TORONTO.- This season, the
Ryerson Image Centre presents work by three contemporary Indigenous artists: Shelley Niro, Nadia Myre and Scott Benesiinaabandan. Collectively, these artists explore notions of culture, identity and the complex colonial histories of Indigenous people using photography, film and new media. All exhibitions launch during the official kick-off party for the Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival, free and open to the public, on April 27, 2018, 7:00 11:00 pm.
Were pleased to partner with the Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival to present these three excellent contemporary artists, all of whom work around themes of indigenous history, identity, and tradition, says Paul Roth, Director of the Ryerson Image Centre. Artists are often able to address societys most difficult and contentious issues in ways that resonate with a wide audience. Ryerson University is deeply committed to learning from the recommendations of Canadas Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and these exhibitions follow that same path.
Scotiabank Photography Award: Shelley Niro celebrates the career of this Canadian artist, known for challenging stereotypes and exploring notions of culture and identity with sensitivity and humour. A member of the Six Nations Reserve, Bay of Quinte Mohawk, Turtle Clan, Niro combines beadwork designs, archival images, family pictures, videos, and installation to question traditional representations of Indigenous peoples, with a particular focus on womanhood. This exhibition is presented by Scotiabank and organized by the Ryerson Image Centre in partnership with the Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival.
On view on the RICs Salah J. Bachir New Media Wall, Nadia Myres silent video Acts that Fade Away presents the artists hands and forearms filmed from above as she carefully manipulates the needles, threads, patterns, beads, and tools necessary to craft four Indigenous-inspired objects. These include a pair of baby moccasins, a small basket, a womans hair bonnet, and a bandolier bagguided only by instructions pulled from nineteenth-century womens magazines. Through the reappropriation of instructions and gestures drawn from European and North American illustrated publications, Myre reclaims Indigenous skills and crafts devalued by colonization.
As part of Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festivals outdoor public installation program, artist Scott Benesiinaabandan (Obishikokaang Anishinaabe First Nation) explores the historical complexities that are often buried under the metaphorical weight of monuments that commemorate colonial stories. As part of Benesiinaabandans ongoing series newlandia: debaabaminaagwad, abstracted imagery in the form of a shadow-like silhouette will be adhered to the sidewalk adjacent to Ryerson Universitys contested Egerton Ryerson statue. Other fragmented patterns will be conformed to the irregular surfaces of the boulders in nearby Devonian Pond, recalling Indigenous petroglyphs and ancient ceremonial sites.
My installation speaks to our countrys highly contentious past that once renounced the rights of Indigenous people to their traditions and ancestral lands, says artist Scott Benesiinaabandan. I hope that my work offers a new interpretation of this historically-charged site, framing powerful and imaginative trajectories for a possible future.