THE TIME
OF THINGS
The Continuum
of Indigenous
Customary
Practice into
Contemporary Art
Curated by
France Trépanier
Daphne Boyer
Maureen Gruben
Susan Pavel
Skeena Reece
Marika Echachis Swan
EXHIBITION
APRIL 11
JULY 7, 2018
02
03
D I RECTOR’S MESSAGE
L
ast year, Sherry Farrell Racette, Métis Canadian feminist scholar, author
and artist, presented a public lecture at Legacy Art Galleries about writing
Indigenous women’s practice into Canadian Art History. She pointed out
that, while generally Indigenous art was gaining recognition in Canada, Indigenous
women’s work was still greatly under appreciated and under represented. The
enthusiasm, words and images of Indigenous women’s work through the ages,
including weaving, embroidery, and beading, that she shared fundamentally spoke to
all of us working at Legacy. As a result, we felt a responsibility to expand education
and recognition of these vital forms of art making. We were inspired to begin
organizing an exhibition that would contribute to the building of a new “canon” of art
history that raises up the work of women engaged in applying long held Indigenous
world views and cultural practices within their contemporary art.
Previous
Skeena Reece
Touch Me, 2013
(Video Still)
The first person we approached to run the idea past was France Trépanier. I was
thrilled when France took up the topic with such sincere passion. Within minutes she
told us that she has been thinking about such a project for years and that she already
had many ideas. Since then it has been a great pleasure working with France on The
Time of Things and having the opportunity to meet and explore the artwork of this
group of women artists who are all working on Coast Salish Territory bringing their
own approaches to customary practice within contemporary art. Thank you to France
Trépanier, Daphne Boyer, Maureen Gruben, Susan Pavel, Skeena Reece, and Marika
Echachis Swan.
Mary Jo Hughes
Director
04
05
T H E TIME
OF T HIN G S
The Continuum of
Indigenous Customary
Practices into
Contemporary Art
H
istorically, European explorers and settlers have imposed their own frameworks
of understanding onto Indigenous socio-cultural structures. This had particular
ramifications for Indigenous creators. The power and agency of Indigenous
artists were mostly invisible to the newcomers. Indigenous art practices were, and are
still, often misunderstood, devalued or simply ignored, as art objects became ‘artifacts’
or ‘crafts’. These artworks rarely enter the elite gallery space reserved for ‘high art’.
Rather, they have been ‘collected’ – often stolen – by anthropologists and presented,
anonymously, in ethnographic museums in Canada and around the world.
Think of magic as a tree. The root
of supernatural ability is simply
the realization that all time exists
simultaneously. Humans experience time
as a progression of sequential events in
much the same way we see the horizon
as flat: our reality is shaped by our
limitations.
Haisla writer, Eden Robinson 1
I
want to express my gratitude
to the Songhees and Esquimalt
First Nations for allowing me to
be active, as an artist and curator of
Kanien’kehà:ka and French ancestry,
on their beautiful, unceded Lekwungen
territory.
For the exhibition The Time of Things,
the artists I have chosen to present are
five women whose work is informed by
Indigenous worldviews: Daphne Boyer,
Maureen Gruben, Susan Pavel, Skeena
Reece and Marika Echachis Swan.
They come from various nations and
backgrounds. There are many Indigenous
people who are from other territories
who now live on or near Coast Salish
land. This situation raises a number of
questions for artists. How do they locate
themselves on new territory? How do
they create art while being respectful of
the cultural sovereignty of their generous
Indigenous hosts? How do they respect
local protocols and avoid cultural
appropriation? How do these complex
enquiries inform their artistic practice?
