media Arts Lecturer at the University of Stirling, Scotland, and most recently an artist-in-residence and teaching fellow (2018-19) at Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Canada.
Sylvia studied both at the University of British Columbia (UBC 1991-1996; 1999-2001 MFA) and Emily Carr University of Art and Design (ECUAD 1993-95 BFA). Her ability to think laterally across media in regard to how conceptual strategies can be introduced into art, photography and installation were heavily influenced by her then tutors at UBC Jeff Wall, Ken Lum, and Ian Wallace (guest lecturer).
By delivering studio theory classes at UBC and ECUAD as a lecturer between 2001-2007, Sylvia gained first hand experience in further interpreting new approaches to how conceptual art could be adopted by younger artists in the development of their own practice.
Between 2007-2009, Sylvia led the MA in interdisciplinary arts as guest lecturer at Queen’s University Belfast, and taught her students how to be able to inscribe their artworks with both associative tiers of contextual and conceptual information. As MA Convener of Photography and Visual Arts at Queen’s University Belfast her responsibilities were four-fold 1) to lecture on contemporary digital photo imaging and popular cultural arts (from photography [fine art, photo montage and digital composite] to zines, blogs, interactive performance art, graphic novels, illustration, and gaming) in relation to the their past and current development. 2) to direct a fine art photography and visual arts curatorial writing program as part of on-going student development and studies and 3) to teach within the applied visual media arts programs course modules in digital studio (composition, imaging, and e-publishing) and 4) to promote research and the University by continuing to publish, exhibit, and undertake international dialogue about the delivery of photography and media arts across interdisciplinary platforms.
In addition while at Queen's University Belfast (QUB) Sylvia worked with artist and curator Keith Donnelly (Glasgow), and Sinead Morrissey (Seamus Heaney Centre Poet) to deliver a new graduate streamed program to explore the construction of linguistic and creative artworks that transverse design and cultural media production. As part of this work, she delivered a showcase exhibition, re-COLLECT-ing, of 18 student artists’ and writers’ work in their response to Queen's special collections as part of the university's centenary celebrations. This program of work was accompanied by a catalogue with contributions from both guests and participants associated with the graduate and exhibition programme. The catalogue was published by Queen’s University Belfast and the Naughton Gallery (ISBN 9780853899341; p 56)
The Picture-Text program was listed as supporting initiative for the University’s bid to win the Times Higher Award for Innovation in the Arts. Work from this curatorial programme developed by Sylvia and her students went onto win as part of QUB's submission for the Times Higher Award for Art and Innovation in 2008. This award would parallel a prize being offered by the General Governor of Canada for exceptional arts practice delivery in higher education.
After assisting with the Canadian Glocal arts initiative (2008-10) associated with the Winter Olympics 2010, Sylvia returned as a guest artist-lecturer to implement curriculum for the launch of the inaugural digital photography and media arts programme at the School of Design and Visual Art, University of Salford-Manchester (2010).
Throughout her teaching career to date, Sylvia has delivered over 120 different course modules, and designed nearly half of them. She has a wide range of subject expertise and has taught new media and photography applied, as well as, theory courses – encompassing visual art, design communication, software systems, and art history as part of studio driven and technology programs at both under and graduate levels.
Teaching Philosophy:
Integral to her practice is the encouragement of dialogue and exchange. Her courses examine how cognitive responses evolve over time in relation to design and cultural events. Her own lecturing interests lie particularly in the examination of popular culture and in the emergence of new structural and visual systems.
Overall Sylvia's teaching philosophy is to present a balance of history, theory and direct application so that students will be able to position themselves confidently in relation to contemporary and historical aesthetics. Within a context of examining past and current practices, students are encouraged to experiment and explore new techniques, alongside new ways of assessing media, criticality and self-reflection. The attainment of information (conceptual content, theoretical frameworks, and exercises) and technique (process) are balanced and equal in accomplishing a successful learning outcome (e.g. art production). Similarly, she encourages dialogue between student and teacher, emphasizing that it should always be reciprocal in order to achieve the maximum benefit.
Community Mentoring and Collaborative Engagement
Since 2009 to present, Sylvia has worked from part-time to full-time on the development of community engaged and public art projects. She was well regarded for developing FLORA WATCH (2010), a studio programme investigating local flora in Northern Ireland, which led to over 150 youth being trained to investigate and respond to the natural environment within the urban-scape. This program led to a national conference being hosted by Visual Arts Ireland discussing the long-term benefits of Sylvia’s work in community engagement and arts development.
