管家婆免费开奖大全

Exhibit by 管家婆免费开奖大全 Scarborough's first Indigenous artist-in-residence focuses on ceremony and its impact

Photo of Animikiik鈥檕tcii Maakaai
Animikiik鈥檕tcii Maakaai is the first to complete 管家婆免费开奖大全 Scarborough鈥檚 Indigenous Artist-in-Residence Program (photo by @hellomynameisalan)

To experience the exhibit by the 管家婆免费开奖大全 Scarborough鈥檚 first Indigenous artist-in-residence, participants had to both look and listen.

鈥淚t adds another layer of expression,鈥 says Animikiik鈥檕tcii Maakaai, who debuted her first solo exhibit, Tako-Pinehsiiwan, at 管家婆免费开奖大全 Scarborough鈥檚 Gallery 1265.

鈥淥ral tradition is so important in Anishinaabe culture, it鈥檚 how we learn, it鈥檚 how we pass down knowledge. It鈥檚 really vital to the storytelling that I鈥檓 trying to do through my drawings.鈥

The exhibit includes five drawings 鈥 four oil pastel and one chalk 鈥 suspended by ribbons hung from the ceiling, a trail of cedarwood branches carefully placed below them. Playing throughout the exhibit is a recording of Maakaai narrating a story about the impact of ceremony, a crucial part of Indigenous tradition and culture.

She says she was inspired to write the story after attending a women鈥檚 healing ceremony in Toronto a few years ago, calling it a 鈥渧ery pivotal time鈥 in her life.  

鈥淓ven though it was a very quick moment in time, it was very important and held a lot of meaning for me and I鈥檝e held onto it for years now,鈥 she says.

鈥淗olding on to that story I can see how it has helped me through life and those changes I was trying to make at the time.鈥

Maakaai is the first to finish 管家婆免费开奖大全 Scarborough鈥檚 Indigenous Artist-in-Residence Program, a collaboration between the Doris McCarthy Gallery, the department of arts, culture and media and 7th Generation Image Makers (7th Gen), an art and mural program run by .

The program gives young Indigenous artists studio space, a stipend and access to campus resources to support them as they create an exhibit between September and June. It also includes the opportunity to audit courses (taking a course without getting a grade) once per semester.

Maakaai was born and raised in Toronto. On her father鈥檚 side, she has family ties to Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug First Nation, also known as Big Trout Lake First Nation, while her mother鈥檚 family is from Wales. Her dialect is Oji-Cree.

She says she has always been creative, but only started seriously creating artwork in 2016.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just something I鈥檝e always been passionate about. I love creating, sharing my inner world and way of communicating and meeting people,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about honouring those things that feel true and real to me that make up my reality, and in that way, I stay connected to my culture.鈥

This was Maakaai鈥檚 first experience with post-secondary education.

鈥淚鈥檓 glad I got to get a taste of post-secondary without the pressures of performing, getting grades and that kind of stress,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 was really able to sit and enjoy my classes and have my work come from a more personal point of view.鈥

The first class she took, a studio foundations course, got her thinking about using different materials to construct her exhibit. She tried several different mediums, including digital and paint, and even considered sculpture. Eventually, Maakaai went with a medium she had never used before 鈥 most of the drawings were made with oil pastels.

鈥淚t鈥檚 very colourful,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he textures are very nice and although it was a totally new medium for me, I was really excited to use it.鈥

The idea for the residency came after Reagan Kennedy, the arts program co-ordinator at 7th Generation Image Makers, began looking for a place to display the final pieces from another art program. She connected with the Doris McCarthy Gallery鈥檚 director and curator, Ann MacDonald, and Erin Peck, the exhibitions and outreach co-ordinator.

MacDonald and Peck offered to exhibit the works in the Doris McCarthy Gallery vitrines. When the exhibit ended, they began thinking about other ways the gallery and campus could support 7th Gen and young Indigenous artists. 

鈥淏eing in these big institutions, which are colonial spaces, can provide a lot of challenges for a number of people, including Indigenous people,鈥 Kennedy says.

鈥淲e wanted to provide a way where this residency could support someone in attending post-secondary, having access to an art studio and really have the time to develop a body of work to exhibit.鈥

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