Before contact with Europeans, Aboriginal art was deeply ingrained in everyday
life. Art was, and still is, a practice imbedded in worldview, cultural protocols and
meanings. It did not neatly reflect the concept of ‘art’ as it has been understood
from a Western perspective. Art objects were conduits for transferring knowledge
and occupied the full spectrum of practice—sacred and ceremonial, customary and
contemporary. As Gitsxan elder Doreen Jensen explained:
I would like to remind you of the Art that the Europeans found when they arrived
in our country. They found Art everywhere. In hundreds of flourishing, vital
cultures, Art was fully integrated with daily life. They saw dwellings painted with
abstract Art that was to inspire generations of European painters. Ceremonial
robes were intricately woven Art that heralded the weavers’ identity and privilege
in the community. Utilitarian objects, including food vessels, storage containers,
and clothing, were powerfully formed and decorated with the finest, most
significant Art. Each nation had its theatre, music, and choreography. The first
Europeans found hundreds of languages in use – not dialects but languages.
And in every language, our Artists created philosophical argument and sacred
ceremony, political discourse, fiction, and poetry. 2
2
1
Eden Robinson. Son of a Trickster, Vintage Canada, 2017, p. 15.
Words spoken at the opening of INDIGENA: Perspectives of Indigenous Peoples on Five Hundred Years.
Museum of Civilization in Hull, QC, 1992. Doreen Jensen, “Art History,” Give Back. North Vancouver:
Galleries Publications, 1992, pp 17–18.
08
09
W
ith the exhibition The Time of Things I want to remember and honour the
many generations of Indigenous women who have nurtured their own
creative gifts, who have respected the land, who have perfected their skills,
and who have generously transmitted their knowledge to the next generation. Today,
women are noteworthy heroes of the current revitalization of Indigenous linguistic,
cultural and artistic practices.
Indigenous artists are practicing in the aftermath of a cultural genocide. They are
actively involved in preserving traditional knowledge while creating new work that
speaks to the world we live in today. Quechua, Spanish and Croatian scholar Carol
Kalafatic elaborates the idea that:
…aboriginal artists … hold an essential place on the series of interdependent
circles that define community/nation. Aboriginal art… is a ‘cultural record’ for
our living communities, rather than for museums, and provides the instructions
we need for life. Our role as contemporary carriers of oral traditions that
are rooted in the covenant is to examine and acknowledge our relationships
with others, between people and the universe, between the physical and the
spiritual; we are story keepers who help acknowledge our peoples’ collective
responsibilities to fight, laugh, and tell stories in order to live.3
In this way, Indigenous art becomes a pursuit of knowledge that is continuous: an
inter-generational exercise of gathering, understanding and passing the enormous
sources of traditional knowledge contained in the world.
So, how does the concept of time, from various Indigenous perspectives, inform
the production of Indigenous art today? How does time influence connections to
materials, to processes? What role does intergenerational memory play in art making?
Previous
Daphne Boyer
All My Relations, 2018
(Detail)
3
Carol Kalafatic, “Keepers of the Power: Story as Covenant in the Films of Loretta Todd, Shelley Niro, and
Christine Walsh,” in Gendering the Nation: Canadian Women’s Cinema, Kay Armatage, Kass Banning, Brenda
Longfellow, and Janine Marchessault, eds. University of Toronto Press, 1999, p. 116.
T
he exhibition The Time of Things proposes to challenge the binary of
traditional and contemporary art. It considers the continuum of Indigenous
customary practices into contemporary Indigenous art. This continuum is
epistemologically rooted in Indigenous concepts of time where the past, present and
future are interconnected. In Indigenous worldviews, time is circular and cyclical. Time
is connected to land. Time is manifested through memory and oral traditions. Stories
are linked through time and place.
As Leroy Little Bear explains:
The idea of all things being in constant motion or flux leads to a holistic and
cyclical view of the world. If everything is constantly moving and changing,
then one has to look at the whole to begin to see patterns. For instance, the
cosmic cycles are in constant motion, but they have regular patterns that result
in recurrences such as the seasons of the year, the migration of the animals,
renewal ceremonies, songs, and stories. Constant motion, as manifested in
cyclical or repetitive patterns, emphasizes process as opposed to product. It
results in a concept of time that is dynamic but without motion.4
In this sense, “time plays a central role in Indigenous people’s expression of
sovereignty and struggle for self-determination.”5 Temporal sovereignty and the
possibilities of multiple temporalities can challenge Eurocentric notions of fixity, of
consigning Indigenous people and their art forms to the past.
