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Wood Land School : 

Kahatenhstánion tsi na’tetiatere ne Iotohrkó:wa tánon Iotohrha
Drawing Lines from January to December

Gestures

For the duration of 2017, SBC Gallery of Contemporary Art will be renamed and operate as Wood Land School. An itinerant project first instigated by Duane Linklater, this instance of Wood Land School is organized by Duane Linklater, Tanya Lukin Linklater and cheyanne turions, with Walter Scott.

 

Wood Land School: Kahatenhstánion tsi na’tetiatere ne Iotohrkó:wa tánon Iotohrha / Drawing Lines from January to December is conceived as a single year-long exhibition that will unfold through a series of gestures—clusters of activity that bring works into and out of the gallery space—such that the exhibition is in a constant state of becoming. Kahatenhstánion tsi na’tetiatere ne Iotohrkó:wa tánon Iotohrha / Drawing Lines from January to December recognizes the power of line to mark history and invoke memory, proposing lines without beginning or end as a way to imagine Indigenous futurity.

 

This project is the continuation of a conversation and it is the forging of new relationships. From an initial position of Indigenous self-determination and collectivity, we situate ourselves as impacted upon by forces both nurturing and destructive; we work to be aware of our own participation in dispossession; and we consider our capacity to articulate new ways of being in relation.

 

Contemporary civic institutions and social structures are built upon systems that have silenced, ignored and destructively classified Indigenous people, ideas and objects. In response to this history, Wood Land School calls upon institutions to give labour, space, time and funds to support Indigenous ideas, objects, discursivity and performance. Foregrounding Indigenous history and presence on this land now known as Canada, in a place now known as Montréal, Kahatenhstánion tsi na’tetiatere ne Iotohrkó:wa tánon Iotohrha / Drawing Lines from January to December creates a space of critical reflection and re-imagination. Here, the tenets of treaty—mutual accountability, reciprocity, relation across difference and stewardship of resources—are enacted.

 

Wood Land School is an experimental space where Indigenous thought and theory are centralized, embodied, mobilized and take shape. Wood Land School does not seek to summarize Indigenous identity, but rather to honour specific, embodied expressions of inheritance and becoming.

 

The scope of the contexts we operate within include the historical, which is akin to theory, and the contemporary, which is akin to practice. Wood Land School is a space for listening, where we tend to the urgency of current conditions as they unfold with an eye to how (and how else) these circumstances can shape our everyday lives. It operates with an awareness that settler colonialism is ever present, enacted in and on Turtle Island in various forms. Wood Land School is the theorization and practice of centering Indigeneity. Our primary relationships are Indigenous to Indigenous, which includes land and non-humans. We also extend our conversations with and to other communities, working in and through a treaty relationship, to re-frame conversations to centre Indigenous agency. The impact of this project will be determined by many viewers over time.

 

We wonder, how do the relationships between theory, practice and pedagogy manifest across the complexity and diversity of Indigenous identities, and in relation to settler colonial positionings? What does it mean for a settler-colonial institution to unknow its power? What does it mean to memorialize and dream in relation? How to collectively tend to the becoming of the future?

 

—Duane Linklater, Tanya Lukin Linklater and cheyanne turions, with Walter Scott

Publications

Exhibition views

Biography

Special thanks to Beatrice Deer, Heather Igloliorte, Reid Shier, Canadian Art, the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, le Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec, le Conseil des arts du Canada and le Conseil des arts de Montréal. As well as National Film Board of Canada, Art Gallery of Windsor, Catriona Jeffries

Studio Brian Jungen, New Leaf Editions and Kitchener-Waterloo Art Gallery, Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal, ED Video, Macaulay & Co Fine Arts, Erin Stump Projects and National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institution.

News

Fourth Gesture

 

21 September – 16 December 2017

 

Please see Events for information about performances, talks et cetera.

 

Billy-Ray Belcourt

A HERMENEUTICS OF THE SOMEWHERE-SOMETIMES (2017)

Vinyl Installation 131 x 65 cm

 

Maggie Groat

5th Eye and Subtle Bodies  > 1, 7, 14, 21, 28 (2017)

Collages 50.8 x 45.5 cm

 

Rita Letendre

Koumer (1975)

Acrylic on canvas, 154.9 x 203.2cm

 

Annie Pootoogook

Coleman Stove with Robin Hood Flour and Tenderflake (2003-2004)

Pencil crayon and ink on paper, 51.0 x 66.5 cm

 

Walter Scott

Dog Series (2017)

Coloured pencil and/or acrylic on paper, 35.5 x 43 cm

 

Joseph Tisiga

25 pack–Totem Special–Fraxinus Edition (2014)

