Tag Archives: exhibitions

Annual Aboriginal Art Exhibition

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We’re so excited about this year’s Aboriginal Student Art Exhibition! On National Aboriginal Day, June 21, 2013, the Mayor of the City of Vancouver took the extraordinary step of declaring a Year of Reconciliation, a year long effort that seeks to heal from the past and build new relationships between Aboriginal peoples and all Vancouverites. A year later, on June 24, 2014, the City of Vancouver formally acknowledged that the city of Vancouver is on the unceded traditional territory of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations. This was an important acknowledgement, as it validates what First Nations have been saying since before confederation.

But what does ‘unceded’ mean? In this year’s exhibition, we will explore the meaning of the term ‘unceded’, and consider how this can be applied in other contexts – art, culture, language, social traditions, traditional economies, and intellectual properties, to name a few. Participating artists will present works that speak to these contexts, and provide personal, familial and/or tribal perspectives on the idea of ‘unceded’.

Participating students will also be taking time during the semester to view another significant and related exhibit series entitled “c̓əsnaʔəm, the city before the city”, which opens in three locations beginning January 21, 2015. Here’s a link for more info on the c̓əsnaʔəm, the city before the city exhibit: http://www.thecitybeforethecity.com/

Written by Lou-ann Neel

Krista Belle Stewart at the CAG

The Contemporary Art Gallery presents a major solo exhibition by artist Krista Belle Stewart
 Motion and Moment Always
January 23 to February 15, 2015
Opening reception: Thursday, January 22, 7-10pm.
Stewart’s practice reclaims personal and cultural narratives from archival material, situating them in dialogue with contemporary Indigenous discourse and engaging the complexities of intention and interpretation. Within this reframing of documents, Stewart’s new installation considers First Nations women’s self-representation and sovereignty. Central to the exhibition is an ongoing project, a bucket filled with distinctive dried clay from land owned by Stewart on the Douglas Lake reservation, and passed down to her from her mother’s family. Not only is this a physical connection to her heritage but also a poetic response to the continued dispossession of First Nations women’s land rights.

Working with her own personal stories and those of the women she met in Nisga’a, Stewart investigates how cultural knowledge is created and exchanged, weaving together new lens-based works with archival photographs and objects from the Nisga’a Museum. These include an image originally shot by Benjamin Haldane, a Tsimshian photographer from Alaska, picturing a Nisga’a woman in a full chief’s regalia surrounded by men dressed in traditional and western clothing. Typical of his work, it offers an example of First Nations self-representation, a counter to the more usual colonial-settler’s gaze.
There is a kinship between Haldane’s and Stewart’s practices through the production of complex and diverse documents of First Nations self-representation. Within this Stewart infiltrates narratives of colonial culture and reasserts connections to pre-colonial traditions while considering the tensions present between institutions as colonial support structures and as living entities shaped by the community they represent.
Krista Belle Stewart is a member of the Upper Nicola Band of the Okanagan Nation. She holds a BFA from Emily Carr University and is currently an MFA candidate at Bard College in New York. At Western Front, Stewart produced a collaborative multimedia performance working with, circa 1918, wax-cylinder recordings by anthropologist James Alexander Teit of her great-grandmother, Terese Kaimetko. Most recently, Stewart was commissioned by the City of Vancouver as part of the “Year of Reconciliation,” Public Art Project where Her Story (2014), a public photo mural and video installation, utilized footage of a 1967 CBC documentary entitled Seraphine: Her Own Story, a scripted interpretation of her mother’s journey from residential school to becoming BC’s first Aboriginal public health nurse. This work was also exhibited in Where Does it Hurt? at Artspeak (2014). Stewart juxtaposes the 1967 film, in which her mother plays herself, alongside a video of her mother’s 2013 Truth and Reconciliation Commission interview, generating a conversation between depiction and lived experience.

Screening and Talk- Krista Belle Stewart
 Western Front, 303 East 8th Avenue, Vancouver
Thursday, January 29, 7pm

Interweavings at the RAG

interweavings-tamara-skubovius-RAG2014-200The Richmond Art Gallery in partnership with YVR Art Foundation is pleased to present Interweavings, an exhibition featuring the artwork of seven emerging BC First Nations artists and their mentors. This exhibition highlights the significance of mentoring relationships in First Nations culture, while foregrounding a grow­ing and strengthening generation of emerging First Nations art­ists whose works are continuing and challenging traditions. In ad­dition to the knowledge and skills the younger artists gain from their mentors and communities, they are also influenced by other modes of education, decolonization and globalization. Organized by Richmond Art Gallery curator Nan Capogna and guest curator Connie Watts, the exhibition includes photography, weaving, painting, jewellery and carving. A publication will accompany the exhibition.

Check out the Interweavings exhibition at the Richmond Art Gallery before it closes January 11th!
Features the artwork of Emily Carr alumni Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun, James Harry, Xwalacktun (Rick Harry), and Tamara Skubovius.

http://www.richmondartgallery.org/exhibition-interweavings-2014.php

Claiming Space Exhibition at MOA

Claiming Space: Voices of Urban Aboriginal Youth looks at the diverse ways urban Aboriginal youth are asserting their identity and affirming their relationship to both urban spaces and ancestral territories. Unfiltered and unapologetic, over 20 young artists from across Canada, the US, and around the world define what it really means to be an urban Aboriginal youth today. In doing so they challenge centuries of stereotyping and assimilation policies. This exhibit will leave visitors with the understanding that today’s urban Aboriginal youth are not only acutely aware of the ongoing impacts of colonization, but are also creatively engaging with decolonizing movements through new media, film, fashion, photography, painting, performance, creative writing and traditional art forms.

If you have a chance during the Holiday break, check out the Claiming Space exhibition at the Museum of Anthropology before it closes January 4th. It features the work of Emily Carr’s graduates and students from our degree program and Continuing Studies Summer Institutes including; Jeneen Frei Njootli, Ippiksaut Friesen, Ellena Neel, Diamond Point. Kelsey Sparrow, and Taleetha Tait

http://moa.ubc.ca/portfolio_page/claiming-space/

http://moa.ubc.ca/claimingspace/

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