In contrast to Western art movements, which are often based on ideas of rupture
and progress, Indigenous arts contain – and are nourished by – the continuous
manifestations of interrelatedness. One can see this as a thread linking memory,
knowledge and experience through the flux of time. In this sense, Indigenous artists
are connected to deeply rooted artistic traditions that help navigate complex streams
of meanings, even as they straddle Indigenous and Western worldviews, values and
theoretical discourses. As Dene Elder Peter Bishop explains, “We’ve always adapted to
new circumstances. We’ve explored new materials, new processes. We’ve embraced
differences and influences. We’ve always been contemporary."6
4
Leroy Little Bear. “Jagged Worldview Colliding", Reclaiming Indigenous Voice and Vision by Marie Battiste,
University of British Columbia, 2000, p. 78.
5
Mark Rifkin, Beyond Settler Time: Temporal Sovereignty and Indigenous Self-Determination, Duke University
Press, 2017, viii Preface.
6
Words spoken during a public consultation and reported: in France Trépanier. Aboriginal Arts Research
Initiative (AARI), Canada Council for the Arts, 2008, p. 17.
12
13
S
W
e are witnessing across the land – and in every artistic discipline –
the strength, the audacity and the vision of hundreds of Indigenous
women artists. These women are trailblazers. They create new ways
of understanding for those of us who live on the territory now known as Canada.
They remind each of us of our ancestors, and the places from which we come. They
insist on our responsibilities to the land and to each other. Their work is recognized
nationally and internationally.
I feel honored to bring together for this exhibition, The Time of Things, the artworks
of five of these remarkable women artists, revealing the inventiveness, versatility and
depth of their practices.
*********
Daphne Boyer is a Metis artist who has recently moved from Montreal to Victoria. Her
work is process-based and intuitive. It is activated through time and the observation
of life cycles. Daphne harvests plant material – leaves, acorns, thorns, berries and
reeds – to make iterative works. Her creative process is ingenious; she dissects,
assembles, recombines, photographs, and then scales digital images before printing
them on paper. The printed images are then embellished using women’s traditional
handwork – stitching, braiding, weaving, embroidering, beading or hand tinting.
These embellished pieces are photographed, further transformed and used as building
blocks for larger works. Her contribution to the exhibition includes a new body of work
exploring the juncture of time, memory and trace. It also celebrates her Prairie Métis
heritage and the life of her late mother Anita – the family storyteller and archivist.
usan Pavel (sa’hLamitSa) first learned to weave in the Coast Salish style
during the summer of 1996 with master teacher subiyay – Bruce Miller of the
Skokomish Nation. Each summer she would take three full months to produce
one ceremonial blanket and then gift it to various elders of the tribe. After four years
of this work someone suggested that she sell her creations and she embarked on that
path. By the seventh year she was invited to teach weaving classes. Pavel, who is not
Indigenous, is married to CHiXapKaid (Michael Pavel) of the Skokomish Indian tribe.
She was chosen to carry on the technique by Miller, and has taught well over 2500
students to date. She explains:
I knew that he saw something in me … and that I would do my absolute best to
be the strongest link in the Coast Salish weaving chain. … when I think of Coast
Salish weaving and my job there, … it was never mine as a possession. It was
only meant to pass through me and I was the conduit so that I could pass it on. 7
Skeena Reece is a Tsimshian, Gitksan, Cree and Métis multi-disciplinary artist whose
practice includes storytelling, stand-up comedy, ceremony, theatre and visual arts. In
her performance work she often embodies a persona modeled after the Sacred Clown
and other indigenous Trickster figures — mischievous, impertinent characters who call
out society's failings and indiscretions. Her performances are honest, humorous,
critically penetrating and hold the potential for raw exchanges with audiences.
“Skeena Reece has created a substantial delectus of work that often features her own
body. Whether through performance, photography or video installation, her body
maps discourses of self-representation, spirit, trauma and the politic of each.”8
Marika Swan is a Tla-o-qui-aht multidisciplinary artist living on her home territory, on
the west coast of Vancouver Island where she is reconnecting with her cultural roots.
