Category Archives: Workshops

Rolande Souliere Hosts Student Workshops at Aboriginal Gathering Place

Artist Rolande Souliere holds out a caribou tuft in-progress during a workshop at the Aboriginal Gathering Place at ECU. (Photo by Perrin Grauer)

By Perrin Grauer
[Originally posted on ECU News.]

The celebrated artist aims to help Indigenous students connect more closely with their practices and one another ahead of the upcoming Indigenous art exhibition, which opens on Feb. 1 at Emily Carr.

Ahead of the upcoming Indigenous artists’ exhibition at Emily Carr University, artist Rolande Souliere is leading a series of workshops at the Aboriginal Gathering Place (AGP).

A Toronto-born member of the Michipicoten First Nation, Rolande will give students support and guidance aimed at producing artwork for the upcoming Indigenous exhibition and increasing visual analysis within their practices.

“It’s good for emerging Indigenous artists to meet each other and develop friendships and networks,” Rolande remarks from her studio in North Vancouver where she is currently an artist-in-residence at Griffin Art Projects.

“It’s important to connect and share stories. The AGP has a lot of interesting materials that are also very traditional. It’ll be good to abstract those materials with students and see what they come up with.”

Artist and ECU student Nevada Lynn displays a drum which will be completed by fellow artist and ECU student Georgina “G” McBride for inclusion in the Frybread as Fok exhibition. (Photo by Perrin Grauer)
Artist and Manager of Aboriginal Programs at ECU Kajola Morewood works on her “Inuit yoyo” ahead of the show. (Photo by Perrin Grauer)

While Rolande has earned an international reputation for her experimental, multi-disciplinary practice, she came to art later in life. Having worked as a computer programmer in Canada, she moved to Sydney, Australia in the late 1990s. As a mother to two young children, she began looking for another career path.

“My mother said, ‘Why don’t you do an art degree?’” Rolande remembers. “I had never painted anything in my life. I did traditional regalia, but very badly. My mother said, ‘You’re always talking about art. You’re looking at art. Just give it a go.’”

Rolande began painting and assembling a portfolio, earning her admission to the BFA program at the Sydney College of the Arts. With tuition and childcare assistance from her First Nation, Rolande threw herself into her practice.

She entered the art school as a painter with a particular love for abstraction. Soon after, instructor and artist Mikala Dwyer introduced Rolande to installation art.

“I’ve never looked back,” she says. Working with industrial materials led to public artworks, and eventually to what she calls ‘socially engaged’ or ‘community art’.

Rolande has since earned a Master of Visual Arts degree, a PhD and a presence in galleries in Canada, Australia and beyond. She notes her cross-continental career was built on hard work in the community as much as in the studio.

Read the full article on ECU News.