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Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun Lets’lo:tseltun: Floor Opener
-Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun Lets’lo:tseltun is one of Canada’s most outspoken and influential contemporary artists, confronting colonialist suppression, environmental degradation, and the ongoing struggles for Indigenous sovereignty.
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Couzyn van Heuvelen: CAMP
-Born in Iqaluit, Nunavut, but living predominantly in Southern Ontario, Couzyn van Heuvelen’s artistic practice explores Inuit cultural sovereignty and the tools and technologies of living on the land.
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Mike MacDonald: Planting one Another
-A project with care and coexistence at its core, Planting one Another features a twin re-planting of a Medicine and Butterfly garden by the late Mi’kmaw artist Mike MacDonald (1941-2006).
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Churning currents, lapping futures
-Rivers can draw us in, for better or for worse; a siren song for the soul. They beguile with their power, their lore, their physical grandeur and, for some, nostalgic memories of the rivers made familiar through literature and life.
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Expressions 50: Foresight
-Highlighting works by students from across the Waterloo Region, Cambridge and selected works from the KWAG Permanent Collection. Organized by the Public Programs Department.
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Miles Rufelds: Salvage Archives
-Salvage Archives continues Rufelds’ research into cultural and subcultural expressions of late capitalist alienation, and the forms of collective storytelling that take shape under the shadows of unjust material systems.
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A Broken Planet
-A Broken Planet builds on the themes of SOS: A Story of Survival, Part III – The Planet by looking at ways that environmental harm can be found in the collection.
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SOS: A Story of Survival, Part III – The Planet
-SOS: A Story of Survival is a three-part exhibition exploring what survival is, what it looks like and what it means to survive. Part III – The Planet draws attention back to the matter of our world: to the rocks beneath our feet, the air in our lungs and the water throughout and all around us.