Category Archives: Exhibitions

Films by Sydney Frances Pascal Show in ‘Whitney Biennial 2024: Even Better Than the Real Thing’

 

Sydney Frances Pascal in April, 2024, with a handmade, animal-hide drum. (Photo by Perrin Grauer)

By Perrin Grauer (Originally posted on ECU News

A pair of films by the artist, ECU staff member, and alum will screen during the renowned exhibition at one of the international art-world’s premier institutions.

A pair of short films by artist and ECU staff member Sydney Frances Pascal (MFA 2023) have been selected to show at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, NY.

Titled distance and n̓áskan nwálhen ninskúz7a (i am going to meet my daughter), the films trace the intergenerational struggle to reconnect undertaken by Sydney’s family.

Having attended an opening for the artists and curators, Sydney says it felt “wild” to meet renowned Indigenous artists as well as art-world luminaries like curator Meg Onli and Whitney director Scott Rothkopf.

“They were all super friendly and sweet,” she says. “They said, ‘You’re Whitney family, we want you to come back. We’re so excited you’re here with us.’ I was just kind of in awe. All I could think of were artists I studied who’ve shown at the Whitney — the Rebecca Belmores of the world. It was a little surreal and kind of strange to think that I was there, too.”

Both films, which were created during Sydney’s studies in the MFA program at Emily Carr, air on May 3 as part of Whitney Biennial 2024: Even Better Than the Real Thing. They are included among works by by Samí, Mongolian, Mapuche, Inuk and Native American artists in a film program titled The Land Wants You, organized by guest curator asinnajaq. Sydney will also participate in a conversation following the screening along with asinnajaq, Samí photographer and director Carl-Johan Utsi, and fellow biennial artists Kite and Lada Suomenrinne.

Still frames from Sydney Frances Pascal’s 2022 film, distance. (Images courtesy Sydney Frances Pascal)

Sydney’s family was one of many shattered by the Sixties Scoop. Her mother was separated from her extended family for most of her life. Sydney, a member of the Lil’wat Nation, was born on Vancouver Island and grew up in Alberta. It was only as an adult that she reconnected with her Lil ̓wat7úl community and came to understand her family’s story of displacement.

distance, made in 2022, imagines a search conducted by Sydney’s grandmother whose daughter — Sydney’s mother — was taken without her consent by child welfare authorities in the 1960s. Filmed on Wreck Beach on Musqueam territory, the camera peers quietly into fog-shrouded forests and then out to sea. Sydney, fully clothed, eventually enters the water to swim and then float, a tiny speck on a vast grey ocean.

n̓áskan nwálhen ninskúz7a (i am going to meet my daughter), made in 2023, draws on archival audio from a 1990s BCTV news feature capturing the reunion between Sydney’s grandmother and her adult daughter. The archival audio is complemented by a voiceover from Sydney, recorded at Lillooet Lake, on Lil’wat territory, as well as a Lil’wat song that plays at the end.

“I was thinking through her perspective about what it’s like to be able to go home, and what it means to be able to have that connection to home because of her,” Sydney says.

One of the voice clips is drawn from the naming ceremony that took place on the first day Sydney’s mother and grandmother met in person.

“My grandma says, ‘I still want to hang onto the ties of our history, and I know it may stop at Maria, but it was important I gave her a name.’” But it didn’t stop with my mother, and now me and my brothers are here and we’re doing well. I’m trying to learn the language and other traditions, and I hope she’s happy.”

Still frames from Sydney Frances Pascal’s 2023 film, n̓áskan nwálhen ninskúz7a (i am going to meet my daughter). (Images courtesy Sydney Frances Pascal)

Her grandmother, a longtime land defender and Indigenous rights advocate, is now deceased. Her story is emblematic of the colonial history that continues to shape lives across the country. And Sydney notes this is still living history. She herself is part of the first generation in her family to have not been taken from their parents — a fact she calls “inconceivable,” for all its real and lasting impacts.