Her most recent work is inspired by research she conducted in the Tla-o-qui-aht
collection at the Museum of Natural History in New York. The artist affirms:
When I gave birth to my daughter, it was such a radical and unquestionably
sacred miracle that I felt immediately connected to the women in my ancestry.
I wanted to reach back past the imposition of the Christian values that feel
embarrassed by the wetness of women's bodies and understand how my
ancestors saw women and women's bodies.9
Inuvialuit artist Maureen Gruben employs similar strategies of disassembling and
re-forming materials to create intimate and profoundly evocative artworks. The land
is present in her choice of material – polar bear fur, moose hides and sealskins. She
imbeds creative tension by juxtaposing new materials such as plexiglass, plastic tubing
and beads. She brings the vastness of the frozen ocean into the gallery space. Her
work establishes critical connections between rapidly changing realities of life on the
arctic lands and pressing international environmental challenges. Gruben’s practice
is permeated with activism while at the same time allowing generous room for her
materials themselves to speak. While referring explicitly inwards to localized acts
of hunting, gathering, communal preparation and sharing–and even to individual
animals–her work extends decisively outwards, exploring new visual languages.
Her current creative exploration focuses on dissolving this duality between
contemporary and traditional artistic practices by embracing the core values of her
people’s teachings and traditions. Through her research of museum items she has
been looking for clues on how her ancestors celebrated women as portals to the spirit
world.
Previous
Maureen Gruben
Memory Bones, 2016
7
Quote from a video interview with Susan Pavel produced by the Portland Art Museum, 2016
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=101&v=Wyv1VZfdcfs
8
Dana Claxton. Embellished Indigeneity: The Art Making of Skeena Reece, Oboro, 2017 (online essay).
http://www.oboro.net/sites/www.oboro.net/files/pdf/opuscules/opuscule-reece-web-en.pdf
9
Quote from an email exchange dated December 26, 2017.
15
14
A
s a curator, it is essential for me that Indigenous ways of knowing inform my
practice. My work is guided by the Indigenous principles of respect, relevance,
relationality, responsibility and reciprocity.10 I always try to be aware of how I
position my authority in relation to my many collaborators, artists and audiences.
I hope that the exhibition The Time of Things opens points of entry, moments of
connection with the artworks. I also hope that the viewer attempts to establish these
‘relations’ on Indigenous terms. And in Indigenous time.
So just for a moment, don’t worry about being on time. Be in time. Take your time.
France Trépanier
Curator, March 2018
Opposite
Susan Pavel
Our Healing
(Detail)
16
10
For more on Indigenous guiding principles, please see: Linda Tuhiwai Smith. Decolonizing Methodologies,
Research and Indigenous Peoples, Zed Books, 2013.
Shawn Wilson. Research is Ceremony, Indigenous Research Methods, Fernwood Publishing, 2008.
17
16
Daphne Boyer
*
Daphne Boyer creates works on paper
that celebrate her Indigenous heritage
and honour plants as the basis of life
on earth. Her recent body of work
honours her mother Anita and her
maternal grandmother Clémence. As
a process-based artist, she harvests
plant material to make iterative works.
Working intuitively, she dissects,
recombines, photographs, and then
scales digital images before printing
them on paper. The printed images
are then embellished using women’s
traditional handwork (stitching, braiding,
weaving, embroidering, beading or
hand tinting). These embellished pieces
are photographed, scaled, further
transformed and used as building
blocks for larger works. In 2017,
Daphne presented a solo exhibition
at Wanuskewin Heritage Park near
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, curated by
Felicia Gay. Her work has been shown
in both Canada and the USA, and is
held by collectors in Montréal, Toronto,
Saskatoon, Calgary and Strasbourg
(France).
