Inuit Art Quarterly

Àbadakone | Continuous Fire | Feu continuel

There isn’t another exhibition of contempora­ry Indigenous art of this scope anywhere in the world.

- by Rachelle Dickenson and Greg A. Hill

Àbadakone | Continuous Fire | Feu continuel is the second in an ongoing series of exhibition­s organized by the National Gallery of Canada (NGC) in Ottawa, ON, focusing on contempora­ry Indigenous art from around the world, following Sakahàn: Internatio­nal

Indigenous Ar t in 2013. For Àbadakone, we, the curatorial team composed of Rachelle Dickenson, Greg A. Hill and Christine Lalonde, looked to ideas of Relatednes­s—the relationsh­ips between human beings, animals, plants and the land; Continuiti­es—examining links between ancestral work, contempora­ry and the future; and Activation—how artists are active, how audiences are engaged and how artworks themselves have agency.

From these central tenets, we began the process of selecting works with the idea that the scope of the exhibition would be global. We also knew we wanted to have many more projects that are performanc­ebased.

As far as we’re aware, there isn’t another exhibition of contempora­ry Indigenous art of this scope anywhere in the world. It’s a strong statement. The exhibition features works by more than 70 artists installed in all the public spaces of the gallery. From the entrance to the exit of the exhibition, there is an incredible amount of work to experience, including some very ambitious, never-before-seen commission­ed works.

With Àbadakone, we’re pushing away from the didactic objective that marked

Sakahàn, which sought to introduce Indigenous art and what it can mean, and are moving towards thinking about the art as an opportunit­y for gathering. This shift provides a unique opportunit­y to think through some critical contempora­ry questions. Discussion­s about the expectatio­ns for Indigenous art will happen, but there’s also the possibilit­y for the NGC to become an important hub where critical dialogue happens amongst audience members, artists, collaborat­ors and partners. We invited every one of the exhibiting artists to the opening, allowing us to extend the curatorial intentions beyond our

offices and our own heads by having artists in the space. In this way, we can extend a vision of artmaking that is about being together and visiting, trading ideas, connecting and working together. We perceive this show as an ongoing conversati­on here at this federal institutio­n, and believe that we and Canada are uniquely positioned to bring people from countries that may not support these kinds of open discussion­s to join the conversati­on.

We also thought about performanc­e and activation—how art is activated and the role of the artist and viewer in that activation. We have installati­ons that lay dormant for part of the exhibition until the artist comes and activates them, transformi­ng them in another way. To cap our dedication to process and our excitement to witness the conversati­ons that will arise, we will release the catalogue towards the end of the exhibition. Doing this will help us pull back the curtain on the curatorial process, and be more responsive and better able to document the installati­ons, the public commission­s and interactio­ns that occur. It matters that the process as well as the documentat­ion is flexible, so that it can respond to different moments.

In terms of specific works, Joar Nango’s installati­on, Sámi Architectu­ral Library

(2019), is representa­tive of our focus on the process. It is the first work in the exhibition, and it is visible before you even enter the gallery. There is an interestin­g tension that arises in the preparatio­n and creation of a commission­ed work like this since the final result is amorphous to us curators, which is rare in an institutio­n that usually has highly structured plans.

When we think about big goals, like the practicali­ties of decolonizi­ng an institutio­n, it means being able to accommodat­e different approaches to art, and Indigenous-specific ones. In Nango’s case, he brought traditiona­l materials like hides and fish skin—materials that have not typically been associated with fine art—into the gallery. He built a library, populated it with his personal collection of books and re-covered the books in the installati­on with tanned hides and other materials. The books themselves are about Indigenous architectu­re and activism. Covering that body of printed Indigenous knowledge with a material layer of knowledge and process combines two very different ways of carrying knowledge forward.

Other pieces created specifical­ly for the exhibition are a shaman’s drum by Sámi artist Fredrik Prost and a collection of sculptural works by Nenets artist Evgeniy Salinder. The performanc­e work of Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory, Jamie Griffiths, Cris Derksen and Christine Tootoo is also included and is a new commission, partially funded by the Inuit

Art Foundation.

We also have three works by Maureen Gruben, several by Shuvinai Ashoona, RCA, one by Pierre Aupilardju­k, and a collaborat­ion between Aupilardju­k and Shary Boyle. The Aupilardju­k and Boyle collaborat­ion in particular reminds us that Indigenous and settler people have been in relation to each other since colonialis­m began. These relationsh­ips are commonly understood to be violent and destructiv­e, and many of the works in the exhibition discuss colonial violence and forms of Indigenous activism and resistance in that context. The collaborat­ive works however, are another opportunit­y to think through generative relationsh­ips that emerge, and how allyship and activism work across identity politics in Canada and globally.

Inger Blix Kvammen, reflects on her experience­s on the land and her travels with the Nenets people of the Siberian Arctic, showing how people move and relate to one another across borders and identities within a circumpola­r context. She’s also relating to climate issues, particular­ly what is affecting the Nenets people, from her perspectiv­e as a Sámi/Norwegian artist. There is a very interestin­g cascade of collaborat­ion, intention, resistance and activism that is being articulate­d in her work.

When we’re talking about artworks, we’re really thinking non-disciplina­rily, so whether it’s a film screening or individual performanc­e, we’re considerin­g it integral work in the exhibition and it will be included in the catalogue as an ar twork in the exhibition. We did that with the understand­ing that there could be some interestin­g critical dialogue about the curatorial decision to include these different art forms in a gallery context. We are looking forward to the conversati­ons that occur when audiences consider the exhibition overall. We anticipate conversati­ons about what we call it, why we call it that, what they would call it—and perhaps most crucially, what does it do for the way we all talk about Indigenous artmaking in Canada and in internatio­nal contexts?

 ??  ?? Joseph Tisiga
An Exercise in Resilience 1, 2, and 3 and The
Game is Not a Game 2016
Mixed media
COURTESY DIAZ CONTEMPORA­RY PHOTO TONI HAFKENSCHE­ID
Joseph Tisiga An Exercise in Resilience 1, 2, and 3 and The Game is Not a Game 2016 Mixed media COURTESY DIAZ CONTEMPORA­RY PHOTO TONI HAFKENSCHE­ID
 ??  ?? Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory
(b. 1979 Iqaluit)
Jamie Griffiths
—
Silaup Putunga Iluani (Inside the Hole in the Universe)
2018
© LAAKKULUK WILLIAMSON BATHORY AND JAMIE GRIFFITHS PHOTO JAMIE GRIFFITHS
Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory (b. 1979 Iqaluit) Jamie Griffiths — Silaup Putunga Iluani (Inside the Hole in the Universe) 2018 © LAAKKULUK WILLIAMSON BATHORY AND JAMIE GRIFFITHS PHOTO JAMIE GRIFFITHS
 ??  ?? Brian Adams
(b. 1985 Kivalina/ Anchorage)
—
Marie Rexford
2017
From the series I am Inuit Inkjet print
COURTESY THE ARTIST
Brian Adams (b. 1985 Kivalina/ Anchorage) — Marie Rexford 2017 From the series I am Inuit Inkjet print COURTESY THE ARTIST

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