Threading the needle between her characteristic humility and resoluteness, Sydney notes that taking on the work of speaking for an entire nation’s history is no longer her — or her family’s — burden to bear.

“Art is for everyone to look at or consume, but I only really make it for my family’s approval and for my community,” she says. “I’m doing it for me and my mom, my family, to feel better and to move through something we didn’t really know how to get past. As long as they’re happy, I feel like I’m doing it in a good way. I really don’t care what anyone else thinks.”

Though she adds that “to have my grandmother’s voice travel to different parts of the world, echoing out there is amazing.”

Look for distance and n̓áskan nwálhen ninskúz7a (i am going to meet my daughter) in the 2024 virtual edition of The Show graduating student exhibition.

Visit Sydney’s website and follow her on Instagram to learn more about her work.

Maria-Margaretta, Parvin Peivandi, Malina Sintnicolaas Solo Shows Debut at BAF

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New works by each of the artists and ECU alums will be on view at Burrard Arts Foundation through Oct. 23.

A trio of artists and ECU alums are featured in solo exhibitions at Burrard Arts Foundation (BAF) this month.

On Sept. 9, new works from resident artists Maria-Margaretta (BFA 2018) and Parvin Peivandi (BFA 2012) were unveiled, as was a new Garage installation from Malina Sintnicolaas (MFA 2020).

Maria-Margaretta’s Resistance in the front yard with spitz, cigs, and coffee “posits the front yard as a site of great cultural significance,” according to the BAF. “Margaretta asks whether the front yard, as an everyday space instilled with lived experiences, can be a site of cultural learning and communication.”

Full article: https://www.ecuad.ca/news/2021/maria-margaretta-parvin-peivandi-malina-sintnicolaas-solo-shows-debut-at-baf

Sonny Assu’s New Solo Exhibition Opens at Equinox Gallery

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The new show, titled Omnibus, addresses the ways traditions of the past inform contemporary ideas and identities, particularly as related to the effects of colonization.

An exhibition of new works by artist Sonny Assu (BFA 2002) is now open for viewing at Equinox Gallery.

Titled Omnibus, the show includes collage and paint works which advance Sonny’s longstanding exploration of contemporary political and ideological issues via the convergence of Indigenous and pop-culture iconography.

“Assu’s work focuses on Indigenous rights, consumerism, branding and technology as totemic representations of identity,” Equinox writes in an exhibition text. “Within this, he addresses the ways in which traditions of the past have come to inform contemporary ideas and identities, particularly as related to the effects of colonization, and the loss of language and cultural resources in Indigenous culture.”

Full article: https://www.ecuad.ca/news/2021/sonny-assu-omnibus

New Access Gallery Show Features Works, Curation by ECU Community Members

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Posted on August 24, 2021 | Updated August 26, 2021, 7:42AM

Titled Conditional Belonging, the exhibition aims to make space for “alternative ways of being, knowing, and making.”

A new exhibition at Access Gallery curated by artist and curator Rebecca Wang (BFA 2021) foregrounds personal and communal narratives around power relations, access, resistance, and healing.

The show, titled Conditional Belonging, features work by local emerging artists Art Action EarwigTaryn Goodwin (4th year BFA), Maria-Margaretta (BFA 2018), Sydney Pickering (BFA 2021), Neena Robertson (BFA 2021), and Tadafumi Tamura each of whom contributes to the show’s enactment of “a temporary belonging for alternative ways of being, knowing, and making,” according to Rebecca’s curatorial statement.

“Beginning with the question, ‘What does it mean to make art with limited access and capacity?’, the making of this exhibition has evolved into an investigation of how multi-faceted limited access and/or capacity could look like for artists in intersectional positions.”

