This is Fringe, one of the most powerful images created by Rebecca Belmore, an Anishinaabe multimedia artist named as a winner of this year’s Governor General’s Awards in Visual and Media Arts (2013 Awards). Belmore’s use of sculpture, performance, photography and video to explore the treatment of Canada’s First Nations people has made her one of the country’s foremost contemporary artists.
Whether a vigil for missing women in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside or a photograph of a deep scar, healed and adorned with beads, her work is imbued with ritual that plays out on the body, on the land and in the elements. -Awards commentary
This video still is from The Named and the Unnamed (Vigil), performed on a downtown Vancouver street corner in the district where at least 60 women went missing, many of them victims of convicted serial killer Robert Pickton. A commission of inquiry slammed police for botching investigations into the disappearances, enabling Pickton to prey undetected for years on women who were mostly sex trade workers or homeless.
Above: Victorious. The seated woman in a dress made of newspapers and honey exemplifies the power of Queen Victoria and the role of the printed word as a vehicle for domination and control.
Belmore’s work is well known internationally, notably from the Venice Biennale’s Canadian Pavilion where she was the first Aboriginal woman to represent Canada. This four-minute video on Belmore was issued by the Canada Council, which administers the awards.
.
Discover more from Canadian Art Junkie
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Fantastic!
Thought provoking, to say the least. The first photo is hard to stomach, but I suppose that is the point.
Yes exactly the point, and I also find it difficult. But she is an astonishingly good artist, no?
Very moving on all levels of emotional impact. Yes beauty in difficult places.
That is so true, very difficult and very powerful. Thank yo.
Reblogged this on intersectionelle.
Thank You! This is wonderful <3
You’re so welcome, glad you found it.
yes. And thank you Rebecca Belmore.
I just read a NYT review that said she used digital manipulation to make that scar in the top piece. That made me feel better.
Wow. I have to read more about her!
Powerful is the first word that comes to my mind as well, then purposeful, poignant, political. Very well done pieces!
So powerful! Thank you.