Quill Violet Christie-Peters: spilling out, spilling over
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College Art Galleries 14-107 Administration Place, Mackinnon Building, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 5A2
Quill Violet Christie-Peters, "Making my homelands shake and feel good too," 2018
acrylic on canvas. Courtesy the artist.
Quill Violet Christie-Peters: spilling out, spilling over
College Art Gallery 2
curator, Leah Taylor
take-away essay by Erica Violet Lee
spilling out, spilling over is comprised of recent painting by Quill Violet Christie-Peters, an Anishinaabe artist and scholar based in Northwestern Ontario. Her work conceptualizes “spilling over boundaries” through Anishinaabekwe practices, moving beyond the material plane to a spiritual form of art-making.
Christie-Peters contemporizes the tradition of Woodlands style painting, often depicting her own body in states of self-pleasure to represent loving acts of reclamation, agency, sovereignty, and spiritual connection. She writes, “It is an image of what my ancestors want for me. They know that my body, so many of our bodies, are withered by this settler colonial weather and so they give us gifts that teach us how to fall in love with our bodies again.”
With evident urgency, Christie-Peters interrogates settler colonialism, holding accountable the capitalist structures that are created on, and occupy, stolen Indigenous land. Her work centres on Anishinaabe futurisms by looking at how ancestral relationships will inform and shape the trajectories to decolonial futures, particularly in the context of displacement and urban Indigenous realities.
Influenced by her father, artist Ron Peters, spilling out, spilling over includes serval of Peters’ key works, presenting the two artists in-conversation with one another. In situ, the impact of intergenerational knowledge, storytelling, resistance, and survival is illustrated, deepening the contextualization of Christie-Peters’ ancestral relations within her work.