Full Article: https://www.ecuad.ca/news/2021/new-access-gallery-show-features-works-curation-by-ecu-community-members

Contemporary Women Sculptors Front and Centre in New Show Celebrating Charles Marega

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Posted on August 19, 2021

The late Italian artist is best known for his lion sculptures which stand at the foot of the Lions Gate Bridge.

new exhibition brings together sculptures by an intergenerational group of women from the ECU community in celebration of — and in contrast to — a seminal Vancouver artist and historical arts figure, Charles Marega.

Marega, who received classical arts training in Italy before emigrating to Vancouver in 1909, is perhaps best known today for his two lion sculptures, which stand at the south end of the Lions Gate Bridge. Between 1925 and 1939, he also served as the first instructor of sculpture at the Vancouver College of Art, which would later become Emily Carr University.

Currently showing at Vancouver’s Il Centro Italian Cultural Centre, the show, titled Pathways to Modernity, explores Marega’s “legacy and impact on the artistic landscape of Vancouver through a study in contrasts,” according to the exhibition text. Featuring sculptural works by artists Connie Sabo (BFA 2003), Sydney Pickering (BFA 2021), Lyndsay McKay (BFA 2020), and Debbie Tuepah (BFA 2011), the show takes Marega as one point along an evolution of the arts in British Columbia.

Full Article: https://www.ecuad.ca/news/2021/contemporary-women-sculptors-charles-marega

Christine Howard Sandoval’s CAG Show An ‘Utterance in Unlearning History’

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By Perrin Grauer

Posted on February 09, 2021 | Updated February 09, 2021, 10:14AM

The new exhibition of works by the artist and ECU faculty member is showing in downtown Vancouver through May 2.

A new exhibition of works by artist and ECU faculty member Christine Howard Sandoval at the Contemporary Art Gallery (CAG) explores the relationships between land, language, image and archive, according to exhibition co-curators Julia Lamare and Kimberly Phillips.

The show, entitled A wall is a shadow on the land, brings together drawings, adobe sculptures, and documents from both personal and public collections, as well as an installation at the CAG’s permanent satellite site, at Yaletown-Roundhouse Station.

“With A wall is a shadow on the land Howard Sandoval makes present Indigenous ways of thinking about space and time, and unsettles the archive through the act of embodied making, enlargement, recontextualization, and collage,” Julia and Kimberly write in their introductory essay.

“The stratum of material across spaces encourages multiple entry-points for interpretation, calls into question the use-value of the image, and resists the archive’s power to cement colonial pasts. Howard Sandoval’s act of archival dislodging and material reclamation is an utterance in unlearning history.”

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Centre-stage in the CAG exhibition is Christine’s use of adobe — a composite of sand, clay, water, and straw or grass, used to make a “sun-baked mud brick.” Christine, an Obispeño Chumash and Hispanic artist, belongs to a family whose members include generations of women who worked as adobe brick makers.

This ancient and commonly used Indigenous building material has “become synonymous with the structures built by Spanish missionaries who colonized the Pacific Coast of the United States from the seventeenth century onwards.”

The large-scale wall works in A wall is a shadow on the land are created by drawing with masking tape on paper, and then applying a thick layer of adobe overtop. The masking tape is then removed before the mud can dry. A resolutely physical composition emerges, “at once quoting and flattening the elemental forms of the Spanish mission architecture vernacular,” Julia and Kimberly write.

“By rendering her images with the very building material of the iconic architecture, Howard Sandoval resists its colonial appropriation, reclaims its deep history and asserts a new visual language for its encounter.”

Full article by Perrin Grauer: christine-howard-sandovals-cag-show-an-utterance-in-

unlearning-history

Skeena Reece Artist Talk to Accompany ‘Honey and Sweetgrass’ Exhibition

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By Perrin Grauer

Posted on January 27, 2021 | Updated January 27, 2021, 8:03AM

The new solo exhibition showcases the vast range of Skeena’s diverse practice.

Multidisciplinary artist Skeena Reece will give an artist talk on Wednesday, Jan. 27, in support of her newly opened exhibition in Harrisonburg, Virginia.

