Denyse Thomasos: Odyssey
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Art Gallery of Greater Victoria 1040 Moss Street, Victoria, British Columbia V8V 4P1
Denyse Thomasos, "Sparrow," 2010
acrylic on canvas, 152.4 x 182.9 c m © Courtesy of the Estate of Denyse Thomasos and Olga Korper Gallery
Denyse Thomasos: Odyssey
The Art Gallery of Greater Victoria presents the ground-breaking and much anticipated exhibition Denyse Thomasos: Odyssey, opening on Nov. 27 with a free Public Open House, from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
"We are grateful that our community will have the opportunity to experience the powerful work of Denyse Thomasos. Work that has the capacity to provoke in us questions, curiosity, and a range of emotions that connect deeply with the human condition,” said AGGV Curator of Engagement, Nicole Stanbridge. “This is articulated so poignantly by Esi Edugyan, the Victoria-based award-winning novelist, who contributed a moving and insightful essay to the exhibitions catalogue that references how Thomasos' work lives in a place of tension between things, like freedom and confinement, Edugyan states; "the work is subtle and refuses to show us what we expect to see.”
The exhibition is co-curated by Gaëtane Verna, Director of The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery in Toronto, and Sarah Milroy, Chief Curator of the McMichael Canadian Art Collection. The show brings together more than 50 works from every phase of Denyse Thomasos’ (1964–2012) career, celebrating her historic contribution to Canadian art.
Denyse Thomasos was a Trinidadian-Canadian artist whose epic paintings incorporate imagery from a range of sources, including Caribbean textiles, historic slave ships, industrial shipyards, graveyards, villages and maximum security prisons.
Thomasos explained her choice of subject matter in an artist statement in 2012, shortly before her untimely death:
“I was struck by the premeditated, efficient, dispassionate records of human beings as cargo and also by the deplorable conditions of the slave ships—so many Africans stacked and piled into the tiny, airless holds. In my artworks, I used lines in deep space to recreate these claustrophobic conditions, leaving no room to breathe. To capture the feeling of confinement, I created three large-scale black-and-white paintings of the structures that were used to contain slaves—and left such catastrophic effects on the black psyche: the slave ship, the prison, and the burial site. These became archetypal for me. I began to reconstruct and recycle their forms in all of my works.”
The structures that confine and define us — whether political, social or architectural — served as the subject of her works. With her lush painterly approach, Thomasos compounded these subjects into form and colour. The result is a body of work that recalls the history of the African diaspora with boundless energy and force. Thomasos’ art enacts a delicate balance between representation and abstraction, and holds a unique place in the history of Canadian art, adding to a narrative from which Black, Indigenous, and people of colour’s voices have for too long been excluded. The McMichael’s exhibition gathers works from all phases of Thomasos’ career in celebration of her historic contribution.
About the Artist
Denyse Thomasos was born in Port of Spain, Trinidad, emigrating with her family to Toronto at the age of six, where they joined the city’s dynamic Afro-Caribbean community. She studied at the University of Toronto and Yale School of Art, eventually taking up a teaching position at Rutgers University. Her extensive international travels and research fuelled her understanding of the histories and legacies of oppression, examining the ways in which we organize ourselves in physical and social space.
Denyse Thomasos: Odyssey is accompanied by an exhibition catalogue including a curatorial conversation between Verna and Milroy, as well as an essay by illustrious Victoria based author Esi Edugyan. The catalogue is available at the AGGV Gallery Shop.