Centre welcomes aboriginal artists to discuss culture

First Nations in Contemporary Culture panel discussion takes place Wednesday in the Vernon Performing Arts Centre's Tolko Millennium Foyer.

The Vernon and District Performing Arts Centre is hosting a First Nations in Contemporary Culture panel discussion, Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the centre’s Tolko Millennium Foyer.

The discussion features a panel of six speakers, including Santee Smith, Mariel Belanger, Margo Tamez, Stephen Foster, Jordan Bennett and Amy Malbeuf.

Admission is free.

Smith (Mohawk) is the artistic director of Kaha:Wi Dance Theatre and is from Six Nations, Ont. She holds a master’s degree in dance from York University and attended Canada’s National Ballet School. She is renowned for producing dances nationally and internationally, and is an innovative choreographer and sought after teacher skilled at teaching students at all levels of dances and from different backgrounds.

Belanger ( Syilx – Okanagan First Nations) is an actor, mentor, writer, video artist and member of the Okanagan Nation. She graduated from media and communications, general arts and sciences in Ottawa, and from the National Aboriginal Professional Artist Training program at Penticton’s En’owkin Centre. She has  trained in acting in Ottawa, Toronto and Vancouver and currently trains at the Actor’s Foundry in Vancouver..

Tamez (Lipan Apache) is a scholar, poet, and human rights defender, and is recognized as an Indigenous ambassador to the United Nations, who has represented the Konitsaaíí Ndé (“Big Water People”) and Cúelcahén Ndé (“Tall Grass People”) of Konitsaii gokiyaa (Lipan Apache homeland) in Southern Texas.

She was born and grew up in the territory of Lipan Apache peoples in South Texas, the Lower Rio Grande Valley and along the Texas-Mexico border. Tamez’s 2007 work, Raven Eye, is considered the first Apache-authored literary work which fuses creative non-fiction, biography, poetry and criticism of the colonization and militarization of Indigenous peoples in the U.S.-Mexico border region.As an Indigenous human rights advocate, an educator, poet and critic, Tamez has made social and intellectual contributions to Indigenous communities in the United States, Mexico, and Canada, as well as to Indigenous teaching at college and university level. She is a social justice and human rights advocate and intellectual, focusing on U.S.-Mexico Indigenous peoples impacted by border bifurcations, treaties, war, conflict and militarization.

Foster is a video and electronic media artist of mixed Haida and European background. His work tends to deal with issues of indigenous representation in popular culture through personal narrative and has been exhibited in solo as well as group exhibitions both internationally and nationally.

He has also participated in various festivals with video installations and single channel works. In 2007 Stephen received his first opportunity to present a retrospective screening of his video work at the Dawson City International Short Film Festival. In addition to his exhibition record, Stephen is a published author, presented lectures and has participated on panels for new media, video art and contemporary indigenous art at national and international venues. Stephen is currently an Associate Professor in the Creative Studies Dept. and is the Director of the Summer Institute for Interdisciplinary Indigenous Graduate Studies at the University of British Columbia – Okanagan. He is also the coordinator of the CanWest Global Centre for Artists’ Video and instructs courses dedicated to video production, digital media and visual and cultural theory.

Bennett is a multi-disciplinary visual artist of Mi’kmaq heritage from Stephenville Crossing, Nfld. He has exhibited extensively in Canada and abroad in venues such as The Museum of Art and Design, NYC, NY; Museum of Contemporary Native Arts, Santa Fe, NM; Project Space Gallery, RMIT, Melbourne, AUS; The Power Plant, Toronto, ON; Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal, Montreal, QC; McMichael Art Gallery. Kleinburg, ON, The Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver BC amongst many others. Jordan has been officially selected to exhibit and represent Newfoundland and Labrador in the 2015 Venice Biennial, as well as recently being awarded the Newfoundland and Labrador Arts Councils Artist of the Year and named as one of the artists in the 2014 Blouin ARTINFO’s Top 30 under 30 in Canada. Jordan is currently working towards a MFA from the University of British Columbia Okanagan with a particular focus on exploring notions of the living artifact within traditional Indigenous and contemporary art forms through the processes of sculpture, film and digital media, endurance performance, painting and sound installation.

Malbeuf is a visual artist of Métis heritage from Rich Lake, Alta. She lives and works in Kelowna where she is working towards a master’s in fine art  from the University of British Columbia Okanagan. She holds a native cultural arts certificate from Portage College and a bachelor’s of fine art from Alberta College of Art and Design.

Through utilising the mediums of caribou hair tufting, beadwork, installation, and performance she explores notions of identity, place, tradition, language, and ecology. Malbeuf has exhibited her work at such places as the Art Gallery of Alberta, Edmonton; Dunlop Art Gallery, Regina; Kings ARI, Melbourne, Australia; Forest City Gallery, London; and Stride Gallery, Calgary. Malbeuf has participated in many international artist residencies including at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, Labrador Research Institute, and The Banff Centre.

 

 

 

Vernon Morning Star

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