25 painted ash trees, dimensions variable

 

Charlene Vickers

Diviners (2010)

Carved cedar, variable dimensions

 

Zotom

Kiowa Soldier Dance (1875-78)

Paper, graphite, crayon, 26.3 x 19.8 cm

Installation views, Wood Land School: Kahatenhstánion tsi na’tetiatere ne Iotohrkó:wa tánon Iotohrha / Drawing Lines from January to December, Fourth Gesture, 2017. Courtesy of Wood Land School / SBC Gallery of Contemporary Art, Montreal. Photos: Paul Litherland

Gestures

 

Wood Land School: Kahatenhstánion tsi na’tetiatere ne Iotohrkó:wa tánon Iotohrha is conceived as a single year-long exhibition that will unfold through a series of gestures—clusters of activity that bring works into and out of the gallery space—such that the exhibition is in a constant state of becoming.

 

In developing Kahatenhstánion tsi na’tetiatere ne Iotohrkó:wa tánon Iotohrha / Drawing Lines from January to December, Wood Land School registers the goals of the project through obligations. These include fostering relationships with Indigenous people in and around Tiohtià:ke, and attending to the broader social, political and cultural circumstances that shape the context of the project’s presentation. In the many months that preceded the project’s launch, the first register of urgency was the passing of Annie Pootoogook. She was so much more than an artist, but Wood Land School firmly believes that her work as an artist has widely impacted conceptions of contemporary cultural production—in the north, across Canada and around the world.

 

Annie Pootoogook’s drawing Coleman Stove with Robin Hood Flour and Tenderflake (2003-2004) anchors Kahatenhstánion tsi na’tetiatere ne Iotohrkó:wa tánon Iotohrha / Drawing Lines from January to December and will remain in the exhibition space for the duration of the year. Depicting the ingredients and instruments required to make bannock, Pootoogook’s drawing reflects the methodologies of Wood Land School in Tiohtià:ke: this project is in a process of becoming, it tends to cross cultural translations and it is concerned with mobility.

4eme geste

Third gesture

 

July 18 - 19, 2017

 

Wood Land School at Under the Mango Tree - Ulterior Sites of Learning , documenta 14.

3eme geste

Second Gesture

 

11 May–29 July 2017

 

Please see Events for information about performances, talks et cetera.

 

Joi T. Arcand

(ēkāwiya nēpēwisi) (2017)

Neon channel sign, 183 x 122 cm

Sponsor acknowledgement : Canada Council for the Arts

nēhiyawēwin Translations : Darryl Chamakese and Dolores Sand

 

Elisa Harkins & Nathan Young

The Plains Indian Sign Language (2017)

Video, 2 min 44 s

 

Brian Jungen

Untitled (2017)

Ink and pencil crayon on paper, 73.7 x 50.8 cm

 

Tsēma Igharas

Riot Rock Rattles (2016 - present)

Shells: copper, rawhide, ceramic; contents: glass beads, dentalium shells, penny shards, mount Edziza soil sample; stand: wood, rope; installation with audio component: variable dimensions

 

Gabrielle L'Hirondelle Hill

Orinoco Note (2016)

Tobacco, thread, dowel, acrylic paint, 84 x 197 cm

Courtesy of the artist

 

Marianne Nicolson

The Sun is Setting on the British Empire (2017)

Dye sublimation on fabric, 218.5 x 373.5 cm

 

Annie Pootoogook

Coleman Stove with Robin Hood Flour and Tenderflake (2003-2004)

Pencil crayon and ink on paper, 51.0 x 66.5 cm

 

Wendy Red Star

The Maniacs (We’re Not The Best But We’re Better Than The Rest) (2017)

Ink jet print on Tyvek, 122 x 96.5 cm

Installation views, Wood Land School: Kahatenhstánion tsi na’tetiatere ne Iotohrkó:wa tánon Iotohrha / Drawing Lines from January to December, Second Gesture, 2017. Courtesy of Wood Land School / SBC Gallery of Contemporary Art, Montreal. Photos: Paul Litherland

deuxieme geste galerie
2ème geste

Installation views, Wood Land School: Kahatenhstánion tsi na’tetiatere ne Iotohrkó:wa tánon Iotohrha / Drawing Lines from January to December, First Gesture, 2017. Courtesy of Wood Land School / SBC Gallery of Contemporary Art, Montreal. Photos: Paul Litherland

Biography

 

Wood Land School is an ongoing project with no fixed location or form. First instigated by Duane Linklater, Wood Land School: Kahatenhstánion tsi na’tetiatere ne Iotohrkó:wa tánon Iotohrha / Drawing Lines from January to December is organized by Duane Linklater, Tanya Lukin Linklater and cheyanne turions, with Walter Scott.

