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Thursday, November 27, 2025 |
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| Duane Linklater reimagines museum structures with powerful 'cache' installation at the Secession |
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The concept of the cache further evokes two such hoards discovered in and around Ottawa.
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VIENNA.- Collecting objects is inherently a form of world-building we establish connections, bestow value, preserve memories, construct and disseminate knowledge. This can occur on a small scale, in a personal family archive, and on a larger scale, when museums fill their depots and galleries with objects in order to shape national identities and narrate their stories about the world.
Duane Linklater situates the conventions of the museum within the broader framework of both contemporary and historical conditions of Indigenous life. The artist not only refers to the inherited storage practices of his ancestors, but also critically addresses the violent systems of knowledge, representation, and value imposed by settler colonialism. For his exhibition at the Secession, Linklater has developed a site-specific modular structure centred around the concept of the cache. A cache is a collection or assemblage of things. Connecting personal collections the keepsakes and small objects we accumulate throughout our lives and display in our homes to the larger museum complex and its colonial underside, the cache speaks to the entangled narratives through which not only objects but also emotions, memories, and ideas circulate and are preserved all over the world.
In this exhibition, the artist responds directly to the physical space and to the institution as an ideological entity itself: its structures, processes, contexts. His presentation is grounded by a series of towering scaffolds. Instead of hanging works on the institutions walls, Linklater creates his own framework for their display. It is no coincidence that the Cree word for cache, teipitǎkan, also translates as structure or frame. Embedded within these scaffolds are paintings, found objects, pieces of furniture, and various materials that undergo Linklaters own process of collecting and safekeeping that is also a gesture of care. Household items and family possessions are elevated high above the ground, beyond immediate reach, awaiting their potential future use.
The concept of the cache further evokes two such hoards discovered in and around Ottawa. The first, unearthed at the confluence of three major rivers near the city, contained Indigenous artefacts and quartz tools dating back 10,000 years. The second, found during construction for a new office building directly on Parliament Hill, held Indigenous objects from the pre-colonial period. Of course, the unearthed tools will not be used again in the same ways for which they were originally intended their future rests with the decisions of local Nations and national museums. This condition resonates with the cache as an indeterminate form, one that is continuously filled with new meanings and associations. At the same time, Linklaters assembling families of objects is also an act of tender repair, one that insists on cultural continuity despite the colonial context of forced displacement and cultural erasure. It is therefore all the more fitting that scaffolding, wherever it appears across the world, is itself a structure associated with acts of restoration a material metaphor for the delicate labour of sustaining connections across ruptures of history.
Duane Linklater, born in 1976, is an Omaskêko Ininiwak artist from Moose Cree First Nation living in North Bay, Robinson Huron Treaty territory.
Curated by Haris Giannouras & Damian Lentini
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Today's News
November 27, 2025
Three new Miami Art Week exhibitions illuminate narratives around migration, culture, and community
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Tim Van Laere Gallery opens major Franz West survey highlighting his radical sculptural legacy
Juan Uslé returns to the Reina Sofía with a landmark four-decade survey
Rob Lyon makes his New York debut at Hales with When There Were More Moons
The Jim Henson Company 70th Anniversary Auction brings in $2.6 million total at Julien's Auctions
MAXXI presents Frame Time Open, Italy's most extensive Rosa Barba retrospective
Andrew Browne: 'A kind of skin' now open at Tolarno Galleries
Thomas Hoepker's hidden East Germany comes to light in new Berlin exhibition
Cristea Roberts Gallery unveils Paula Rego's darkest, most personal works from 2005-2007
Philbrook presents first career retrospective for Tulsa artist Patrick Gordon
Gooding Christie's to offer the Curtis Leaverton Collection at 2026 Amelia Island Auctions
Tuula Lehtinen revives Baroque splendor in new exhibition at Galerie Forsblom
Shu Lea Cheang's radical digital worlds take center stage at Ludwig Forum Aachen
Farida Sedoc unveils monumental Social Capital triptych at the Stedelijk Museum
Duane Linklater reimagines museum structures with powerful 'cache' installation at the Secession
The Met to offer holiday experience featuring festive displays, dining, shopping, and more
Joel Sherwood Spring debuts Diggermode 2: Cloud Ceding at the Institute of Modern Art
South Australian artists in focus as AGSA announces 2026 exhibition program
MAAT-Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology presents tenth-anniversary programme
'A Minute of Shelter' by Narges Mohammadi unveiled in Rotterdam
Kevork Mourad unveils Memory Gates at Miami Basel Meridians with Leila Heller Gallery
National Gallery of Canada opens its first cross-cultural exhibition of Indigenous, Canadian settler and European art
Sale to offer photographic masterworks from an important private collection
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