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I continue to shape: Maria Thereza Alves, Deanna Bowen, Cathy Busby, Justine A. Chambers, Nicholas Galanın, Ame Henderson, Maria Hupfield, Jessica Karuhanga, Lisa Myers, Mickalene Thomas, Joseph Tisiga, Charlene Vickers
The University of Toronto Art Centre
September 5-December 8, 2018
What do we do with the cracked histories we've inherited? How do we participate in active recovery? These questions are as pragmatic as they are philosophical. In an exhibition that explores aesthetic practice in response to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's Calls to Action, curator cheyanne turions examines art's capacity to speak back to settler-oriented histories and "support interruptions where new kinds of stories become possible to tell."
In the curatorial statement, turions explains turning toward the writing of David Garneau, who used the phrase "extra-rational aesthetic action" to describe the affective responses provoked in him as a result of artworks that engage in cultural decolonization. Garneau was considering three such examples: "Rebecca Belmore's yell before a panel discussion; Guillermo Gómez-Peña's threat to decapitate a woman during a work of performance art; and Terrance Houle's presentation of his naked, fleshy belly in photographs and performances." Laying out the startling associations that compel him toward these acts, Garneau theorized about the political potential found in disruptive awakenings of the senses-a potential that might burn through the effects of his own colonial conditioning. I continue to shape is a curatorial progression of this concept. For turions, it is clear that the generative potential of decolonial aesthetics lies in our responses to collisions between familiar cultural forms and gestures that disrupt how we expect them to behave. Acknowledging that it is not necessary to depart...