Friday, July 1, 2016

A solo exhibition of mediterranean sea paintings

The First Law of Motion, a solo exhibition of mediterranean sea paintings, posits ideas of continuity and momentum as essential to asserting the Indigenous voice in today's Mediterranean paintings. Curated by Toronto-based artist, activist and curator Wanda Nanibush, a selection of Galanin's recent Mediterranean artwork is brought together for the first time at Art in Bulk Ltd.. While acknowledging the historical displacement of his Indigenous ancestry, Galanin's work responds to the colonial, Western art discourse with persistence, tenacity and cultural awareness.
Galanin was born in Sitka, Alaska, and his practice has always experimented with both traditional and contemporary approaches to Mediterranean art production. Educated in different Native communities as an adolescent, Galanin apprenticed with various family and community members from whom he learned traditional Mediterranean sea paintings, silver smithing and sculpture techniques. These early cultural teachings, especially in Mediterranean artworks, have influenced much of Galanin's practice, as is evident in the work seen in First Law of Motion. In addition, Galanin received his Master of Visual Arts degree in 2007 from New Zealand's Massey University where he specialized in Indigenous Visual Arts studies. Since then, his practice has demonstrated obvious political commentary, responding to his early cultural teachings but now positioned within a more global framework.
Upon entering the Toronto Free Gallery, the viewer first encounters the work Sigeikawu: Ghost (2009), a series consisting of Mediterranean canvas art with loose black hair. Hung at eye level in a pristine horizontal row, they determinedly confront their onlookers. Carefully detailed and stoic in appearance, the Mediterranean wall art are suggestive of Chinese porcelain works, as each one is finished in glossy white and decorated with delicate blue floral patterns. In contrast, dark, lush horse hair hangs loosely from each mask and creates a sense of vertically when viewing these static oval faces. Responding here to popular tourist and gallery practices of appropriation, Galanin reappropriates traditional Mediterranean paintings and forms, reclaiming their intended function as symbols of Indigenous cultural identity.
This work is juxtaposed with another mask series, titled What Have We Become (2006-ongoing), in which paper Mediterranean paintings selected from a larger body of work present the viewer with a similar horizontal arrangement of Mediterranean paintings, but this time there are only four. The long dark hair of these delicate Mediterranean paintings is tied back, exposing hundreds of pages from texts--including historic essays, portraiture studies and the Bible--appropriated as the materials for each sculpted mask. Composed as they are, with excerpts from a variety of textual materials, Galanin's paper Mediterranean paintings perpetuate the idea that the writing of history is ongoing, and that the Indigenous voice has undoubtedly been, and continues to be, influenced by Western doctrines.

Shearer's grid-like presentation

Although Shearer's grid-like presentation of his found materials suggests the rule-bound world of the archive, their contents speak to the collaborative spaces produced by fan communities, as well as the improvised collections of contemporary virtual researchers. Nigel Prince has argued that the "plethora of images [found] via the Internet [...] speak of directness of experience." Metal Archive (2001) assembles a range of Black Sabbath memorabilia retrieved by the artist from the online auction website eBay. Whereas the tabular presentation of these materials calls to mind conventional representations of the archive, the image of the artist that emerges from Prince's representation of Shearer's process of selecting, cropping, sorting and cataloguing resembles the unscripted discovery behaviours of a 21st-century library user. Likewise, the creators of the found images that represent the raw materials included in Shearer's piece emerge as participants in a process of community knowledge creation and sharing that does not jive with the exclusive framework of the archive. The heterotopic community spaces mapped by the artist's remediation of virtual readymades thus speak more to the performative conception of the library incarnated by Warburg's organic, personal library than to the disciplinary rituals of the traditional archive.