Skip to main content
Loading...
to
  • A portrait of the artist with spiking red hair wearing a blue dress, her arm on fire as gestures to an easel painting of a nude winged male among flames; both are posed in a pastoral landscape

Curated by Darryn Doull

 

Dear Joyce,

You continue to inspire us. Your groundbreaking oeuvre playfully complicates our understandings of nationalism, at a time when the flag itself has been instrumentalized for ulterior motivations. The call for reason over passion is perhaps even more important now than ever before. Or maybe we just need a more impassioned reason.

Looking around, great disruptions continue to establish new forms (of collectivity, governance, and understanding of the land) despite a bruised hope for the future. They beckon for greater respect of our neighbours and the world around us, much like your own pioneering work did throughout your life.

I wish you could see how far the rhythmic beating of protesting feet echo today. The solidarity is something deeply felt, like the pulsing of blood in your ears on a quiet night. A collective reassessment of the terms of employment continues to bloom. The people rally against those who have taken so much and returned so little to the shared project of humanity.

We reach to kiss the present goodbye: we cannot stay in one place for too long without embracing complacency, wasting our time. In part, and with good humour, we remember this from you.

Yours, with a clutter of love,
Darryn

 

Related Programs

Dr. Joanne Sloan, Joyce Wieland and the Feel of Solidarity, 16 February, 7 pm

Film Screening at KPL, Joyce Wieland: Reason Over Passion, 22 February, 7 pm

Curator Tour, Darryn Doull, 4 March, 1 pm

 

This exhibition is presented with the support of KWAG’s Women of Influence for Women’s Art (WIWA).

 


Joyce Wieland, Artist on Fire, 1983. Oil on canvas. 107.2 x 130 cm. Collection of The Robert McLaughlin Gallery, Purchase, 1984.