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Title: | Ă badakone | Continuous Fire | Feu continuel | ||
| By (author): | Rachelle Dickenson, Greg A. Hill, Christine Lalonde | |||
| ISBN10-13: | 0888849974 : 9780888849977 | |||
| Format: | Paperback | |||
| Pages: | 272 | |||
| Weight: | .500 Kg. | |||
| Published: | - January 2020 | |||
| List Price: | 30.99 Pounds Sterling | |||
| Availability: | Temporarily Out of Stock, more expected soon | |||
| Subjects: | ||||
Originally published to accompany the second contemporary international Indigenous art exhibition at the National Gallery of Canada in 2019, Ă badakone | Continuous Fire | Feu continuel taps into the global pulse of Indigenous artistic production. It builds on themes of continuity, activation, and relatedness, exploring the creativity, concerns, and vitality of Indigenous art from virtually every continent. Ă badakone features work by more than 70 contemporary Indigenous artists identifying with almost 40 Indigenous nations, ethnicities, and tribal affiliations across Turtle Island and beyond, including Anishinaabe artist Rebecca Belmore, Maya-Tzâ utujil artist Manuel Chavajay, and Hlubi artist Siwa Mgoboza. These stunning works are accompanied by major essays by artists and curators, covering topics as diverse as the curatorial methodology behind the exhibitions, Indigenous performance art, African art and Indigeneity, and the intersection of Indigenous art and global art history narratives in an age of post-colonialism and decolonization. PubliĂ© dâ abord Ă lâ occasion de la deuxième Exposition internationale dâ art indigène contemporain au MusĂ©e des beaux-arts du Canada, en 2019, Ă badakone | Continuous Fire | Feu continuel reflète le dynamisme de la production artistique autochtone Ă lâ Ă©chelle internationale. Lâ ouvrage exploite des thèmes comme la continuitĂ©, lâ activation et la connectivitĂ©, et met en valeur la crĂ©ativitĂ©, les questionnements et la vitalitĂ© de lâ art indigène de tous les continents, ou presque. Ă badakone propose des Ĺ uvres de plus de 70 artistes autochtones contemporains reprĂ©sentant près de 40 nations, ethnicitĂ©s et affiliations tribales, de lâ Ă®le de la Tortue et dâ ailleurs. Entre autres : Rebecca Belmore, artiste anishinaabe, Manuel Chavajay, du peuple maya-tzâ utujil, et Siwa Mgoboza, du groupe ethnique hlubi. Ces Ĺ uvres remarquables sâ accompagnent dâ essais fouillĂ©s, de la part dâ artistes et de conservateurs, sur des sujets allant de la mĂ©thodologie de la conversation et de lâ exposition Ă lâ art performance autochtone, en passant par lâ art africain, lâ indigĂ©nĂ©itĂ© et lâ intersection entre les rĂ©cits que portent lâ histoire de lâ art autochtone et celle de lâ art global, Ă lâ ère du postcolonialisme et de la dĂ©colonisation. |
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