LANDFALL AND DEPARTURE: PROLOGUE
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Nanaimo Art Gallery 150 Commercial Street, Nanaimo, British Columbia V9R 5G6

Marina Roy, " Mal de mer," 2016
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Join us for the opening reception and to launch the Gallery's 40th year in our newly renovated exhibition space, Thursday, January 26 at 7 pm
Artist Talk with Marina Roy | Saturday, February 11, 7:00 pm
Free for Members | $5 Non-Members
Join us for a talk by Vancouver-based artist Marina Roy. By using techniques of play and bricolage, Roy deconstructs the "pile-up of language and spectacle" to unearth new meanings and conceptions of reality. Mal de Mer, a new video work that Roy made in collaboration with sound artist Graham Meisner, is on display as part of Landfall and Departure: Prologue.
Marina Roy is a Vancouver-based artist working across a variety of media, including painting, drawing, sculpture, animation, video, and writing. She has participated in exhibitions across Canada, as well as in Europe, India, and the US. Roy is Associate Professor of visual arts in the Department of Art History, Visual Art and Theory at the University of British Columbia. Roy is interested in creating new visual languages in which human, animal, plant, mineral and microbial life coalesce into new formations, challenging the way industrialized countries think about the natural world we inhabit.
LANDFALL AND DEPARTURE: PROLOGUE
Doug Allen, Michael Belmore, Allan Sekula and Noël Burch, Heather Cameron, Stan Douglas, Elisa Ferrari, E.J. Hughes, Emily Luce and Klehwetua Rod Sayers, Max Maynard, Marina Roy and Graham Meisner, Charles H. Scott, Jack Shadbolt, Tommy Ting, Hajra Waheed.
Nanaimo Art Gallery is located one block away from the city’s working harbour, a site that is distinctly local, but through oceanic networks of distribution, is connected to harbours around the world. "Landfall and Departure: Prologue" is a contemporary art exhibition that responds to the harbour as a place where goods, labour, and stories are exchanged. Contemporary artworks are shown alongside historical images borrowed from the Nanaimo Museum, audio recordings and documents from the Nanaimo Archives, and works from Nanaimo Art Gallery’s permanent collection.
Ports and docks facilitate both thinking and being elsewhere: a place of departures and arrivals where shipping news and salty stories are shared. Set in Nanaimo, artworks in "Landfall and Departure: Prologue" also look to the traffic in resources, stories, luxuries, and the lives of workers in harbours around the world. The sculptures, photographs, paintings, drawings, videos, and textiles in the exhibition respond to sites in Canada, China, The United States, the Netherlands, the Persian Gulf, Japan, and harbours of the imagination.
Harbours have their own particular features and histories, but they can also articulate shared characteristics as places of both refuge and dislocation. Nanaimo markets itself as “The Harbour City”, but this quaint moniker, common to many seaside communities, belies a tumultuous past and present. Throughout its existence the Nanaimo harbour has seen the displacement of the Snuneymuxw people who had utilised the harbour’s resources for thousands of years, the arrival of precarious mine workers from China, UK, and Scandinavia, and the World War II internment of Japanese Canadians who ran successful herring salteries and boat-building companies there. The harbour has also been transformed, displaced, filled in, and rebuilt. These physical transformations not only had profound impacts on the local environment, but also make imagining the history of this site as difficult as visualizing harbours located far across the sea.
"Landfall and Departure" is the third in a series of three exhibition projects that look to the resource industries that formed and fragmented communities on Vancouver Island while having implications globally. The first project: "Black Diamond Dust" (2014) responded to coal mining; the second project: "Silva" (2015/2016), responded to forestry. "Landfall and Departure" (2017/2018) is a two-part exhibition, which considers resources both distributed on, and extracted from, the sea.
This exhibition is also linked to "Broadcast Archipelago": a series of events, special programs, and radio broadcasts tied to Nanaimo Art Gallery’s 40th anniversary year of programing through which we ask the question “What does it mean to live on an island?”