Limits of Tolerance: Re-framing Multicultural State Policy; curated by CCST candidate Liz Park


DATE
Saturday May 19, 2007 - Saturday June 23, 2007

EXHIBITION: May 19 to June 23, 2007.

Guest Curator: Liz Park,candidate in the CCST program.

OPENING: Friday May 18, 8pm
Gallery Hours: Tuesday to Saturday, 11:00 -18:00, Sunday-Monday closed
SYMPOSIUM: Saturday May 26, 14:00 to 17:00, UBC Robson Square theatre

A group exhibition with works by Dana Claxton, Stan Douglas, Laiwan, Paul Lang and Zachary Longboy, Ahasiw Maskegon-Iskwew, Anne Ramsden, Ruby Truly, Henry Tsang, and Paul Wong.

In a country that has touted its multicultural policies, the resurgence of racist attitudes after 9/11 prompts critical assessment of race issues today. In an effort to review race politics in the context of Canada’s colonial and immigrant policies, the exhibition Limits of Tolerance examines a period in recent history when cultural diversity became Canada’s state policy with the 1988 Multiculturalism Act.

In the late 1980s, an increasing number of artists explored and questioned their own identity based on race, gender and sexuality, as lobby efforts and activism of people of colour and aboriginal ancestry gained momentum. With the 1988 Multiculturalism Act demanding government agencies to reform or invent equity policies, the arts and culture sector in particular underwent a turbulent period in which comfort zones of liberal attitudes were challenged. The present exhibition Limits of Tolerance, re-presents a selection of artworks produced in Vancouver in the late 1980s and early 1990s when artists, writers and academics engaged in intense debates about identifications based on race, gender, and sexuality. This selection emphasizes the various and often contrasting ways in which artists deal with issues of identity and critique social structures which inform their identity.

The artists featured in the exhibition use non-traditional visual media such as video, performance, and photo-installation to push the limits of art production at a time when the concept of a singular culture was under scrutiny. The artistic output from this period in the form of artworks, group exhibitions, and conferences challenged the very idea of artistic quality as prescribed by an artworld resistant to self reflection. In this context, some artists actively identified their subjective positioning and sought to speak from within communities defined by race, gender, or sexuality, while other artists deliberately avoided such self-identification or resisted being categorized under a homogenous group. The differing strategies deployed in dealing with the question of identity have insulated discussions of certain artists’ works from others. This exhibition brings together these works in renewed discussions of identity and reflects on the common place and time shared by each artist despite his/her distinct experience of race, gender and sexuality.

Presented alongside the artworks are archival materials from the cultural equity caucus for the former  ssociation of National Non-Profit Artists’ Centres (ANNPAC), Minquon Panchayat (1992-1993), the film festival In Visible Colours (1989), and the exhibitions Yellow Peril: Reconsidered (1990), Self Not Whole (1991), Racy Sexy (1993). The records of these cultural activities help reframe the presented art works in broader terms, which include social and political history of Canada, and the changing questions of community in an increasingly globalized world. Revisiting this recent past sharpens a critical lens through which one can see how race politics is played out in art and the sociocultural and political arenas today.

A symposium will be held on Saturday, May 26, 14:00 – 17:00 at the UBC Robson Square theatre, featuring Laiwan, Candice Hopkins, and Keith Langergräber as speakers. The symposium will explore questions around issues of difference and marginality and analyze the present state of the arts and culture field in Canada.

Centre A gratefully acknowledges the generous support of its patrons, sponsors, members, partners, private foundations, and government funding agencies, including the Canada Council for the Arts, the British Columbia Arts Council, and the City of Vancouver through the Office of Cultural Affairs. This exhibition is presented with support from the Alvin Balkind Fund for Student Curatorial Initiatives, the Department of Art History, Visual Art, and Theory, and the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery at The University of British Columbia.

For more Information, please contact Centre A:
Tel: 604-683-8326
Liz Park, Guest Curator: esrpark@gmail.com
Makiko Hara, Curator: makiko.hara@centrea.org
Joni Low, Public Relations: joni.low@centrea.org

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