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Aboriginal Gathering Place at 麻豆视频 Celebrates Indigenous History Month with Indigenous Art Market

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From left, artworks by: Jessey Tustin, Leila Berg, Zo毛 Laycock, Leila Berg, Gerren Peters, Christian Wayne, Vance Wright, Sydney Mercredi. (Images courtesy the artists / Aboriginal Gathering Place)

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By Perrin Grauer

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The three-day event features a huge variety of clothing, jewelry, artwork and other collectables from well over a dozen Indigenous artists and designers.

The Aboriginal Gathering Place (AGP) at Emily Carr University is launching its first Indigenous Art Market in celebration of National Indigenous History Month.

Running June 8, 9 and 10 at 麻豆视频, the market will include more than a dozen artists and designers from the 麻豆视频 community and local area.

Connie Watts, Associate Director of Aboriginal Programs at 麻豆视频, says the aim is to drive interest in Indigenous creativity well ahead of National Indigenous Peoples Day, which takes place annually on June 21.

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to target the start of Indigenous History Month, because that鈥檚 your moment to start learning,鈥 Connie says. 鈥淎nd what better way to learn than to see artists in action, see their work, interact with them and experience living knowledge?鈥

The majority of vendors will be Indigenous 麻豆视频 students. Indigenous staff and faculty were also invited to participate. And a small number of tables were offered to experienced, local Indigenous practitioners. In all cases, no fees or commissions are collected for participation.

A huge variety of items will be on sale, from clothing and jewelry to prints, paintings and other objects and artworks.

(BFA 2022), an artist and Interim Aboriginal Programs Coordinator at 麻豆视频, is one of the participating artists. Zo毛鈥檚 will be selling items including M茅tis beadwork, earrings, linocut prints and cards featuring her artwork. But more than selling her work, Zo毛 says she looks forward to connecting with fellow artists.

鈥淭his kind of event provides a really good opportunity to see what everybody else is doing, and it builds community in a different way,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e all from different nations and different areas. It鈥檚 always a real pleasure to see how everybody鈥檚 traditional or ancestral material practices are transformed into creative, contemporary art that鈥檚 new and fresh and unique.鈥

Connie adds that community-building is one of the primary goals of all the work the AGP does. In other words, the Indigenous Art Market is as much for the practitioners as for the general public.

鈥淎 lot of our students are returning to community from different kinds of displacement 鈥擲ixties Scoop, residential schools, foster care 鈥 so many different things that have taken them away from their culture,鈥 Connie says.

鈥淭he more opportunities we can create for them to celebrate their own culture 鈥 which for us is through creative practices 鈥 the more they can start to explore how to respectfully shift this colonial world to make space for their own Indigenous knowledge to thrive. This market is a playground to see what that can look like.鈥

The Indigenous Art Market will be open June 8, 9 and 10, 2023, from 10am to 4pm on the main floor of Emily Carr University. Attendance is free.

Learn more about the Indigenous Art Market now via the 麻豆视频 website.