Following this project, Sylvia led the proposal for the development of a large-scale camera obscura art-dwelling (2010-11) to be built as part of a national reconciliation program between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. This programme was part of a larger scheme Sylvia won through EU Peace III funds, which also included the delivery of a series of artist mentoring classes for artists in Counties Cavan, Monaghan, and Fermanagh.
During 2012-13, she led an arts engagement and exhibition programme entitled 'This one's for the farmer' wherein she worked diverse groups including the BC Young Farmers Association, the Canadian Military, Transport Canada, Surrey Farmer’s Market Association, and City of Surrey Planning department amongst others to create inclusive bodies of artwork about farming issues today. Through this endeavour Sylvia illustrated the value of farm land as it moves from transitional rural landscape to contemporary sites of tension in Surrey, BC, Canada caught between sub-divisions and civic redevelopments.
Throughout her residency period at the Surrey Art Gallery, BC (2013) she attracted both farmers and the arts community to talks, public days, and exhibition events. Sylvia continued to defend and define why farming is integral to the wider definition of being a Canadian. She was able to provide solid evidence about the connections between farming and its legacies to Lawren Harris. Not only was Harris a founding member of the Group of Seven but he was also the heir of a farm equipment fortune, namely the Harris-Massey company. Of note Lawren Harris used his personal funds (1910-40s) to create a contemporary framework for Canada’s arts to develop and grow. For the farming community, Sylvia was able to provide a framework illustrating how agricultural monies assisted in fostering and evolving Canada's contemporary arts scene. This research in addition to her community engagement program has started to earn her international recognition.
In 2014, Sylvia received the only EU 'Frontiers in Retreat' International artist commission given to a Canadian, and has continued to portray farming beyond its romantic stereotypical notions. While using art history as a foundation to inform her production, Sylvia has collaborated with communities to accurately produce narratives that are contemporary portraits of our time and provide reflections on the social realities of modern life farming.
Sylvia also won two additional commissions, wherein she has produced new body of works for Mustarinda, Finland, and created a set of walls mural for Azipute, Latvia. In recent (2020) Sylvia has also been selected and short-listed to develop large scale community projects for Barking, Borough of London, and Edinburgh City Councils (UK).
Additional to these activities, Sylvia also continues to disseminate her research through publications, conference speaking, and other various community support roles. For the artist her commissions and educational programming remain inter-dependent, informing and developing one another.
Sylvia Grace Borda has been an artist and Research Associate at Emily Carr University of Art and Design, Vancouver, a past Honorary Visual Arts Fellow (2008-16) and Media Arts Lecturer at the University of Stirling, Scotland, and most recently an artist-in-residence and teaching fellow (2018-19) at Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Canada.
Sylvia studied both at the University of British Columbia (UBC 1991-1996; 1999-2001 MFA) and Emily Carr University of Art and Design (ECUAD 1993-95 BFA). Her ability to think laterally across media in regard to how conceptual strategies can be introduced into art, photography and installation were heavily influenced by her then tutors at UBC Jeff Wall, Ken Lum, and Ian Wallace (guest lecturer).
By delivering studio theory classes at UBC and ECUAD as a lecturer between 2001-2007, Sylvia gained first hand experience in further interpreting new approaches to how conceptual art could be adopted by younger artists in the development of their own practice.
Between 2007-2009, Sylvia led the MA in interdisciplinary arts as guest lecturer at Queen’s University Belfast, and taught her students how to be able to inscribe their artworks with both associative tiers of contextual and conceptual information. As MA Convener of Photography and Visual Arts at Queen’s University Belfast her responsibilities were four-fold 1) to lecture on contemporary digital photo imaging and popular cultural arts (from photography [fine art, photo montage and digital composite] to zines, blogs, interactive performance art, graphic novels, illustration, and gaming) in relation to the their past and current development. 2) to direct a fine art photography and visual arts curatorial writing program as part of on-going student development and studies and 3) to teach within the applied visual media arts programs course modules in digital studio (composition, imaging, and e-publishing) and 4) to promote research and the University by continuing to publish, exhibit, and undertake international dialogue about the delivery of photography and media arts across interdisciplinary platforms.
In addition while at Queen's University Belfast (QUB) Sylvia worked with artist and curator Keith Donnelly (Glasgow), and Sinead Morrissey (Seamus Heaney Centre Poet) to deliver a new graduate streamed program to explore the construction of linguistic and creative artworks that transverse design and cultural media production. As part of this work, she delivered a showcase exhibition, re-COLLECT-ing, of 18 student artists’ and writers’ work in their response to Queen's special collections as part of the university's centenary celebrations. This program of work was accompanied by a catalogue with contributions from both guests and participants associated with the graduate and exhibition programme. The catalogue was published by Queen’s University Belfast and the Naughton Gallery (ISBN 9780853899341; p 56)
The Picture-Text program was listed as supporting initiative for the University’s bid to win the Times Higher Award for Innovation in the Arts. Work from this curatorial programme developed by Sylvia and her students went onto win as part of QUB's submission for the Times Higher Award for Art and Innovation in 2008. This award would parallel a prize being offered by the General Governor of Canada for exceptional arts practice delivery in higher education.