17
Maureen Gruben
*
Maureen Gruben was born in
Tuktoyaktuk, NWT. She studied at
Kelowna Okanagan College of Fine
Arts (Diploma in Fine Arts, 1990); the
En'owkin Centre in Penticton (Diploma
in Fine Arts and Creative Writing,
2000 and Certificate in Indigenous
Political Development & Leadership,
2001); and University of Victoria (BFA,
2012). She has been recognized by
the En'owkin Centre with both their
Eliza Jane Maracle Award (1998/99)
and their Overall Achievement Award
(1999/2000). In 2011 she was awarded
the Elizabeth Valentine Prangnell
Scholarship Award from the University
of Victoria. Gruben has most recently
exhibited in the following group shows:
Blink at University of Victoria (2012) and
Custom Made at Kamloops Art Gallery
(2015), 150 Acts: Art, Activism, Impact
at Art Gallery of Guelph (2017-18),
and as part of Landmarks/Repères
2017. Her first solo show, UNGALAQ
(When Stakes Come Loose) opened at
Vancouver's grunt gallery in 2017.
Susan Pavel
*
sa’hLamitSa ~ Dr. Susan Pavel is a fiber artist living in Olympia, Washington. She first
learned Coast Salish Weaving during the summer of 1996. Each summer she would
produce one ceremonial blanket and then gift it to various elders of the tribe. By the
fourth year she was selling the weavings. By the seventh year she was invited to teach
weaving classes and has taught over 2,500 students. She has participated and later
solo exhibited seven museum exhibits. With public and private collectors across the
nation she continues to weave. 2016 marked 20 Years of Coast Salish weaving for her
and more importantly – SQ3Tsya’yay – Weaver’s Spirit Power.
18
Skeena Reece
*
Skeena Reece is a multi-disciplinary
Tsimshian/Gitksan, Cree and Métis
artist whose work includes performance
art, spoken word, ‘sacred clowning’,
writing, singing, and video art. Reece is
based on Vancouver Island, on the west
coast of Canada. She has performed
and shown at venues including The
Power Plant, Toronto, ON (2012),
Modern Fuel, Kingston, ON (2011),
17th Biennale of Sydney, Australia
(2010), Nuit Blanche, Toronto, ON
(2009), LIVE Biennale, Vancouver, B.C.
(2009), Emily Carr University of Art and
Design, Vancouver, B.C.(2008), the
Museum of Anthropology, Vancouver,
B.C. (2008), and the National Museum
of the American Indian, Washington,
D.C. (2008). Reece attended Northwest
Community College, Prince Rupert;
Emily Carr University of Art + Design,
Vancouver, and has trained at the Banff
Centre and grunt gallery as a curatorial
practices intern.
Marika Swan
*
Marika Swan is an artist and mother of
mixed Tla-o-qui-aht, Scottish and Irish
descent. Her main creative practice
explores feminist Nuu-chah-nulth
values through woodblock printmaking,
sometimes layered with other visual
arts techniques such as carving, stencil
and photography. Currently based
out of her home territory of Tla-oqui-aht, Marika has been developing
The Nuu-chah-nulth Living Archive, a
community led research project that
is locating and documenting the vast
bodies of Northwest Coast ancestral
objects and materials held in various
institutions all over the world. Through
this project, Marika is actively engaging
with local elders and culture keepers
to stimulate community discussion
and create resources for the purposes
of cultural revitalization. The study of
ancestral objects and being immersed
in community reflections on the roles
of creative objects and images, has
inspired the beginnings of a new body
of work.
France Trépanier
*
France Trépanier is a visual artist, curator and researcher of Kanien’kéha:ka and
French ancestry. Until recently, France was the Aboriginal Curator at Open Space Arts
Society in Victoria, where she is co-curating, with Michelle Jacques and Doug Jarvis,
the exhibition Deconstructing Comfort. She also curated the Awakening Memory
Project with artists Sonny Assu, LessLIE and Marianne Nicolson. France was the corecipient of the 2012 Audain Aboriginal Curatorial Fellowship by the Art Gallery of
Greater Victoria. Her essays and articles have been published in numerous journals
and magazines. France was selected, by the Canada Council for the Arts, to be part of
the International Indigenous Curators Exchange in New Zealand and the 2017 Venice
Biennale. France co-authored, with Chris Creighton-Kelly, Understanding Aboriginal
Art in Canada Today: a Knowledge and Literature Review for the Canada Council for
the Arts. Along with Chris, France is currently co-directing Primary Colours/Couleurs
primaires, a three-year initiative, which seeks to place Indigenous art practices at the
centre of the Canadian art system.
