OPEN SPACES GALLERY WEDNESDAYS 12:30- 1:30 PM Gallery Mandate: To create an open space for the sharing of First Nation culture Eligibility: Preference will be given to artist or person of First Nation descent wishing to share aspect of culture or expression of being a First Nation artist or person in contemporary society
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Day Nine (Toronto)
Today was the final opening of the Open Spaces Gallery in Toronto until next fall, September 2011. I was expecting to present a local painter Oluwatosin Sanni but the weather called for thunder and rain and we both decided to delay his exhibition until next fall to prevent from damaging his paintings.
So I had to come up with a plan, a creative way to use the space. What was I going to do? I have started playing with a new experiment where I sit on a house doorstep and use that time to doodle, colour and write randomly into my sketchbook inspired by that doorstep. When I feel complete or finished I put the drawing into an unsealed envelope that has my address on it, place the envelope into their mailbox. The envelope explains that I drew this on their doorstep and they can reply if they wish. It is fun for me but also a recreation of a pen pal, or art sharing and way to include the viewer in a part of the process of generating ideas, is totally open for interpretation, and plays with the artists role of parting with their ideas, artwork, moments of freedom and sharing them with others.
So I decided to run with this experiment in the Open Spaces Gallery today. I did two drawings in the hour, they included text from thoughts that ran across my mind as I drew or words from uncontextualized conversations which I heard while people were walking by and then I placed these words into my drawings. Each drawing was put into an individual envelope marked with my name and address. On the front of one of the the envelopes is written "I drew this on the street today" and the other envelope is written "I left this here for you to find" and as a parting gift from the gallery, to leave my presence and I think to benefit the performance, I left the envelopes on the sidewalk with the hopes that someone may find the curiosity to pick one up and respond. I will see if anyone is up for some fun. I like these projects that have no rules, they have my own expectations but come with other people's interpretations which help me further develop my concepts.
Since today was the final opening of the gallery for some time, I was torn about what to do with the territorial marker, the baby carriage Iroquois Confederacy Flag and beaded fabric that sits draped upon the flag. These have really come to identify the gallery's presence and existence on Wednesdays. I have kept the beaded fabric to bring with me to Vancouver and perhaps use as a surface, blanket to continue manipulating but also to host the gallery on and mark my chosen parking space. However, the baby carriage Iroquois Confederacy Flag is now apart of the ephemeral genre of art. I pushed it down to Union Station, and got a lot of strange glares in the process of pushing a broken baby carriage with no baby. I decided to treat it as a real monument or flag. Outside of Union Station there is a large monument to multiculturalism depicting a human figure raising a spherical globe kind of thing with birds flying overhead. I thought a monument to multiculturalism? Wow, what a perfect place to leave the Iroquois Confederacy Flag, left as a monument for the rest of the day probably, but it would be great if the baby stroller has been adopted as an important part of Toronto public art. Again, the Open Spaces Gallery led to a creative day for me.
Future plans for Open Spaces Gallery are; open a related project in Vancouver over the summer months, continue documenting the projects process, use the summer months to develop a strong base of upcoming performances in the fall of 2011 when the Open Spaces Gallery will reopen in Toronto and hopefully be an essential part of the Colloquium of Aboriginal Visual Culture that happens in October. Still work to do, but that is a good thing.
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Upcoming Exhibitions (Toronto)
Tanya Linklater, a performance artist/experimental choreographer based in North Bay, Ontario. Tanya is of Alutiiq descent from a southern coastal First Nation Alaskan community. This will be an exciting performance as Tanya plans to create a unique performance for the Open Spaces Gallery. To view Tanya's past works and websiter; www.ikalluk.wordpress.com
Potential relationship between students and faculty of the OCAD performance art faculty and Open Spaces Gallery. This is exciting because this relationship could evolve into weekly manifestations and explorations of the body as medium. Woo hoo, I love this.
Future plans for Open Spaces Gallery are; open a related project in Vancouver over the summer months, continue documenting the projects process, use the summer months to develop a strong base of upcoming performances in the fall of 2011 when the Open Spaces Gallery will reopen in Toronto and hopefully be an essential part of the Colloquium of Aboriginal Visual Culture that happens in October. Still work to do, but that is a good thing.
