Lauren Crazybull: TSIMA KOHTOTSITAPIIHPA Where are you from?
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Southern Alberta Art Gallery 601 3 Avenue S, Lethbridge, Alberta T1J 0H4
Lauren Crazybull, "TSIMA KOHTOTSITAPIIHPA Where are you from?," 2020
Join us for the opening reception of The Otolith Group and Lauren Crazybull
There are two sessions for our opening reception | 8-8:45 PM (Please note this session is fully booked) and 9-9:45 PM. We look forward to seeing you at the event!
Exhibition Tours will be hosted by Courtney Faulkner, Public Engagement & Event Coordinator [Adult], and Adam Whitford, Curatorial & Publications Coordinator, at the start of each viewing session | 8 PM and 9 PM
Lauren Crazybull, a Niitsitapi and Dené painter currently residing in Edmonton, returned to Kainai territory to research the land and language of her family as a part of her artistic research as 2019 Alberta Artist-in-Residence. In this region she met with artists and elders, and connected to landmarks and historical sites of the Blackfoot Confederacy. Through this process, she has created her own map based on her personal exploration of the lands across the province, and how they have informed her own practice in becoming an artist.
TSIMA KOHTOTSITAPIIHPA Where are you from? includes the hand-painted map of Indigenous territories now known as Treaty 6, 7, and 8 territories of Alberta, traversed by Lauren Crazybull. The photographic documentation of this journey culminated in a book created by the artist, and an audio soundscape by Lauren Crazybull, featuring a score by musician Matthew Cardinal.
TSIMA KOHTOTSITAPIIHPA Where are you from? was premiered at Latitude 53 Gallery in an exhibition curated by Noor Bhangu. The Southern Alberta Art Gallery iteration of the exhibition will include several new works created by the artist, reflecting on her connections to the Blackfoot territory. The closing celebration will include a screening of a short documentary IIKAAKIIMAAT, by filmmaker Conor McNally. This film screening is presented in partnership with the Reconciliation Lethbridge Committee and the City of Lethbridge.
When I think about repatriation, I think about going into a museum and taking back items. I learned from Martin HeavyHead Sr. that repatriation takes many forms, including learning stories, making relations and visiting the places where our ancestors spent time. We can take back these things that were once stolen from us. Sometime this year I decided that the money I received from the Alberta Government would be the money I used to reclaim what I lost during my sixteen years in the child welfare system. To do this I would create a large-scale map of Alberta that focused on Indigenous relationship to land. I would do this through looking for original place names, researching and traveling around Alberta. Halfway through the residency, when I realized that I'm not a cartographer, I decided I would narrow the scope and include myself and my family's relationship to the land in this province. I ended up spending most of my time in Southern Alberta where
my mom's side of the family is from. “TSIMA KOHTOTSITAPIIHPA: Where are you from?” has been a way for me to explore the complexity of home and belonging.
—Lauren Crazybull
Curated by Adam Whitford, Curatorial and Publications Coordinator
SAAG Art Library Project | Beginning in 2020, the SAAG will present exhibitions as in-situ interventions within our art library. The Art Library Project will feature a diverse selection of artworks and mediums from regional contemporary artists. Artists are invited to think of the library as a unique exhibition context by investigating the SAAG’s programming around readership, publications, and its place within Lethbridge’s historic Carnegie library, which opened in 1922. Artists are encouraged to consider the physical architecture of the library and its material holdings, responding to a broader and generative idea of what a library might be, as they change and adapt to new forms of knowledge production.
Lauren Crazybull is an Edmonton based Blackfoot, Dene visual artist. Lauren's most recent work has looked to explore the tension and power within portraiture by examining the subtle relationship between herself and the subjects she paints. By centring the gaze, beauty and rich humanity of fellow Indigenous people in her recent work, she means to ask poignant questions about how Indigenous identities can be represented, experienced, celebrated and understood through the particular gaze that artistry casts and requires. In 2019, Lauren Crazybull was appointed as Alberta’s first Artist in Residence. In 2018, she was awarded the McLuhan House year-long studio residency. Before fully immersing into the visual art world, Crazybull worked for four years in radio and broadcasting focusing on Indigenous issues. Following that, she worked for two years as the art coordinator at a centre for at-risk youth. Through this work, she understands that her creative power is a poignant way to assert her own humanity, and advocate, in diverse and subtle ways, for the innate intellectual, spiritual, creative and political fortitude of Indigenous people.