The exhibition, entitled Honey and Sweetgrass, opens Jan. 25 at the Duke Hall Gallery. Works from across Skeena’s diverse practice will be on view, including performance art, videos, photography and installation works. The works advance Skeena’s ongoing engagement with “Indigenous culture, myth and humour,” and examination of “racial stereotypes and the effects of colonization,” according to the gallery.

“Skeena Reece is an important voice in contemporary art,” Beth Hinderliter, director of the Duke Hall Gallery, says. “She offers us insight into the care, compassion and strength of Indigenous women as well as giving us critiques of the violence of colonialism.”

Full article by Perrin Grauer: skeena-reece-artist-talk-to-accompany-honey-and-sweetgrass-exhibition

New Luke Parnell Solo Show Coming to Bill Reid Gallery

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By Perrin Grauer

Posted on January 19, 2021 | Updated January 19, 2021, 10:37AM

Indigenous History in Colour explores “the relationship between Northwest Coast Indigenous oral histories, conceptual art, and traditional formline design,” according to the gallery.

A new solo exhibition of stunning recent works by multidisciplinary artist Luke Parnell (MAA 2012) is headed to the Bill Reid Gallery.

Luke Parnell is Wilp Laxgiik Nisga’a (House of Eagles) from Gingolx on his mother’s side and Haida from Massett on his father’s side.

While Luke’s training has included a traditional apprenticeship with a master Northwest Coast Indigenous carver, his use of materials is “determined on a project-by-project basis,” according to OCAD University, where he works as Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Art. That open-minded approach to materiality is on full display in Indigenous History in Colour, which opens at the Bill Reid on Feb. 2.

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Works in the exhibition include last year’s collaborative installation, Neon Reconciliation Explosion (2020). The monumental artwork combines 44 panels to form a Northwest Coast housefront in Nisga’a style. Viewed together, the works reveal a formline butterfly design. Each of the panels was painted by “55 community members with bright neon colours, in reflection of their own personal understanding of reconciliation,” according to the gallery.

Luke’s contribution, by contrast, stands stark at the centre of the work — an unfinished lumber doorway marked by the initials “TF” and “CB,” in memory of Tina Fontaine and Colten Boushie. (Fontaine’s body was found in Winnipeg’s Red River six years ago; a man charged with her murder was found not guilty in 2018. Her case was one of many that led to the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls. Boushie was shot and killed by Saskatchewan farmer Gerald Stanley in 2016; Stanley was later acquitted of charges in the case. Both verdicts sparked Indigenous-led protests nation-wide, calling for justice for the slain teens).

Full article by Perrin Grauer: https://www.ecuad.ca/news/2021/new-luke-parnell-solo-show-bill-reid-gallery

First NW Coast Art Exhibition in Hawaii Sparks ‘Powerful’ Cultural Exchange

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By Perrin Grauer

Posted on January 27, 2020 | Updated February 03, 2020, 12:18PM

Aboriginal Gathering Place Director Brenda Crabtree reflects on new connections and old histories.

Enduring cultural connections are the most powerful outcome of a recent group exhibition of Northwest Coast art in Hawaii, says Brenda Crabtree, Director of the Aboriginal Gathering Place and Special Advisor to the President on Indigenous Initiatives at Emily Carr University.

The show, to which Brenda contributed work, appeared first at the Schaefer Gallery in Kahului, on Maui, and then through the winter at the East-West Center Gallery in Honolulu. Entitled First Nations Art of British Columbia, it represents the first time works by Indigenous artists from BC have been shown in a dedicated exhibition on the Hawaiian Islands.

“The best part of both the Maui opening and the Honolulu opening were the cultural connections we had with local Indigenous people.” Brenda said. “They came out and they were so supportive. They shared their local ceremonial practice, they welcomed us in a very traditional way, and we spoke back.”

Full article by Perrin Grauer: https://www.ecuad.ca/news/2020/first-nw-coast-art-exhibition-in-hawaii-sparks-powerful-cultural-exchange