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Day Eight (Toronto)
I have been developing a painting project inspired by the Betty Goodwin installation of a thick canvas-and-rope sculpture at the AGO. I was just there one day needing some time away from my thoughts and I totally got inspired by the loose tarpaulin draped over a horizontal pole. I have since purchased a 5'x5' canvas and have carried it around with me throughout Toronto a few times. To allow my surface to be as spontaneous as I am, to carry it with me when I am ready to go, to have something more substantial than a sketchbook, to incorporate my wandering walks throughout the downtown and along the discarded areas awaiting the spot I wish to layout the canvas and paint my surroundings.
Today at Open Spaces Gallery I decided to incorporate this identification with my art process into the open space. I woke up this morning and I knew I just wanted to layout the canvas and paint. The canvas took the shape of a blanket that I could paint and think on. I felt very proud of being apart of the Open Spaces Gallery today. Lots of thought development took place today as I have finished my classes and feel like a load has been lifted from my shoulders and being apart of a creative outdoor project was just what I needed.
I had some great conversations and shared a lot of hellos with people passing by, seeming to be happy to see a random act of painting on the street. I had an exciting conversation with an OCAD faculty member about performance art and her students. I love hearing stories about other practicing artists using their body to express a concept. We spoke about the potential next fall to use the Open Spaces Gallery as a venue for performance art students from OCAD to present and explore ideas. Of course I was in agreement and look forward to greater potential for use of the Open Spaces Gallery. I am really excited that this project is encouraging the involvement of other artists to take part in an outdoor temporal and alternative venue. Great! Another great feeling was to know that the small steps taken to advertise and document this project has lead to raising interest, to hear that this project is recognized and being watched when it feels as though some days I am on my own.
That is totally how I see the potential of Open Spaces Gallery too. You know, it doesn't need to be a space specifically for finished art pieces or works, but as a space that encourages and celebrates the exploration of developing new ideas. A documentation of the process that exists when involved in the construction of thought. Like, hey I got and idea, look, that guy has an open venue, lets go play kind of a thing. I have been encouraging this kind of minimal process at the Buffalo Stews at OCAD, the development of a small inkling of an idea is completely rewarding and can grow into a magnificent creation and a potential long term project. Anyways, that is what I hope for. The fall hasn't come yet, but there seems to be some great potential for future performances at Open Spaces Gallery.
Anyways, the conversation really inspired new thought about potential use for the Open Spaces Gallery. Encouraged thought about how I identify with art; how do I identify with my projects? This open gallery is a lot of performance, an act to be present for an hour, to celebrate the potential for opening of alternative space and to believe in my concept beyond the questioning looks. A show piece of what I can do with my art and my body, of feeling good. To use art to manifest good feelings and not a focus around frustration. To incorporate my practice around my daily routines
Being in everyone's eye today as they clean out their lockers and pick up their artwork, I feel correct. Today was both challenging and rewarding. It was hard to lay down the canvas and sit in the middle of an unfinished work and just stand behind the gallery concept and allow this performance to be my existence in the fresh crisp air painting from my surroundings. I never thought I would see myself sitting in the middle of the street in Toronto in front of an art school I attend. I really like the silence of this project. To sit in silence and slowly raise visibility of First Nation culture, or like today, visibility to the possibility of expressing creativity wherever someone wants. To raise awareness through a silent performance. I identify with grass roots projects that are more about celebrating free thought. To be inspired by natural materials of the environment and influenced by the open atmosphere. To breathe.
Next Wednesday, April 27 2011 Open Spaces Gallery will welcome Oluwatosin Sanni, a local Visual and Graphic Artist, to exhibit paintings exploring the artists fear of the unknown. As can be seen in the top painting on the right, the almost alien like figures and concepts of his work explore his experience as a newcomer to Canada from Nigeria. This exhibition promises to be stimulating. To view Oluwatosin's website; www.mycreomotion.com
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Day Seven (Toronto)
www.janusdanceswithghosts.com
Today is Wednesday April 13th and probably the most fantastic experience at Open Spaces Gallery. I welcomed Janus a local sculptor from Edeb Mills near Markham and an artist desiring to share her knowledge with eager emerging artists like Morena and myself.
