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“Mide-wigwas: Transmediating” Angelina McLeod

“Mide-wigwas: Transmediating” Angelina McLeod
Date: Friday, July 2, 2021 GMT-0500 - Saturday, August 7, 2021 GMT-0500
Time: 12:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Location: Urban Shaman Gallery
Address: 203-290 McDermot Ave
City/Province: Winnipeg, MB

Main and Marvin Francis Media Gallery

Mide-wigwas: Transmediating

Director: Angelina McLeod

Running dates: July 2 to August 7, 2021

Artist Talk: TBA

We acknowledge that we are gathered on ancestral lands, on Treaty One Territory. These lands are the heartland of the Métis people. We acknowledge that our water is sourced from Shoal Lake 40 First Nation.

STATEMENT

Mide-wigwas: Transmediating is an exhibit focused on the relationship of birchbark scrolls, as relatives holding both sacred and historical knowledge, to other archival media such as photographs and film. 70 years ago, the artist Angelina McLeod’s great-uncle James Redsky (re)produced a series of Midewiwin birchbark scrolls, including origin, migration, and master scrolls, telling the story of the Anishinaabeg migration from east to west. The migration has been documented in other sources, but these scrolls are the only known source that conveys this history through traditional Anishinaabeg methods of knowledge record. Redsky is from McLeod’s community of Shoal Lake 40 (SL40) First Nation, and in 1966 sold his scrolls to the Glenbow museum in Alberta where they currently reside.

 

Midewiwin pictograph birch-bark scrolls contain stories, songs, and sacred narratives (Aadizookaanag) that have been handed down to the Anishinaabeg from generation to generation, long before the arrival of settlers on Turtle Island. This exhibit begins to connect the intergenerational Midewiwin practice in McLeod’s family to study of and relation with birch bark scrolls historically and through embodied knowledge. The purpose of this exhibit is to honor the ancestors and culture by re-telling our stories through intergenerational history across media and through Anishinaabeg ways of knowing.

 

 

Bio

Angelina McLeod (Anishinaabekwe) is an emerging filmmaker, writer, and documentary subject from Shoal Lake First Nation. Angelina is a land and water defender who is passionate about sharing Anishinaabeg history, culture, languages and stories. Her research is focused on Midewiwin birch bark scrolls that were once held by her grand uncle James Redsky, WWI veteran and prominent member of the Midewiwin, interpreted the scrolls before they were sold to the Glenbow Museum in Calgary for preservation. Angelina directed a series of short films with the National Film Board of Canada about her community Shoal Lake 40, First Nation, the source of Winnipeg’s drinking water.

Thank you to Jessica Jacobson-Konefall and Daina Warren on this project.

Special funding came from Canada Council for the Arts and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, University of Manitoba School of Art and Archive/Counter-Archive.

Images Left to Right: Shoal Lake, Angelina McLeod, 2017; Redsky Family, Archival Photograph, Angelina McLeod; James Redsky, Birch Bark Migration Scroll (103 Ft), Permission: Angelina McLeod

Urban Shaman: Contemporary Aboriginal Art Gallery acknowledges the support, throughout the year, of our friends, volunteers, community and all our relations, NCI FM, CAHRD, Winnipeg Foundation, Manitoba Heritage, the Winnipeg Arts Council, the Manitoba Arts Council, and the Canada Council for the Arts. ~Miigwetch/ Hai Hai/ Ekosi / Merci/ Thank you

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MUSKRAT Magazine is an on-line Indigenous arts, culture, and living magazine that honours the connection between humans and our traditional ecological knowledge by exhibiting original works and critical commentary.

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