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Added: Feb 22, 2012
From: krashhazzard
Duration: 4:24
Ominjimendaan/ to remember Charlene Vickers Opening: Thu, 23 February 2012, 7-11pm Exhibition Dates: Thu, 23 February 2012 - Sat, 31 March 2012 grunt gallery, Vancouver, BC 350 E 2nd Avenue, Unit 116 Gallery Hours: Tuesday - Saturday, 12 - 5pm Carvings in wood, grasses wrapped in fabric and hair, and a clan of turtles become signals and searchers to remember those lost or missing. Grunt gallery is pleased to present the work of Charlene Vickers in her new installation entitled, "Ominjimendaan/ to remember". This exhibition is comprised of a range of sculptural objects including wrapped grasses, sturdy spear forms, and stylized turtles. At the heart of this exhibition, Vickers evokes a healing space for those who have experienced loss or who are looking for someone who is missing. Within each grass stalk, spear, and turtle, memory is a source of experiential meaning both historical and personal, for maker and viewer. History, healing and growth are themes of the early wrapped grass and fabric works. By wrapping and binding grasses and hair together with cotton and linen strips, the grasses begin to resemble bone-like forms to evoke vulnerability and recovery. The most recent wrapped grasses stand facing the viewer in relation to their own body. Emphasis on how the body and experiences of the viewer are incorporated in the meaning of the work is crucial. Tall lengths of pointed, sharpened cedar stand balanced against a wall waiting for someone to employ them with purpose; a story, a history, an action. Resembling spears or tipi poles, one thinks of weaponry, hunting, or traditional shelters that provide protection and sustenance. The initial idea for the form of the work began when thinking of the porcupine quill and its elegant and efficient functionality as deterrent to predators. The clan of turtles are the searchers of things lost: people, culture, languages, and histories. The clan shuffles, floats, dreams and searches to find lost sisters and family members, then slowly re-enters the land and the rivers from where they came. Charlene Vickers is an Anishinabe artist based in Vancouver BC. She graduated from the Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design (94) and is currently an MFA candidate at Simon Fraser University (2013). Born in Kenora Ontario and raised in Toronto her art explores her Ojibway ancestry and her experiences living and working in urban spaces. Vestige Vagabond, a performance and collaboration with Maria Hupfield was recently presented at the 2011 Santa Fe Indian Art Market hosted by the Museum of Contemporary Native Arts
Channel: People
Tags: charlene vickers vancouver grunt gallery to remember art installation sculpture turtles spears grass history healing anishinabe emily carr simon fraser ojibway talking stick festival glenn alteen demian petryshyn krista lomax artist biography documentary canon 60d after effects
Rating: 5.0' max='5' min='1' numRaters='2' rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#overall ( ratings) Views: 185 Comments: 1
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MsShadow1964 Says:
May 12, 2012 - this is amazing i love native art and believe in theyre beliefs. also we are related through marriage