Janus loved the Open Spaces Gallery concept of celebrating open land and freedom of land used to express culture. Janus saw Morena and I as artists willing to celebrate the recreation of the outdoor environment. I was happy to be viewed in such a way and Janus' words reignited my original conceptual excitement of Open Spaces Gallery. This week has seemed to be full of personal lessons and realizations to develop a perspective of appreciation.
Janus exhibited sculptures that are part of her Nomad series of terra-cotta assemblages of her life. Representations of family members, sculpted by hand creating strong terra-cotta interpretations of confident women. In Janus' words; "They are an ongoing portrait study of contemporary women. The Nomads are a hauntingly physical interpretation of the silent voices of ancestral culutre, history and society." A process using very natural resources and process, Janus uses bonfire in the final firing of the Nomad sculptures. I just imagined a beautiful process relying on Janus' time, energy and eye for knowing when the process and sculpture are complete. To me, this is important because the sculpture's perfection relies on Janus' knowledge of her subject and personal expression. This knowledge helps to construct the sculpture from the base up.
Three sculptures were set up on a large table in the middle of the parking space and a single wooden sculpture presented on the street. All sculptures resembled the "ancestral culture, history and society" of women and the First Nation cultural following of a matriarchal history. There was no need for the territorial marker today because of the strong sculptural presence, the gallery was well marked. We received a lot of positive feedback from students and the general public throughout the presentation. The sculptures definitely have the ability to stop traffic. The sculptures have a strong gaze and stoic presence. They represent strong individuals but also their individual detail reflect personal qualities of the sculpture. I loved these detailed patterns on the figures clothing, face and crowns. The detail was created through Janus' creative hand but also used found material, like a beaded fabric pattern taken from Janus' lamp, to imprint original detail into the terra cotta sculptures. I love when artists use found objects from their everyday environment. I think many artists are inspired by their surroundings, and when Janus is considering adding detailed imprints to her sculptures she considers all of her surroundings for available materials.
The main sculpture in the middle of the table represents Janus' niece who is a strong individual. The figures strength is acknowledged by adorning imprinted battle axes on the top of the cheekbones.
I was really pleased to meet Janus and was really impressed with her support of the Open Spaces Gallery project. Janus shared a lot of insight as a mature artist. Encouraged me to continue the Open Spaces Gallery, maintain relationships with the artists I will meet through this project and view the project as a source for my own development. I really needed this encouragement and am very excited to persevere along with the development of this project.
An amazing and beautiful part of Janus' performance at the Open Spaces Gallery was her song. She adorned a drum to beat a miigwetch rhythm, a chant of thank you to the land and space. The song is personally created inspired by the women of Cape Croker. Janus' personal principles are so great because for me it meant that the sculptures and song are individually created with a personal relation, understanding and respect of the land we live on and its history. I found myself totally calm as Janus was beating the drum and I was focusing on the attached feather and red colour. Also, my eyes focused on the beating drumstick. Janus will be uploading a video of this performance on her websites;
www.JanusNomad.com
www.JanusDancesWithGhosts.com
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Day Six (Toronto) OCAD Student Art Show
Today is April 6 2011 and was another successful opening of the Open Spaces Gallery, Morena is so loyal to this project it is incredible and quite refreshing. The plan for today was to use the street gallery space as an exhibition venue for OCAD students from my VISC 3B42 course, Critical Issues in First Nations Art.
Unfortunately, I was not joined by their artwork which is a real shame because they created magnificent art works related to their association with First Nation culture, which exactly meets the mandate of Open Spaces Gallery and would have been a great moment. Perhaps it is me as the curator, maybe I am not successfully creating a stimulant amongst the students to take part in the project, a free space to exhibit their artwork from class. However, it is my preference to let these happenings be natural, to proceed in a way that does not enforce anything on the artist. To allow the presence of the Open Spaces Gallery project be enough to encourage involvement. This project is best served as a whisper. Letting First Nation artists and people know that there is an open space available for the presentation of culture, come and take part if you wish, the project will only benefit from more involvement and layers of education provided by additional creative participants and artworks.
The VISC 3B42 class had its critique of artworks today and the works were very diverse; printmaking, graphic design, sculpture and paintings. Some themes discussed were memory and how it is altered and prioritized throughout time, especially regarding First Nation history when it is blurred, misunderstood and misrepresented. Creating art is great because we are able to use our minds to comment with large sweeping instincts as a reaction, emotional or aesthetic, to challenging topics like a people's history.
