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This is an archived event from Culture Days 2025.

  • Elliott Ramsey
  • Manuel Axel Strain, photo by Jon Benjamin.
  • Richmond Art Gallery Opening Reception of Manuel Axel Strain: xʷən̓iwən ce:p kʷθəθ nəw̓eyəł ((((Remember your teachings)))). Photo by Jon Benjamin.
  • Elliott Ramsey at Manuel Axel Strain opening reception, Sept 2025. Photo by Jon Benjamin.

Art Talkback Series with Elliott Ramsey and Manuel Axel Strain

In-person

Visual arts Interdisciplinary Indigenous LGBTQIA2S
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Date and time

Location

Richmond Art Gallery

7700 Minoru Gate

Richmond, BC

Directions: Entrance through the Richmond Cultural Centre.

Access

Free.

Offered in English.

Wheelchair accessible.

About

Art Talkback Series

Featured artist Manuel Axel Strain invites local artists and cultural workers into a collaborative and reflective gathering at the Gallery. This informal series blends thoughtful conversation, community insight, and hands-on experiences, offering participants a chance to engage directly with the artworks and each other in a welcoming, interactive setting. Whether you're an artist, art lover, or simply curious, come explore the exhibition in new ways.

Limited seating—RSVP appreciated.

Session 2: Elliott Ramsey, Polygon Gallery Curator

Join curator Elliott Ramsey for a behind-the-scenes look at their recent collaboration with artist Manuel Axel Strain, whose work is featured in the current exhibition. This session takes place inside the new installation and includes a guided discussion about the artist’s evolving practice, themes in the work, and the curatorial process. Guests are invited to enjoy local herbal teas and take part in an informal conversation with other attendees in a relaxed gallery setting.

About the Presenters:

Elliott Ramsey (b. 1990) is Curator of The Polygon Gallery, based on the unceded territories of the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh and səlilwətaɬ Nations and xʷməθkʷəy̓əm Band. He holds a Masters of Arts degree in Comparative Media Arts (2015) from Simon Fraser University, and is an alumnus of the Association of Art Museum Curators’ Professional Alliance for Curators of Colour. He has sat on numerous panels, juries, and public art committees, including the Sobey Art Award, VIVA Award, Portfolio Prize, and Barbara Spohr Memorial Award for Photography. His recent exhibition As We Rise: Photography from the Black Atlantic, presented by Aperture and featuring work from the Toronto-based Wedge Collection, is currently touring.

Manuel Axel Strain (pronouns they/them) is a 2-Spirit artist from the lands and waters of the xʷməθkʷəyəm (Musqueam), Simpcw and Syilx peoples, based in the sacred region of their q̓ic̓əy̓(Katzie) and qʼʷa:n̓ƛʼən̓ (Kwantlen) relatives. Strain’s mother is Tracey Strain and father is Eric Strain, Tracey’s parents are Harold Eustache (from Chuchua) and Marie Louis (from nk̓maplqs), Eric’s Parents are Helen Point (from xʷməθkʷəy̓əm) and John Strain (from Ireland). Although they attended Emily Carr University of Art + Design they prioritize Indigenous epistemologies through the embodied knowledge of their mother, father, siblings, cousins, aunties, uncles, nieces, nephews, grandparents and ancestors.

Creating artwork in collaboration with and reference to their relatives, their shared experiences become a source of agency that resonates through their work with performance, land, painting, sculpture, photography, video, sound and installation. Their artworks often envelop subjects in relation with ancestral and community ties, Indigeneity, labour, resource extraction, gender, Indigenous medicine and life forces. Strain often perceives their work to confront and undermine the imposed realities of colonialism. Proposing a new space beyond its oppressive systems of power. They have contributed work to the Vancouver Art Gallery, Surrey Art Gallery, the UBCO FINA Gallery, were longlisted for the 2022 Sobey Award and were a recipient of the 2022 Portfolio Prize.

Links

Organizer

Richmond Art Gallery

Richmond Art Gallery (RAG) is a non-profit municipal art gallery established in 1980. The gallery produces an array of exhibitions and programs that connect, empower, and provoke conversation with our diverse Richmond, BC communities. RAG actively contributes to Richmond’s cultural communities through our commitment to supporting artists via exhibitions, educational programs, publications, and a permanent collection.

Richmond Art Gallery is dedicated to promoting dialogue among diverse communities on challenging ideas and issues of today as expressed through local, national and international contemporary art. Through its exhibitions, publications, educational programming, collections and significant partnerships, the Richmond Art Gallery provides opportunities for the enhancement of life in Richmond while serving the contemporary arts community in Canada.

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