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Ceci est un event archivé de la Fête de la Culture 2021.

How to Read a Vessel

En personne

Artisanat Poterie et éramique Arts visuels
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Date et heure

Cette activité se déroule pendant toute la durée de la Fête de la culture.

Lieu

Art Gallery of Burlington - Lee-Chin Family Gallery

1333 Lakeshore Road

Burlington, ON

Accès

Gratuit.

Offert en Anglais.

Accessible en chaise roulante.

À propos

Art Gallery of Burlington - Lee-Chin Family Gallery

Sept. 24 to Oct. 24

Tuesday - Friday: Noon to 5 p.m.

Saturday: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

ARTISTS:

Featuring: Marissa Y Alexander, Althea Balmes, Anong Beam, Francisca Benítez, Tamyka Bullen, Nicole Clouston, Bojana Coklyat, Rania El Mugammar, Sameer Farooq, Shannon Finnegan, Naoko Fukumaru, Shaya Ishaq, Beatriz Paz Jiménez, Joon Hee Kim, Myung-Sun Kim, Ivy Knight, Vanessa Kwan, Ness Lee, Pamila Matharu, Primal Studio, Noe Martínez, Mark Menjivar, Peter Morin, Lisa Myers, Haruko Okano, Karla Rivera, Jamie Ross, Sin Wai Kin, Stephanie Singh, Nurielle Stern, Amina Z. Suhrwardy, Isola Tong, Camille Turner, Adam Williams, Kendra Yee, Zo’tz* Collective, and work from over 550 AGB Permanent Collection artists.

Curated by: Tara Bursey, Suzanne Carte, Ness Lee, Su-Ying Lee, and Christine Saly-Chapman

Over the last 38 years, the Art Gallery of Burlington (AGB) has amassed the largest comprehensive collection of contemporary Canadian ceramics in the world. Totalling over 3,000 works, the collection ranges from functional ware to sculptural installations.

How to Read a Vessel is an experimental exhibition and communal site of learning that openly discusses the challenges and excitement of holding, caring for, and exhibiting this object-based, craft-forward permanent collection, while continuing to develop a vision that incorporates critical social practice at its core.

The assembly of programs and projects by artists and curators Ness Lee, Su-Ying Lee, Myung-Sun Kim, Ivy Knight, and Christine Saly-Chapman has been conceived of in response to two key texts: Elizabeth Fisher’s “Carrier Bag Theory of Evolution,” which proposes that the first tool was a container, rather than a weapon, thereby feminizing concepts of early society; and, by extension, Ursula K. Le Guin’s “Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction,” which applies the container approach to stories, arguing for an expansion of the types of narratives and outcomes that are made visible beyond the finality of a singular weapon-wielding hero.

With these texts as a guiding force, the exhibition examines how a collection of vessels speaks to an unaccounted and unrecognized history of women’s ingenuity and labour in the arts. How to Read a Vessel unpacks the matriarchal history of craft production and the AGB’s own institutional beginnings by bringing its ceramic vessels out of their vaults and into the public space, alongside newly commissioned pieces, and an array of international artworks. It is a non-linear, queer exhibition exploring the vessel as language, lineage, containment, nourishment, and archive. Within it, art objects become metaphors, or mnemonic devices, to discuss the colonial constructs of collections and their histories.

Image Credit: Myung-Sun Kim, Rituals for belonging, Ceramics, 2021-ongoing (Note: Each vessel is accompanied by rituals created by many collaborators)

Organisateur

Art Gallery of Burlington

The Art Gallery of Burlington is Burlington’s public art gallery and community centre. We are a place of intersection where creators, cultures and communities meet and share in the wealth of human creativity.

The Art Gallery of Burlington aspires to free minds and feed spirits by supporting, sharing, and influencing the visual culture of our times.

We are a team of thirty employees who work with almost five hundred volunteers in service to our communities, to visual culture, and to future generations.

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