Another theme discussed was land and how it is treated regarding First Nation land concerns, treatment, history, but also reflecting on a general commentary to how we as people perceive the land's purpose and use. These topics really raised a lot of great discussion amongst the class and I found the critiques very stimulating.
A favourite work of mine which I wish could have been included in the gallery street space was this recreation of a puzzle into a tool to tell fortunes. I think I was excited by the growth and development of the concept. An OCAD artist named Beth found a unique colourful plastic 3dimensional puzzle that she could not complete and transformed the pieces into a mechanism for fortune telling. The artwork included three separate objects that had no connection to one another beyond the artist's conceptual framework. The eight pieces of the puzzle placed into a container, shook and dumped out onto a small circular carpet. The volunteer's fortune was told by the way the pieces fell and placement, the artist was able to convey a reading of the volunteer's fortune. I just loved the performance and aspect of recreation of found material identified into a fortune telling tool.
Once again, it was a terrible loss to Open Spaces Gallery that none of the artists wanted to display their works. Today at 100 McCaul, Morena and I opened the gallery in a parking space with a purchased parking ticket, territorial marker and drawn chalk to define the space borders. Morena and I used the the street to display three paintings, two sculptures and two encaustic works.
The three paintings were my expression of First Nation culture as a reaction to course material I learned through the VISC 3B42 Critical Issues class and meant to comment on my frustration inspired from the 1990 Oka standoff. I just felt that instead of finding a successful solution for the land dispute and standoff, the Quebec and Federal government officials just used computer buttons meant to 'delete', extend and complicate the dispute. The abstract backgrounds are meant to suggest my process of layered frustration and the absurdity of discrimination and ignorance, therefore, the landscapes are only blurred suggestions of clarity.
Also, Morena and I continued beading today in the gallery street space. With the increase in street traffic, the territorial marker and act of beading has attracted a lot of attention, interest and raised awareness about the originality of the Open Spaces Gallery project. I added beading around a crushed can I found on the street as I felt this would help add an aspect of my own identity to the beautiful territorial marker.
Next Wednesday April 13th, a local sculptor from Markham, Janus, will join the Open Spaces Gallery and use the street space for the presentation of sculptures (top right image) and compliment the show with a public performance of song in celebration of opening the availability of land. I AM SO EXCITED!!!!
Janus' sculptures can be viewed on her website; www.janusnomad.com
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Day Five (Toronto)
The sun was shinning today to welcome Open Spaces Gallery. Today I purchased a one hour parking ticket and marked out a couple feet between two cars.
This limited space was perfect because it represented how I felt. The expression of First Nation culture in the beautiful outdoors and fresh air was so stimulating. I only added a small section of beaded patterning to the gallery's territorial marker but I was so proud with the performance. Totally calming I guess.
I related todays beading of the territorial marker to an artist I learned about today. Marianne Nicolson's outdoor "Cliff Painting" of a emblematic shield served to identify the territory of her isolated community in Kingcome Inlet, BC. Her painting identifies the importance of subtle recognition, for the very least to feel apart of the greater existence. This project of allowing a parking space to be represented into a cultural venue is a subtle and important reminder that free expression of culture is a great feeling and rejuvenating.
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Day Four (Toronto)
Day Four saw the Open Spaces Gallery being led by Morena and Fiona, snow and numb hands. New detail in beadwork and colour has been added to the Open Spaces territorial marker.
This Wednesday, March 3oth will follow another traditional pow-wow with the sharing of more craft by Ojibway artist and instructor, Bonnie.
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Day Three (Toronto)
It was the third day of Open Spaces Gallery and there were three people taking part in the gallery space. Our guest Bonnie, Ojibway artist and art educator, chose to share some knowledge on beadwork. As a ritual for the opening of the Open Spaces Gallery ritual, we again marked off the rented space with sidewalk chalk. Also, the painted Iroquois Flag (babystroller) serves as an Open Spaces Gallery territorial flag. ON this occassion of the performance I came with turf builder to pour on the cement as a method for growing grass. As per Bonnie's instructions, traditionally, a First Nation person will ask permission from inanimate objects of nature in the form of a prayer before receiving. So, the three of us reached into the turf builder with our left hand, by using the left hand allows the prayer a connection to the heart. With each spread of the turf builder, we would ask the cement to grow grass in its place.
