Regina Leader-Post

READY FOR A CHANGE

LaVallee to continue promoting the work of Indigenous artists in her new position

- ASHLEY MARTIN amartin@postmedia.com twitter.com/LPAshleyM

After 10 years as curator at the MacKenzie Art Gallery, Michelle LaVallee is leaving for a job as director of the Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada Art Centre in Quebec. While happy for the new opportunit­y, LaVallee says she’ll miss Regina.

Looking back on the past 10 years of Michelle LaVallee’s career, 7 is the highlight.

That was the name of her most prized exhibition that featured works from Profession­al Native Indian Artists Inc., also known as the Indian Group of Seven. The group demanded to be recognized as profession­al contempora­ry artists in the 1970s.

Coincident­ally, 7 took place in 2013, her seventh year as a curator at the MacKenzie Art Gallery. It took seven years to organize the show that borrowed 120 pieces from private and public art collection­s.

“Getting to spend time with Daphne Odjig and Alex Janvier and Joseph Sanchez and meeting Norval Morrisseau before he passed, that’s definitely something I’ll carry with me,” said LaVallee.

While finalizing the exhibition, she had a baby in tow. Daughter Xochil Elena, now four years old, is one reason LaVallee is taking the next step in her career — moving to Gatineau, Que., to direct the Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada Art Centre.

The city is much closer to LaVallee’s hometown of Toronto, where she still has family.

When she starts her new job on Oct. 26 — her 40th birthday — she’ll be taking the next step in a curatorial career that began almost by accident in 2005.

She’ll be responsibl­e for managing a collection of 4,000-plus Indigenous artworks dating back to the 1960s.

“It’s probably one of the most important and comprehens­ive collection­s of contempora­ry Indigenous art in Canada and beyond,” said LaVallee.

She hopes to increase its profile and encourage her art gallery colleagues across Canada to access the collection for exhibition­s.

“I don’t feel I’m leaving curating behind completely,” said LaVallee.

“I’m still going to be able to work with a collection and artists who I admire and respect and … to help build upon this history, a very important history that the art centre has establishe­d.”

LaVallee, whose grandmothe­r is from the Chippewas of Nawash First Nation, has made a point of featuring Indigenous artwork at the MacKenzie.

One of the main reasons is because “there’s still a ways to go” in terms of attitudes toward Indigenous people.

“We’re still living in a time when there’s lots of racism and judgments made based on a person’s racial background,” said LaVallee.

“The last show that I’ve had the privilege to work on at the MacKenzie kind of speaks to that history, as well and where we are today and how we’re going to move forward. … We all play a role in how we’re going to move forward.”

That show is Notes From the Inquest, which opens on Saturday alongside Brett Graham’s Pioneer.

In Notes From the Inquest, Jeff Funnell’s courtroom drawings tell the story of a 1988 Winnipeg coroner’s inquest into the police shooting of Wasagamack Cree leader J.J. Harper.

Given a year of Canada 150 celebratio­ns, “I think it’s an important time to always be cognizant of where we’re at, where we came from, but more importantl­y, where we’re going,” said LaVallee.

MacKenzie Art Gallery executive director Anthony Kiendl called LaVallee “an important part of the gallery’s history.”

“As a gallery, our aim is to continue on with that legacy and to reflect on the work that Michelle has done and build upon it as we go forward and find a new person to take her place,” said Kiendl.

“She’ll be greatly missed by the MacKenzie and the broader community, not just in Regina, but I think in Saskatchew­an and Western Canada.”

That works both ways. LaVallee calls the move “a happy-sad thing.” She’s glad for the opportunit­y, but says she’s going to miss the Regina community that embraced her and her partner, classical guitarist Ramses Calderon.

However, LaVallee said, she doesn’t “see this as ending my relationsh­ip with the MacKenzie at all,” Lavallee said. “I’m hoping it’ll continue. It will just be in a different way.”

Perhaps as a guest curator?

 ?? TROY FLEECE ??
TROY FLEECE

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