Indigenous Art: Beyond History Exhibition Opening

What: Indigenous Art: Beyond History, Exhibition Opening

Who: Norval Morrisseau, Daphne Odjig, Carl Bean, Linus Woods, Sandy Bunn, Felicity Nepinak-Hart, Anja Pickel, Carly Morrisseau, Jackson Beardy, Arthur Amiotte, Cassidy McDonald, Justine Hutcheson and the Beading Babes

Where: Glen P. Sutherland Gallery of Art, 2021 Victoria Ave, Brandon University

When: Exhibition opening Friday, March 1 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Run: March 1 to 15, 2024, Monday to Saturday, 1 to 4:00 p.m.

On Friday, March 1 at 7 p.m., an exciting exhibition of contemporary Indigenous art will open at Brandon University’s (BU’s) Glen P. Sutherland Gallery of Art. It will include works from some of the most revered contemporary artists, such as Norval Morrisseau, Daphne Odjig, Jackson Beardy, Carl Beam and Arthur Amiotte, as well as works by students, alumni and community artists.

Indigenous Art: Beyond History was organized by art history professor Dr. Stacey Koosel’s Contemporary Indigenous Art course. Her students worked as curators of the exhibition led by Felicity Nepinak-Hart as the Chief Curator of the project. Together they selected, researched and installed an exhibition of works by two dozen Indigenous artists, ranging in artistic mediums from paintings, prints and textile, to beading, installation and video.

The exhibition opening will include a smudging ceremony and drumming by The Good Hearted Warriors, as well as tea and bannock for guests from the Brandon Friendship Center.

The exhibition will run for two weeks, from March 1 to 15, from Monday to Saturday, 1 to 4 p.m., and will feature daily tours of the exhibition by the student curators.

For more information, please contact Dr. Koosel at KooselS@BrandonU.ca.

 

University Closed — Louis Riel Day

Brandon University will be largely closed on Monday, Feb. 16 to observe Louis Riel Day. No classes are scheduled for Louis Riel Day.

Louis Riel was the driving force behind Manitoba joining Confederation and becoming Canada’s fifth province.

As the Métis leader of the Red River Resistance of 1869-70, he was instrumental in drafting the List of Rights that formed the basis of the Manitoba Act, passed by the Parliament of Canada in the spring of 1870, which brought the new province of Manitoba into Confederation.

Fearing prosecution, Riel fled to the United States. From exile, he was elected three times as a member of the House of Commons, but could never take his seat. Returning to Canada to help Métis leaders in 1884, he was defeated and captured at the Battle of Batoche. Despite popular appeals and a jury’s call for clemency, Riel was hanged for treason in 1885.

Louis Riel Day has been celebrated as a provincial holiday in Manitoba since 2008.

The University will re-open normal business hours on Tuesday, Feb. 17.

From Tuesday, Feb. 17 through Friday, Feb. 20, Brandon University will observe the Winter Study Break.