After assisting with the Canadian Glocal arts initiative (2008-10) associated with the Winter Olympics 2010, Sylvia returned as a guest artist-lecturer to implement curriculum for the launch of the inaugural digital photography and media arts programme at the School of Design and Visual Art, University of Salford-Manchester (2010).
Throughout her teaching career to date, Sylvia has delivered over 120 different course modules, and designed nearly half of them. She has a wide range of subject expertise and has taught new media and photography applied, as well as, theory courses – encompassing visual art, design communication, software systems, and art history as part of studio driven and technology programs at both under and graduate levels.
Teaching Philosophy:
Integral to her practice is the encouragement of dialogue and exchange. Her courses examine how cognitive responses evolve over time in relation to design and cultural events. Her own lecturing interests lie particularly in the examination of popular culture and in the emergence of new structural and visual systems.
Overall Sylvia's teaching philosophy is to present a balance of history, theory and direct application so that students will be able to position themselves confidently in relation to contemporary and historical aesthetics. Within a context of examining past and current practices, students are encouraged to experiment and explore new techniques, alongside new ways of assessing media, criticality and self-reflection. The attainment of information (conceptual content, theoretical frameworks, and exercises) and technique (process) are balanced and equal in accomplishing a successful learning outcome (e.g. art production). Similarly, she encourages dialogue between student and teacher, emphasizing that it should always be reciprocal in order to achieve the maximum benefit.
Community Mentoring and Collaborative Engagement
Since 2009 to present, Sylvia has worked from part-time to full-time on the development of community engaged and public art projects. She was well regarded for developing FLORA WATCH (2010), a studio programme investigating local flora in Northern Ireland, which led to over 150 youth being trained to investigate and respond to the natural environment within the urban-scape. This program led to a national conference being hosted by Visual Arts Ireland discussing the long-term benefits of Sylvia’s work in community engagement and arts development.
Following this project, Sylvia led the proposal for the development of a large-scale camera obscura art-dwelling (2010-11) to be built as part of a national reconciliation program between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. This programme was part of a larger scheme Sylvia won through EU Peace III funds, which also included the delivery of a series of artist mentoring classes for artists in Counties Cavan, Monaghan, and Fermanagh.
During 2012-13, she led an arts engagement and exhibition programme entitled 'This one's for the farmer' wherein she worked diverse groups including the BC Young Farmers Association, the Canadian Military, Transport Canada, Surrey Farmer’s Market Association, and City of Surrey Planning department amongst others to create inclusive bodies of artwork about farming issues today. Through this endeavour Sylvia illustrated the value of farm land as it moves from transitional rural landscape to contemporary sites of tension in Surrey, BC, Canada caught between sub-divisions and civic redevelopments.
Throughout her residency period at the Surrey Art Gallery, BC (2013) she attracted both farmers and the arts community to talks, public days, and exhibition events. Sylvia continued to defend and define why farming is integral to the wider definition of being a Canadian. She was able to provide solid evidence about the connections between farming and its legacies to Lawren Harris. Not only was Harris a founding member of the Group of Seven but he was also the heir of a farm equipment fortune, namely the Harris-Massey company. Of note Lawren Harris used his personal funds (1910-40s) to create a contemporary framework for Canada’s arts to develop and grow. For the farming community, Sylvia was able to provide a framework illustrating how agricultural monies assisted in fostering and evolving Canada's contemporary arts scene. This research in addition to her community engagement program has started to earn her international recognition.
In 2014, Sylvia received the only EU 'Frontiers in Retreat' International artist commission given to a Canadian, and has continued to portray farming beyond its romantic stereotypical notions. While using art history as a foundation to inform her production, Sylvia has collaborated with communities to accurately produce narratives that are contemporary portraits of our time and provide reflections on the social realities of modern life farming.
Sylvia also won two additional commissions, wherein she has produced new body of works for Mustarinda, Finland, and created a set of walls mural for Azipute, Latvia. In recent (2020) Sylvia has also been selected and short-listed to develop large scale community projects for Barking, Borough of London, and Edinburgh City Councils (UK).
Additional to these activities, Sylvia also continues to disseminate her research through publications, conference speaking, and other various community support roles. For the artist her commissions and educational programming remain inter-dependent, informing and developing one another.