Don Proch DCL (born 1942) is a multimedia artist known for complex installations, masks, and silkscreen prints.
His work is centered in his imaginings of the Canadian Prairies combined with references to the Asessippi Valley, his life there and with global concerns of climate change.
In 1972 the Gallery held a solo exhibition of his work entitled The Legend of Asessippi: Space Drawings by the Ophtalmia Co. of Inglis, Manitoba (1972).
Others joined including Doug Proch, artist Kelly Clark, Glen Tinley, Ernest Mayer, Gord Bonnell and Patrice.
[12] Through his work which includes silkscreen prints made at the Grand Canadian Western Screen Shop, Proch has imagined a characteristic image of the prairies but added a perception of the environment and climate change.
[11] His installation-sculpture and masks[1] often have a moulded fibreglass structure on which he worked with silverpoint, graphic and colored pencil, and to which he added found objects from his environment.