“Vivian makes the world joyful” is a phrase that has been repeated many times.
Vivan’s creativity takes many forms over her 50 year career as an artist:
paintings, food, architecture, gardens, music, dance, and events.
Biography

Reiss has traveled widely, and her wanderlust is an important element in her work. She has lived in yurts with nomadic herders in the mountains of Kyrgyzstan, painted elephants in Africa, and studied dance in Bali. Reiss’ background in numerous art forms, from dance to sculpture to the culinary arts suffuses her art with multiple visions of artistry, including the art of living which she paints with wide strokes. Her collection of ethnocultural artifacts, ranging from miniature kitchens to Central Asian silk caftans, are reflected in her work and showcased in her larger-than-life home.

In addition to the Triennial, Reiss had a concurrent show at The Canadian Embassy in Tokyo of Reiss’ portraits of prominent Canadians in the arts. Her portraits are known for their intimacy between subject, artist, and art. A catalog of Reiss’ portraits has been published, including a wide range of subjects – portraits of friends, acquaintances, as well as portrait commissions.
Reiss’ talents go beyond the canvas. She has designed numerous architectural projects (over 60 projects in Toronto), created integrated multimedia performance events, created installations, has facilitated numerous social events and salons, and designed costumes, clothing, gardens, and furniture; and is currently working on a cookbook.
Reiss has always rejected rigid or dogmatic approaches to art. “My modus operandi does not restrict itself to a rigid field of artistic tenets. My tenet is merely ‘the art shall speak for itself. I advocate the freedom to express and interpret. I don’t believe that for something to be good, really good, it has to be arcane, or painful. That is a myth that is outdated. Joy is a vastly underrated artistic expression.”
About | Quotes about Reiss | Curriculum Vitae