Saturday, May 18, 2024
ADVT 
Exhibitions

Exhibition Ayumi Goto and Peter Morin: how do you carry the land?

Vancouver Art Gallery14 Jul '18 to 28 Oct '18 @ 10:00 AM - 6:00 PM
    The Vancouver Art Gallery announces a new exhibition bridging the experiences of artists with diverse ancestries in dialogue, Ayumi Goto and Peter Morin: how do you carry the land? on view July 14 to October 28, 2018. Long-time collaborators and friends, Goto and Morin have created a performance art practice informed by their perspectives as a Japanese diasporic woman and Tahltan First Nations man. Together, Goto and Morin investigate their distinctive relationships to place in this presentation of new installations and reassembled documentation from their individual and collaborative performances over the past six years.
     
    Ayumi Goto is a performance artist based in Toronto, traditional territories of the Mississaugas of the New Credit, the Haudenosaunee, the Anishinaabe and the Huron-Wendat. Born in Canada, she explores her Japanese heritage to question and confront notions of nation-building, cultural belonging, and structural racism. Peter Morin is a Sobey Award-nominated Tahltan Nation artist, curator and writer whose work focuses on Indigenous ways of knowing and the disruption of Western settler colonialism. His art serves as a record of his ongoing process of understanding and practicing his culture and language. The artists first began their creative partnership with this is what happens when we perform the memory of the land during the 2013 Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) of Canada’s Quebec National Event in Montreal. Incorporating video and performance, the work considered Indigenous and settler structures of witnessing beyond the Indigenous-to-state framework of the TRC.
     
    The pair have since joined forces for multiple projects and, in the process, have developed a unique methodology of collaboration centered on the interaction of bodies in space, witnessing and connections to land. Their practice often involves drums, rattles, masks and other such cultural objects that document history and have the potential to be re-activated in new contexts and in continuity with the past, thus transcending a Western concept of linear time. Merging with the Japanese/Taoist notion of 陰陽 (inyō) that conceptualizes the universe as a circle, the artists’ multi-dimensional approach to spacetime allows them to share their works as an enfolding of many simultaneous moments from which new meanings emerge.
     
    Goto and Morin’s work is also notably created with the intention of making inclusive spaces welcoming of their mothers, ancestors, and a multiplicity of voices, particularly of the marginalized. In this spirit, they have commissioned works by several other artists for this exhibition: Corey Bulpitt, Roxanne Charles, Navarana Igloliorte, Cheryl L’Hirondelle, Haruko Okano and Juliane Okot Bitek.
     
    This exhibition is organized by the Vancouver Art Gallery and curated by Tarah Hogue, Senior Curatorial Fellow, Indigenous Art.
     
    Public Programs for Ayumi Goto and Peter Morin: how do you carry the land?
    • Artists Talk: Resonant Presence and Refusals with Jeneen Frei Njootli, Ayumi Goto, Peter Morin and Olivia Whetung on Tuesday, July 17 at 7:00pm at the Contemporary Art Gallery (555 Nelson Street). This panel discussion between four artists who will reflect together on the shared concerns of their practices is presented in collaboration between the Contemporary Art Gallery and the Vancouver Art Gallery. Admission is free of charge. Space is limited. Please RSVP by calling 604-681-2700.
     
    • Roving Gallery Performance: this is not us featuring artists Ayumi Goto and Peter Morin alongside Tarah Hogue, Senior Curatorial Fellow, Indigenous Art on Saturday, July 21 at 2:00pm on the third floor of the Gallery. The performers will activate three portrait masks carved by Haida artist Corey Bulpitt. Free for members or with Gallery Admission.
     
    For more up-to-date information on Public Programs, visit vanartgallery.bc.ca
     
     
     

    Join DARPAN Magazine community on socialmedia!  

     

     FACEBOOK  |  TWITTER   | INSTAGRAM  |  YOUTUBE    |  ISSUU

    Event Location Vancouver Art Gallery
    Address: 750 Hornby St
    Post Code: V6Z 2H7

    MORE Exhibitions ARTICLES

    2018 Earlybird RV Show & Sale returns to Tradex

    1190 Cornell Stree | 15/02/2018 - 18/02/2018

    Start Your RV Adventure at The Earlybird RV Show and Sale February 15 - 18

    2018 Earlybird RV Show & Sale returns to Tradex

    15/02/2018 - 18/02/2018

    47th annual BC Home + Garden Show reveals celebrity line-up for 2018

    777 Pacific Blvd | 21/02/2018 - 25/02/2018

    Find your style with help from Canada’s biggest names at BC Place Stadium for five days only, February 21-25, 2018

    47th annual BC Home + Garden Show reveals celebrity line-up for 2018

    21/02/2018 - 25/02/2018

    17th Annual World Congress on Neonatology

    Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada | 27/06/2018 - 28/06/2018

    The two days neonatal research topics includes child health care workshop, symposium, neonatal info and special key note session conducted by an eminent and renowned speaker

    17th Annual World Congress on Neonatology

    27/06/2018 - 28/06/2018

    Soar over America at FlyOver Canada

    999 Canada Place | 02/11/2017 - 22/11/2017

    New Ride, New Locations, Same Breathtaking Experience! 

    Soar over America at FlyOver Canada

    02/11/2017 - 22/11/2017

    Vancouver Baby and Family Fair

    Vancouver Convention Centre East Facility Hall C 1055 Canada Pl | 28/10/2017 - 29/10/2017

    Come celebrate families at the annual event happening Oct 28 & 29

    Vancouver Baby and Family Fair

    28/10/2017 - 29/10/2017

    Trauma, Memory and the Story of Canada Exhibition

    Between 49th and 51st Avenues, Main Street | 29/09/2017 - 15/12/2017

    Migration Themed Public Art Launches September 29 at Vancouver’s Historic Punjabi Market

    Trauma, Memory and the Story of Canada Exhibition

    29/09/2017 - 15/12/2017