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   | Finalists for the 2003 Saidye Bronfman Award 
 Susan Edgerley is one of the most innovative and outstanding 
glass sculptors in Canada. Edgerley has been involved with 
Espace Verre (Centre des métiers du verre du Québec) 
since 1988. She has taught at the school and served as the 
facility's president, bringing to both positions dedication and 
innovation. Edgerley is an exceptional artist who works in glass 
and other craft media (paper, metal, wood) to create a personal 
vision that comments on the fragility of life.
 
Edgerley has conducted workshops and given lectures throughout 
North America, in Belgium and in Spain. She has exhibited across 
Canada and in China, Finland, Germany and the United States. In 
2000, she organized the exhibition of Canadian glass 
10 North for the Glass Art Society's International 
Conference in New York; and in 2002, she was a member of the 
Canadian Mission to the Glass Art Society's International 
Conference in Amsterdam. Edgerley's pieces can be found in 
numerous private and public collections, including the Canadian 
Museum of Civilization, the Musée national des beaux arts 
du Québec, the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, the Claridge 
Collection, Montreal, and the Wuspum Museum in Wisconsin. 
 
 Michael Hosaluk, recognized as one of the world's most creative 
wood "turners", is based near Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. 
Hosaluk is a member of the Royal Canadian Academy, is active on 
the Steering and Advisory committees of the Furniture Society of 
North America and was the coordinator of the biennial 
International Wood Furniture/Turning Conference from 1982-2002. 
His work has been exhibited throughout Canada, the United 
States, England, Germany and Japan. Hosaluk's pieces can also be 
found in the permanent collections of Her Majesty Queen 
Elizabeth II, Buckingham Palace; Zhao Xiu, Governor of Jilin 
Province, China; Idemitsu Corporation, Tokyo; the Los Angeles 
County Museum of Art; the Detroit Institute of Arts; the Yale 
University Art Gallery; the Minneapolis Institute of Arts; and 
the Royal Ontario Museum. "Scratching the Surface: Michael 
Hosaluk" is a monograph on the artist's work released in 
2002 by Guild Publishing.
 
 
 Paul Mathieu, one of Canada's most highly respected ceramic 
artists, is based in Vancouver, British Columbia and teaches at 
the Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design. He has lectured and 
demonstrated throughout Canada, Australia, the United States, 
France, Hungary and Mexico and has written extensively about 
ceramics in major international publications. Mathieu's articles 
on ceramics are used as course material at colleges and 
universities across Canada, and he has recently published 
Sexpots: Eroticism in Ceramics a book that advocates 
awareness of contemporary ceramics to a broad audience. In 2000, 
Paul Mathieu received the Jean A. Chalmers National Craft Award, 
considered one of Canada's most prestigious visual arts prizes. 
Mathieu's pieces can be found in the permanent collections of 
the Victoria and Albert Museum, London; the Museum for 
Contemporary Ceramic Art, Shigaraki, Japan; the Los Angeles 
County Museum of Art; the Nelson Fine Arts Center, Kansas City; 
the Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art, Toronto; the Montreal Museum 
of Fine Arts; the Musée national des beaux arts du 
Québec; and the Canadian Clay and Glass Gallery, 
Waterloo, Ontario.
 
 
 Walter Ostrom is internationally recognized as a major force in 
the world of contemporary ceramics. Based in Halifax, Nova 
Scotia, Ostrom is currently Professor of Ceramics at the Nova 
Scotia College of Art and Design. Ostrom is regarded 
internationally as a technical and academic expert in low-fire 
maiolica production. Walter Ostrom has conducted hundreds of 
lectures and demonstrations in Canada, the United States, 
Europe, Asia and Australia. His pieces can be found in the 
permanent collections of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London; 
the Academy of Art and Design, Tsinghua University, Beijing; the 
Boston Museum of Fine Arts; the New York State College of 
Ceramics at Alfred University, New York; the Art Gallery of Nova 
Scotia; the Burlington Arts Centre, Ontario; the Dalhousie Art 
Gallery, Halifax; the Claridge Collection, Montreal; and the 
Canadian Museum of Civilization.
 
   
 Gordon Peteran is one of Canada's leading artists creating 
site-specific works of art and furniture for public and private 
spaces. Based in Toronto, Ontario, Peteran's work has been 
exhibited throughout Canada and the United States. He is a 
member of the Royal Canadian Academy and in 2001 received the 
Jean A. Chalmers National Craft Award, considered one of 
Canada's most prestigious visual arts prizes. Peteran has been 
an active lecturer and educator at the Rhode Island School of 
Design, the California College of Art and Crafts, Sheridan 
College School of Art and Design and the Ontario College of Art 
& Design.
 
Peteran's public art commissions include work for the City of 
Toronto; the Glenn Gould Foundation; the Canadian Crafts Museum, 
Vancouver; the University of Toronto; and the Whitby Psychiatric 
Hospital. His work is represented in numerous private and 
corporate collections. 
 
 Finalists for the 2002 Saidye Bronfman Award
 Finalists for the 2001 Saidye Bronfman Award
 Finalists for the 2000 Saidye Bronfman Award
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