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Saturday, December 6, 2025 |
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| McMichael presents retrospective of Stan Douglas's global colonial narratives |
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Stan Douglas (b. 1960), Act I, Scene V: In which Polly Peachum is Greeted at the Ducat Estate by Family Friend Diana Trapes, who will Ultimately Betray Her, 2024, inkjet print on Dibond aluminum, 150.5 x 150.5 cm, courtesy of the artist, Victoria Miro, and David Zwirner. © Stan Douglas.
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KLEINBURG.- This winter, the McMichael Canadian Art Collection presents Stan Douglas: Tales of Empire, a landmark exhibition surveying three decades of work by internationally acclaimed Vancouver-based artist Stan Douglas. On view from December 5, 2025, to March 22, 2026, the exhibition brings together five major photographic series that explore the histories, legacies, and enduring reverberations of colonialism across continents and centuries.
Curated by Frances & Tim Price Executive Director and Chief Curator Sarah Milroy, Tales of Empire investigates the power structures, mythologies, and lived realities shaped by imperialism through Douglass technically masterful and conceptually incisive lens.
The Nootka Series (1996) Created on the northwest coast of Vancouver Island, this series traces the enduring presence of Indigenous communities and moments of early contact with European settlers. At the McMichael, these photographs are being shown in dialogue with historical paintings by A.Y. Jackson, opening a compelling conversation between Douglass contemporary vision and the Group of Sevens early twentieth century perspective.
The Cuba Series (2005) Capturing the complex architectural and political landscape of Havana and other Cuban towns, these images illuminate how centuries of Spanish, American, and Soviet influence have shaped the citys identity and visual fabric.
The Western Series (2006) Set in British Columbias interior, this series examines landscapes marked by resource extraction, revealing how settler-driven development has altered the environment and reshaped the region.
The Klatsassin Series (2006) A cinematic re-imagining of a violent episode of Indigenous resistance in nineteenth-century British Columbia. Douglas invents a cast of characters associated with the event, blurring the boundaries between fact and fiction while probing how stories of colonial conflict are constructed and remembered.
The Enemy of All Mankind (2024) Douglass most recent project draws inspiration from Polly (1729), the satirical sequel to John Gays The Beggars Opera. Featuring a costumed ensemble, the series restages scenes of decadence, intrigue, and misadventure in the Caribbean, using Enlightenment-era satire to critique the moral bankruptcy of colonialism for a contemporary audience.
Across these bodies of work, Douglas dissects and dramatizes the machinery of empireits spectacle, its systems, and its violencewhile inviting viewers to reconsider how histories are recorded, contested, and retold.
Stan Douglas (b. 1960, Vancouver) is an internationally renowned artist whose multidisciplinary practice spans photography, film, video, installation, and theatre. Since the 1980s, he has created technically ambitious works that explore the complexities of history, collective memory, and the lasting imprint of colonialism.
Through innovative uses of both analog and digital media, Douglas restages pivotal historical momentsoften at cultural, political, or social tipping pointsblurring the boundaries between documentary and fiction, cinema and visual art.
Douglas has been featured at the Venice Biennale five times, most recently in 2022 with the acclaimed video installation ISDN. His work has been presented in solo exhibitions at major institutions worldwide, including the Centre Pompidou, MoMA, and the National Gallery of Canada and is held in leading museum collections across North America and Europe. Recent projects include a permanent public commission at New Yorks Moynihan Train Hall (2021) and the recent survey Stan Douglas: Ghostlight at Bard Colleges Hessel Museum of Art in 2025. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including the Audain Prize for Visual Art (2019); the Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography (2016); the third annual Scotiabank Photography Award (2013); and the Infinity Award from the International Center of Photography, New York (2012). In 2021, Douglas was knighted as a Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Minister of Culture, and in 2023 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by Simon Fraser University, Greater Vancouver. Douglas lives and works in Vancouver.
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