VICTORIA, BC.- On view at the
Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, The Artist Herself: Self-Portraits by Canadian Historical Women Artists, is making Victoria its first stop in western Canada and putting Canadian women artists front and centre.
This ground-breaking exhibition includes works from both settler and Indigenous perspectives. From Caroline Gros Louiss exquisite headdress through which she expresses her identity of a woman of the Wendat nation, to Emily Carrs painting of herself from the back at her easel; from Hannah Maynards playful photographs of her multiple selves to Pitseolak Ashoonas sly comment on her participation in the Inuit art market, these works open up new avenues of inquiry and new understandings of the realities and perspectives of women in Canadian society before 1970.
Audiences may be surprised at the variety of work in this exhibition, says Michelle Jacques, Chief Curator, AGGV. When we hear self-portrait we most immediately envision painted images of the artists face. The Artist Herself includes some striking examples of this type, but it also reveals that self-representation can take many forms.
The Artist Herself features the work of 41 artists, working in a range of media, including paintings, textiles, photographs and film, and other forms of self- representation. Some of the portraits in the exhibition were found in amateur sketchbooks or private diaries at Library and Archives Canada, such as an image of Katherine Jane Ellice (18131864), an accomplished amateur artist; the wife of an official with the North West (fur trading) Company, Ellice used the reflection from a mirror on the wall of her ships cabin to capture a quick and very private self-portrait.
The project includes a fully illustrated bilingual catalogue, with an introductory essay by Boutilier and Bruce, as well as in-depth entries on individual works and themes by 35 invited specialists.
The exhibitions opening year, 2015, marks the 40th anniversary of From Womens Eyes: Women Painters in Canada, a landmark exhibition in the history of Canadian art organized by the Agnes in 1975, International Womens Year. The Artist Herself will tour nationally before closing at the Art Gallery of Hamilton in the summer of 2016. The Artist Herself can be viewed at the AGGV until January 3, 2016.