Marcel Dzama, born in 1974 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, is renowned for his fantastical and surreal visual language, populated by a cast of humans, animals, and hybrid beings rendered in pencil, ink, watercolor, and even unconventional materials like root-beer syrup. Drawing inspiration from a diverse range of sources—including childhood fascinations with creatures like the Wolfman and Dracula, as well as artistic forebears such as Marcel Duchamp, Francisco Goya, William Blake, and Francis Picabia—Dzama crafts imaginative worlds that are simultaneously whimsical and unsettling, lyrical and grotesque, chaotic yet meticulously composed.Dzama’s early works often featured sparse compositions—three or four figures suspended against stark white backgrounds, evoking the erasure of horizon lines in the snow-laden landscapes of his native Winnipeg. After relocating to New York in 2004, his imagery grew increasingly complex and populated: dense with flocks of bats and owls, masked ballerinas wielding rifles, and parades of surreal characters clad in polka-dots or nothing at all. Approaching his drawings as frozen moments from stage performances, Dzama integrates elements of choreography to orchestrate his crowded scenes into elegant formations. His practice has evolved to include socio-political themes, reflecting on contemporary media and American politics through allegory and satire.A co-founder of the Winnipeg-based collective The Royal Art Lodge, Dzama has long embraced collaboration. His creative partnerships span disciplines, involving artists like Raymond Pettibon, actress Amy Sedaris, and institutions such as the New York City Ballet, with whom he has co-created performances, drawings, and films.Dzama earned his BFA from the University of Manitoba in 1997. His accolades include the Hnatyshyn Foundation Award for Outstanding Achievement as an Artist (Ottawa, 2013), the ARCO Award (Madrid, 2012), and the New Artist Award at Art Cologne (2000). He has exhibited internationally, with major solo shows at institutions such as the University of Michigan Museum of Art (2018), Kunstmuseum Thun (2014), Museo de Arte de Zapopan (2012), the Gemeentemuseum in The Hague (2011), and the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal (2010), among many others.Marcel Dzama currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.