 

In its malleability, Wood Land School seeks critical engagements within the realms of representation, film, contemporary art, land and politics in Turtle Island and beyond. It emerges out of Linklater's investigation into Indigenous artists based in northern Ontario in the 1970s, whose work engaged both ancient and contemporary Indigenous art forms. Each iteration of Wood Land School carries forth a commitment to address the lack of structural inclusion of Indigenous people, both historically and in the now, in a multiplicity of institutional spaces. It is a conceptual and physical space for Indigenous people, with Indigenous people deciding its directions, structures and functions. An important additional component of Wood Land School is the inclusion of non-Indigenous people who are invited to engage with the complex realities of Indigenous artworks, experiences, ideas and spaces.

 

Wood Land School began in 2011 with the making of a small exhibition of works selected by Linklater in a small office/studio space located above the Necessities convenience store (selling “Native Crafts, Fireworks, Cigarettes”) on Nipissing First Nation in Northern Ontario. This location was transformed into the Wood Land School, an open and contemplative space for the present. This activation and investigation of space is an ongoing and never-ending task that must be portable, because walls should not obstruct the circulation or behaviour of ideas. Since then, Wood Land School has taken many forms including residencies, seminars, film screenings and discursive happenings shaped by many participating artists, writers and thinkers along the way.

 

Previous iterations of Wood Land School include the following:

 

Wood Land School: Exhibition, Nipissing First Nation, Ontario, 2011

with Raymond Boisjoly, David Horovitz, Duane Linklater, Tanya Lukin Linklater and Walter Scott

 

Wood Land School: What colour is the present? The Banff Centre, Banff, Alberta, 2013

Facilitated by Brian Jungen, Duane Linklater and Wendy Red Star

 

Wood Land School: The Exiles, Artscape Gibralter Point, Toronto Island, Ontario, 2013

Facilitated by Duane Linklater

 

Wood Land School: On 12 Years a Slave, Art Metropole, Toronto, Ontario, 2013

Facilitated by cheyanne turions

 

Wood Land School: In the land of the Head Hunters, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, British Columbia, 2014

with Raymond Boisjoly, Marcia Crosby and Duane Linklater

 

Wood Land School: Critical Anthology (symposium), Or Gallery, Vancouver, British Columbia, 2016

with Raymond Boisjoly, David Garneau, Richard Hill, Candice Hopkins, Amy Kazymerchyk, Tanya Lukin Linklater, Liz Park, Postcommodity, Walter Scott and cheyanne turions

 

Wood Land School: Thunderbird Woman, Plug In ICA, Winnipeg, Manitoba, 2016

with Jamie Isaac and Duane Linklater

 

Wood Land School: Critical Anthology (publication), Or Gallery and SFU Galleries, Vancouver, British Columbia, forthcoming

with Raymond Boisjoly, David Garneau, Candice Hopkins, Amy Kazymerchyk, Tanya Lukin Linklater, Liz Park, Postcommodity, Walter Scott, cheyanne turions and Jordan Wilson

News

 

From July 18 to July 19, 2017, Wood Land School participates in Under the Mango Tree: Ulterior Sites of Learning — a gathering that addresses new sites for learning to take place in Kassel as part of documenta 14. The program brings together practitioners from across the world.

 

 

biographie
Images
Nouvelles

First Gesture

 

21 January–29 April 2017

 

Please note: dates listed below represent when works were first be presented in the exhibition space. Please see Events for information about performances, talks et cetera.

 

21 January 2017

Annie Pootoogook

Coleman Stove with Robin Hood Flour and Tenderflake (2003-2004)

Pencil crayon and ink on paper, 76.0 x 112.5 cm

 

4 February 2017

Alanis Obomsawin

Christmas at Moose Factory (1971)

16mm film transferred to video, 13 min 07 s

 

18 February 2017

Layli Long Soldier

A Line Through Grief

Poetry performance produced especially for Wood Land School: Kahatènhston tsi na’tetiátere ne Iotohrkó:wa tánon Iotohrha / Drawing a Line from January to December

 

4 March 2017

Ange Loft with Re:Collection Kahnawake

Performance and belongings

 

18 March 2017

Napachie Pootoogook

Drawing of My Tent (1982)

Colour stonecut and stencil on Japan paper, 25/50, 64 x 87 cm

Collection of the Art Gallery of Windsor

Gift of the Director's Fund

 

30 March 2017

Brian Jungen

A new series of drawings produced especially for Wood Land School: Kahatenhstánion tsi na’tetiatere ne Iotohrkó:wa tánon Iotohrha / Drawing Lines from January to December

1er geste
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