For the rest of the performance Bonnie led Morena and I in decorating the current Open Spaces Gallery territorial marker. The process included covering the painted Iroquois Confederacy Flag with a white fabric and then adding three individual sections of beading, one for each of us. This process was so much fun for me because it was unexpected, educational and I just really liked collaborating and creating something new outside. At this moment, I think next week we will continue the process of decorating the Open Spaces Gallery territorial marker with more beadwork. There could even be some grass growing.
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Day Two (Toronto)
On March 9th 2011 Open Spaces Gallery opened its second public performance of making the sharing and practice of First Nation culture visible. On this Wednesday I was joined by a fellow OCAD student Morena, seen painting and representing the the baby stroller which served as the first Open Spaces Gallery territorial marker. We painted the broken baby stroller with the emblem of the Iroquois Confederacy Flag which represents the peace and power of the Six Nations of the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca and Tuscarora.
I felt that using a physical territorial marker would help in the identification of the Open Spaces Gallery territory and would signify this project being a safe approach to provide a space for the visible sharing of First Nation culture.
I am really happy that I was able to receive help from Morena making the process of raising awareness and creating the territorial flag much simpler. In leading by example, Morena has encouraged other members of the OCAD student society and faculty to engage within the mandate of the Open Spaces Gallery.
Next Wednesday, March 16th, the Open Spaces Gallery will be providing space for 5 OCAD students and faculty to share in a traditional First Nation pow-wow. Plans are to adorn the chosen space with turf and as a group create and share in craftwork and repolishing the territorial marker, as the paint on the baby stroller is messy after dealing with the rain and snow from last week.
For more information about the Open Spaces Gallery call for submissions, please refer to the Call for Submissions posting on this blog.
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Day One (Toronto)
On March 2nd 2011 I introduced the concept of Open Spaces Gallery outside of OCAD at 100 McCaul Street, between Dundas and Queen. I have documented this event and posted the photos with this entry.
I learned a lot from following through with this concept. I bought an hour of time from the local parking meter. I had expected to be renting space that would fit the size of a car. However, all of the spots were full. So, with sidewalk chalk I drew my own border around available space between two parked cars, probably 5 feet. It was a great action of spontaneity because I realized that the Open Spaces Gallery would be able to fit in any size of space.
As this was my introductory performance, I only needed enough space for myself to perform a ceremony that allowed me to mark my territory.
I wrote on the sidewalk and street that "I OWN THIS LAND". The purpose of this performance is to challenge possibility that as an individual, I can purchase land on the street through a parking meter to use as a gallery and for the performance of culture and art.
My gallery's mandate is that this space will be made available for the sharing of First Nation culture.
I have posted a call for submissions on this blog, around OCAD, in the office of Aboriginal Visual Culture Program. In the near future I plan to try and leave submissions at the University of Toronto's First Nations House at 563 Spadina Avenue, The Native Canadian Centre of Toronto at 16 Spadina Road and online.
If there are no responses to my call for submissions, this coming Wednesday at 1230pm I will be performing a second ceremony identifying the space of land by decorating territorial markers. Currently I have found a broken baby stroller and plan to paint the fabric into a territorial flag that will signify my purchased territory. The potential flags I will paint are; the Iroquois Confederacy flag, the Anishnabe New World Order design, or the Ojibway design which marks the colors and geographical location of the various First Nation tribes.
I am also excited about representing a Western conception of a baby stroller as a First Nation territorial flag. I feel that this action will comment on Carl Beam's art projects "Need to Explain" and "Bury the Ruler" that question Western conventions of defining materials and events.
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
Call for Submissions
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
OPEN SPACES GALLERY
WEDNESDAYS 12:30- 1:30 PM
RECLAMATION OF LAND
along McCaul St. between Dundas and Queen
or
along Dundas St. W. between McCaul and Beverly
Gallery Mandate:
To create an open space for the sharing of First Nation culture
Eligibility:
Preference will be given to artist or person of First Nation descent
wishing to share aspect of culture
or
expression of being a First Nation artist or person in contemporary society
to make a submission or to create a dialogue
email a member of the Open Spaces Artist Run Society (Joel, Billy, Jerry, Miloc or Batman) at JoelLibin@Hotmail.com
include Open Spaces Submission in your emails subject heading