Welcome to Archive/Counterarchive
Working Paper Series: Postdoc Roundtable | Zoom, January 23, 2025, 4:30 PM EST
Join us for another online iteration of the Archive/Counter-Archive Working Papers Series (WPS), which brings together PhD students and graduate researchers from different universities to hear about exciting work in the area of archival studies
Special issue of Frames Cinema Journal on "Sensing the Archive â Exploring the digital (im)materiality of the moving image archive"
A/CA researcher Catherine Russell guest edited the latest issue of Frames Cinema Journal on "Sensing the Archive â Exploring the digital (im)materiality of the moving image archive."Â
Working Papers Series:Marcus Jack | Peripherality and its Consequences: The Counternarratives of Artists' Filmmaking in Scotland (and elsewhere)
The Archive/Counter-Archive Working Papers Series brings together PhD students from different Universities to hear about exciting doctoral research in the area of archival studies. Our speaker was Marcus Jack, who is a visiting MITACs doctoral researcher from The Glasgow School of Art. Marcus's talk was followed by a Q&A with the audience, moderated by our student organizers, Emily Barton and Elisa Arca Jarque.
Artist Residency: CFMDC + Archive/Counter-Archive
A call for an Artist in Residence to work with the Canadian Filmmakers' Distribution Centre.Â
New book: HOLDING GROUND:NUIT BLANCHE AND OTHER RUPTURES
HOLDING GROUND: NUIT BLANCHE AND OTHER RUPTURES
Edited by Julie Nagam and Janine Marchessault
PUBLIC Books, 2022
312 pages, 22 x 28 cm
This edited collection brings together historical, contemporary, and future-oriented ways of understanding public art in, and adjacent to, the development of Nuit Blanche in Canada. Personal reflections, dialogues, and projects generate a multiperspectival and cross-cultural sense of this all-night public exhibition, which has spanned numerous Canadian cities and forged countless community relations. In addition, it weaves international voices into the dialogue on public art and public space. With contributions by Hiba Abdallah, Karen Alexander, Fern Bayer, Honoure Black and Niigaanwewidam James Sinclair, Carole Boughannam, Karl Chitham, Sara Diamond, Alyssa Fearon, Peggy Gale, GLAM Collective (Heather Igloliorte, Julie Nagam, Carla Taunton), Ădouard Glissant and Hans Ulrich Obrist, Jenn Goodwin, Maria Hupfield, Umbereen Inayet, Serena Keshavjee, Justin Langlois, Janine Marchessault, Denise Markonish, Ashley McKenzie-Barnes, bpNichol, Leah Sandals, Haema Sivanesan, Synonym Art Consultation (Chloe Chafe and Andrew Eastman), and Jean-Philippe Uzel.
http://www.publicjournal.ca/holding-ground-nuit-blanche-and-other-ruptures/
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 âWriting Quebecâs feminist and LGBT film historyâ
âWriting Quebecâs feminist and LGBT film historyâ
a roundtable organized by the Réseau québécois en études féministes
Bilingual (French/English), Online, Free
A roundtable on âWriting Quebecâs feminist and LGBT film historyâ will be held on Zoom on March 7, 2022 from 1PM to 2:30PM EST. This event is organized by the RĂ©QEF and Antoine Damiens (postdoctoral fellow at York, recipient of a RĂ©QEF postdoctoral award).
Working Papers Series: Linda Grussani | Recognition and Access: Indigenous Curatorial Practice
Archive/Counter-Archive Working Papers Series Presents Linda Grussani | Recognition and Access: Indigenous Curatorial Practice
Online and free
Tue, February 15, 2022
4:30 PM â 6:00 PM EST
This talk was part of the online iteration of the Archive/Counter-Archive Working Papers Series, which brings together PhD students from different Universities to hear about exciting doctoral research in the area of archival studies. Our speaker was Linda Grussani, who is a doctoral candidate in the Cultural Studies program at Queenâs University. Lindaâs talk was followed by a Q&A with the audience, moderated by our student organizers, Emily Barton and Elisa Arca Jarque.
Recognition and Access: Indigenous Curatorial Practice
Over the last four decades, the exhibition and display of Indigenous cultural production have increasingly become a priority for museums in Canada and internationally. This transition has primarily been encouraged by the criticism of past hegemonic institutional practices that have excluded, marginalized, or ignored the contributions of Indigenous Peoples. Post-modernism and the international discourse on human rights have influenced these changes, which also follow a global trend for museums to critically examine the ideologies underpinning their museological approaches and assumptions about Indigenous Peoples and communities, marking one of the most significant shifts in museum practices since museums opened to the public in the 19th century. Concurrently, recognizing the actions of non-state actors involved in cultural and public diplomacy has been on the rise. In Canada, Indigenous leaders, and more specifically, arts and culture practitioners, share a long legacy of engaging in art and politics to influence change, exert sovereignty and advance policies. Only recently encouraged into these spaces, Indigenous curators navigate a complex landscape of settler-Indigenous relationships impacted by connections to community, land and the roles and responsibilities that come with their Indigenous and professional positionality. This presentation will discuss recommendations, policies, and methodologies that have influenced institutional access to the traces of our Indigenous histories in museums collections and galleries.Â
Linda Grussani (Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg/Italian ancestry) is a curator and art historian born and raised on unceded AnishinĂ beg AkĂŹ in the Ottawa area. Grussani has spent over two decades working to change the colonial structure from within by advancing the presence and representation of Indigenous ancestral and cultural belongings in settler-colonial cultural structures of the Canadian-nation state imposed on AnishinĂ be AkĂŹ. Grussani has held the positions of Curator, Aboriginal Art at the Canadian Museum of History (CMH) and Director, Indigenous Art Centre for Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada (CIRNAC). She has also worked in the Indigenous art department at the National Gallery of Canada. Grussani currently sits on the Inuit Art Foundationâs Board of Directors, the Indigenous Education Council for OCAD University, and the Indigenous Collections Symposium Working Group for the Ontario Museums Association. Grussani is currently a doctoral candidate in the Cultural Studies program at Queenâs University, Chair of the Indigenous Archives Gathering Steering Committee for Archive/Counter-Archive, and a member of the North American Cultural Diplomacy Initiative.
Archival Atelier Workshop Series
Artists, archivists ,and researchers engage with analog and legacy digital materials, many of which are at-risk. Explore different ways of assessing these media at Archival Atelier, ACAâs new series of workshops devoted to varied media types and their preservation.
Atelier méthodologique du RéQEF: Travailler les archives féministes et LGBTQ
11 mars 2022, 15h, sur Zoom.
This activity will be held in French.Â
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Le 11 mars 2022, Ă 15h, aura lieu la quatriĂšme Ă©dition des Ateliers mĂ©thodologiques du RĂ©QEF intitulĂ©e « Travailler les archives fĂ©ministes et LGBTQ » sur Zoom, co-organisĂ©e par le RĂ©QEF et Antoine Damiens (postdoctorant au DĂ©partement dâĂ©tudes cinĂ©matographiques de lâUniversitĂ© de York et boursier du RĂ©QEF 2020-2021).Â