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Exhibition List
All works are in the
collection of the artist
unless otherwise indicated.
Daphne Boyer
*
All my Relations, 2018
Collage of printed forms
with magnets
120” X 20”
Red Leaf and Hawthorn Tipi
Cover, 2017
Pigmented ink printed on
Canson rag paper
63" X 32"
Hemoglobin, 2018
Weaving of printed paper
strips
84” X 45”
Acorn Caps (Green, Red,
Gold) and Smoke Leaf in
situ, 2014
Limited edition archival print
33” X 25" each
Maple Squares #1,2,3,
2015
Limited edition archival print,
Japanese paper, pigment,
silk and linen thread
16” X 16” each
Maureen Gruben
*
Stitching My Landscape,
2017
Print on Epson Hot Press +
video
39.25” x 96”
Video, 6 mins. 10 secs.
Message, 2017
Polar bear guard hair, cotton
thread, black interface
180” x 24”
Gestation, 2016
Polar bear guard hair,
silicone wrap, polar bear
underfur, white glue, thread
53” diameter
POPs (The medicine from my
body is poisoning our future
ancestors the meat here has
turned to glass), 2012
Wood, plexiglass
4' x 3" x 4”
Memory Bones, 2016
Plastic tubing, beads,
moose hide
4", 90 pieces-30 per colour
Susan Pavel
*
Our Healing
Wool, 11’ X 3’
Third Eye Listening, 2017
Mushroom dyed wool
28" x 15.5" x .5”
An Affinity for Moss, 2016
Acrylic wool blend
50" x 55" x .5”
Morning Rise, 2015
Wool
24.25" x 38" x .4”
Skeena Reece
*
Touch Me, 2013
Video, 8 minutes
Collection of the Morris and
Helen Belkin Art Gallery,
The University of British
Columbia, Purchased with
support from members of
the Belkin Curator’s Forum
Conceptual Carving
Performance
June 7, 2018, 7pm
University of Victoria
Legacy Art Gallery
Marika Echachis Swan
*
As Above, So Below, 2017
Carved and painted
woodblock
20" x 24”
My Grandmother's Regalia,
2016
Carved wood panel
24" x 36"
Becoming Worthy, 2015
Painted print framed
31.75" x 26.5"
I am Creation, 2018
Reduction print
18" x 24"
I am Creation, 2018
Carved woodblock
18" x 24”
Tlaoquiaht Carved Woman,
2017
Photograph
12” X 16”
Deep In Our Bones, 2014
Giclée Print
21.5" x 27.5"
Acknowledgments
********
I would like to acknowledge my teachers and
mentors – the many Indigenous women artists who
have inspired and guided my journey. Nia:wen’kowa
to you respected ones. Thank you to Mary Jo
Hughes, Director of the University of Victoria Legacy
Art Galleries, for extending an invitation to be a
guest curator. I truly appreciate this opportunity
to work with her and her dynamic team, and to
present the exhibition The Time of Things to Legacy’s
multiple audiences. Thank you also to Chris
Creighton-Kelly for his continued support and his
editorial assistance.
—France Trépanier
Guest Curator: France Trépanier
Project Manager: Mary Jo Hughes
Preparation: Roger Huffman
Curatorial Intern: Lorilee Wastasecoot
Publication & Exhibition Design: Katie Hughes
Proof Reading & Programming: Gillian Booth
© 2018 University of Victoria,
France Trépanier
and the artists
University of Victoria Legacy Art Galleries
630 Yates Street
Victoria, BC V8W 1K0
www.legacy.uvic.ca
Printed in Canada
Opposite
Marika Echachis Swan
I am Creation, 2018
(Detail)
Legacy Art Galleries
630 Yates St. 250.721.6562
legacy.uvic.ca