The Province

Chinese Canadians share their experience­s

Museum’s first exhibition explores history primarily through the lens of food and restaurant­s

- BRENNA OWEN

A giant, intricate dragon mask and a hand-painted wok greet visitors to the first exhibition of the new Chinese Canadian Museum of B.C. in Vancouver’s Chinatown.

The exhibition, called A Seat at the Table, explores historical and contempora­ry experience­s of Chinese Canadians, particular­ly through the lens of food and restaurant­s.

“A close look at the food industry reveals the impact of racial discrimina­tion on Chinese Canadians, but it also tells us much about their ability to resist, organize, seek justice and thrive,” reads the museum’s descriptio­n of the exhibition that opens Saturday.

In one installati­on, the story of a campaign to save barbecue-meat stores in Chinatown in the mid-1970s is told through delicate, miniature paper cut-outs of the storefront­s and their supporters, as a spotlight casts their shadows high up on the wall.

Co-curator Viviane Gosselin said the exhibition was two years in the making and involved historians, educators, students, community activists and staff at the Museum of Vancouver, who collected a wide range of personal stories and items of significan­ce from members of the Chinese Canadian community in B.C.

Their goal was to highlight the diversity of Chinese Canadian experience­s and create a space where people feel comfortabl­e sharing their own stories, she said.

“All the clusters of images and videos and artifacts are there to act as prompts for people to kind of trigger their memory,” said Gosselin, the director of collection­s and exhibition­s at the Museum of Vancouver, which is partnered with the Chinese Canadian Museum of B.C.

A Seat at the Table includes stations for writing and recording videos, as well as a large map where visitors can illustrate where they have come from, she said.

“The whole idea is to kind of generate a new body of historical knowledge that the Chinese Canadian Museum can use for future research and programmin­g,” said Gosselin.

Grace Wong, the chairwoman of the society that’s working to fully establish the Chinese Canadian Museum, said the exhibition recognizes the contributi­ons of Chinese Canadians across B.C.

“Everything from the 1880s — all the struggles, all the contributi­ons, all of the work, whether it was building the railway, whether it was contributi­ng in the world wars, despite not having any status.”

A Seat at the Table opens during the COVID-19 pandemic and the Vancouver police has reported that incidents of racism directed at Asian people are on the rise. Co-curator Denise Fong wore a mask printed with the phrase “stop the spread of racism” while touring the exhibition this week, saying she hopes the exhibition will spur conversati­ons about how people can make change in their day-to-day lives.

A Seat at the Table is presented in English as well as traditiona­l and simplified Chinese, Fong noted.

A so-called sister exhibition is set to open at the Museum of Vancouver’s main location in the fall.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The first exhibition at the Chinese Canadian Museum of B.C. in the city’s Chinatown, A Seat at the Table, took two years to pull together, says co-curator Viviane Gosselin.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS The first exhibition at the Chinese Canadian Museum of B.C. in the city’s Chinatown, A Seat at the Table, took two years to pull together, says co-curator Viviane Gosselin.

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