Julie Voyce

Julie Voyce (born 1957)[1] is a Canadian multimedia artist, known for her imaginative imagery,[2] and for printmaking.

She has shown her work since 1979 in unusual and diverse places for an artist, such as, she says, “an exhibition truck, shop windows, Union Station, a Trash Palace, a vending machine, galleries and a tree in Grange Park”.

[4] To gain the technical knowledge she needed about printmaking, she became a regular of Open Studio in Toronto in the 1980s.

[13] Her inspiration was, she said, Dr. Seuss and over time, she developed her signature style of layers of shapes and dots.

[13] In 2012, she did an intervention in an existing phone booth as part of Tel-Talk,[14] a series of public art installations culminating in an exhibition at Telephone Booth Gallery, and enhanced it with handmade flowers (the flowers were stolen during the show and replaced with two pennies).