VANCOUVER.- The Vancouver Art Gallery presents an exhibition by Vancouver-based artist Christos Dikeakos. On display now until January 31, 2015, NEXT: Christos Dikeakos is a focused exhibition that features a series of photographs produced by the artist over the last six years through which the artist considers the economic and cultural values involved in transactions of Northwest Coast art.
For the last two decades, Christos Dikeakos has been deeply interested in the changing landscape of our city, as well as the art and culture of Indigenous cultures of the Northwest Coast. Among these explorations is a series of panoramic photographs produced in the 1980s and 90s of False Creek, an area of Vancouver that has undergone dramatic changes since it was inhabited centuries ago by Coast Salish peoples. As a precursor to this exhibition, these works registered urban development in this area of the city with an overlay of the history of Indigenous land use and cultural activity that took place long before the arrival of European settlers.
This exhibition begins with an image of False Creek, taken through the artists studio window that frames an ever-changing view of the world. The work revisits the shifting land use of this urban area, which has undergone yet another phase of dramatic growth with the development of the Olympic Village. The subsequent photographs, as well as the artists collection of Northwest Coast baskets also on display, point to the importance of Indigenous history and culture in this region.
In the successive images, Dikeakos portrays collectors, artists and entrepreneurs that he has captured in acts of assessing, exchanging or contemplating evocative Northwest Coast objects. The photographs show how one culture interacts with another through collecting as both Indigenous and non-Indigenous cultures have historically and mutually engaged in economic and cultural exchanges since early contact. Such exchanges have the ability to transform values, beliefs and ideologies.
The final image in the exhibition, taken in the forest of Haida Gwaii, depicts a man holding a microphone and wind-sock as if attempting to record the sound of the trees or to capture the essence of the medicine plants and other cultural materials found in this bogas if in search of an intangible heritage. Dikeakos speaks of the soundman as a stand-in for shaman figures, who are believed to be in touch with a language of meanings, cosmologies that could go outward and backward to produce a knowledge of the world. Together, these works point to an existential pursuit that accompanies an intrinsic drive to collect, create or be with such inspiring objectsactivities that offer the possibility of cross-cultural dialogue.
Christos Dikeakos is an artist working primarily in photography who has actively participated in the development of photoconceptual art in Vancouver and has exhibited nationally and internationally. He was born in Thessaloniki, Greece and moved to Vancouver in 1956, graduating from the University of British Columbia in Fine Arts in 1970.