Chartrand is a self-taught ceramicist. She was initially inspired by the Pueblo San Ildefonso potter Maria Martinez, whose instructional videos she initially learned from. Her early works were autobiographical, focussing on the tension between Indigenous and European culture in Vancouver.[2] In her formative years, she was influenced by trips to the Vancouver Museum located at the Carnegie Community Centre in downtown Vancouver where she developed an awareness of the design and painting of ceramics.
An early motif utilized in her work was referencing Mimbres bowl forms and surface decoration,[3] which is a design language she has referenced back to frequently in her work from renditions of historical Mimbres pots,[4] to public art installation like the one done for the Olivia Skye Public Housing Building[5] which featured illustrations of women in the style of Mimbres surface decoration.
Her series "If This is What You Call, ‘Being Civilized’, I'd rather go back to Being a ‘Savage’" is an evolution of the Mimbres pots, keeping the same bowl form but adding more personalized surface decoration from the artist. It currently exists in the private collection of contemporary art collector Bob Rennie[6] and the permanent collection of the Surrey Art Gallery.[7]
Works have also been collected by the Glenbow Museum, the AMOCA in Pomona Ca, the Gardiner Museum, the Museum of Anthropology, the Crocker Art Museum and the Saskatchewan Arts Board. Her work has been included in anthologies on arts and crafts, including Utopic Impulses: Contemporary Ceramics Practice.[8]
Education
Chartrand studied for her Diploma in the Fine Arts Program at Langara College before being accepted to the Emily Carr University of Art and Design where she graduated with her BFA in 1998. She continued on to finish her master's degree in Fine Arts in Ceramics at the University of Regina (2003).
Exhibitions
Playing With Fire, Vancouver, BC: Museum of Anthropology, 2019[9]
the poets have always preceded, North Vancouver, BC: Griffin Art Projects, 2019[10]
Bad Stitch: Audie Murray, Judy Chartrand, and Jeneen Frei Njootli Vancouver, BC: Macaulay & Co. Fine Art, 2018[11]
What a Wonderful World, Vancouver, BC: Bill Reid Gallery 2016-17[12]