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Sponsored By
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__________
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“An artist is a creature
driven by demons.
He doesn't know why
they choose him and
he's usually too busy
to wonder why”
William Faulkner
American writer
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A multi-disciplined artist, Oryst Sawchuk defies
simple classification. He is an architect, a
graphic designer, a painter, a sculptor and a
musician, as well as an urban planner, and a
business and community leader. His artistic
expression is rooted in social consciousness.
“Ever since my days as a student at the School
of Architecture at the University of Manitoba,
I’ve been under the influence of the modernist
architectural movement of the 1920s and
1930s, which was not just a revolution in style
but had social ambitions to enhance the conditions
under which ordinary people lived,” says
Sawchuk, the son of Ukrainian immigrants.
“I suppose this influence has resonated in all
the things I do whether it be in architecture or
planning, or art or music, or the preservation
of our heritage resources. My underlying concern
has always been for the human condition
and how it may be improved.”
As senior partner of Sawchuk Peach Associates
Architects Planners, his architectural contributions
to the city include the original Grace
Hartman Amphitheatre at Bell Park (demolished
in 2009), the Sudbury Transit Centre,
the main fire hall in downtown Sudbury, Lo-
Ellen Park Secondary School, the N’Swakamok
Native Friendship Centre, and Market Square.
Graphic art and sculpture are a natural extension
of his architecture. Sawchuk captures
Sudbury’s proud history through the mediums
of pen, ink and watercolour. He has created a
legacy of heritage drawings and paintings that
capture the spirit of determination upon which
this city was built. His sketches for Northern
Life delighted readers for more than a decade.
In 1998, he contributed 15 pen and ink
sketches to Street Names of Downtown Sudbury,
a heritage book published by Sudbury’s
Your Scrivener Press.
In the mid-1990s, he established the Acorn
Gallery on Oak (Sudbury’s AGO), where he
can often be found encouraging young artists
to explore their own talent and artistic expression.
The gallery is a popular stop on the annual
artists’ studio tour.
While contributing to the urban landscape of
the city, Sawchuk has also worked diligently to
champion the preservation and restoration of
heritage buildings as monuments to Sudbury’s
history. He is chair of Greater Sudbury’s Heritage
Advisory Committee as well as a member
of the city’s archives committee. In 2008, as
part of Greater Sudbury’s 125th anniversary
celebrations, Sawchuk hosted two exhibitions
of his drawings of heritage buildings—many of
which no longer exist except in our collective
memory.
As an artist and as a volunteer, Sawchuk has,
over the years, been a contributor of his time and talent to the Sudbury Arts Council, the
Art Gallery of Sudbury and the Sudbury Theatre
Centre. He created the original logo for
the Sudbury Theatre Centre.
A former president of the Sudbury Chamber
of Commerce, Sawchuk was active in the
business organization for many years, and
was an early lobbyist for the four-laning of
the Trans-Canada Highway. As a member of
the chamber’s arts committee, he was instrumental
in the installation of the Spirit of ‘86
sculpture, which stands next to the Sudbury
Theatre Centre.
True to his Ukrainian heritage, he has been
president of the Association of United Ukrainian
Canadians, Sudbury branch, for more
than a decade, and has represented Sudbury
at national gatherings in Toronto, Winnipeg
and Edmonton. With his guidance and encouragement,
the association has produced
many musical and theatrical events including
the most recent, Four Poets Who Changed
the World (Jan. 31).
Sawchuk has performed in community bands
since the 1940s, playing the mandolin and
trombone. Since 1994, he has conducted the
Jubilee Folk Ensemble. In this role, he has devoted
himself to helping promote and foster
community pride in the fabric of Sudbury’s
multi-cultural heritage. The ensemble is invited
to play for numerous community groups.
In 2005, he conducted for the Tsunami RX
Benefit Concert, and in 2007, was conductor
when the Jubilee Folk Ensemble entertained
thousands during Canada Day celebrations at
the Sudbury Arena.
Sawchuk’s focus on keeping the heritage and
culture of this city alive and well is reflected
in his architectural designs, paintings, sculptures,
music and community spirit.
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