E-mail OrderingHome           Exhibitions           MSVU Collection           Publications           Posters           Working Title           Resources
 


Exhibitions


Artist
¤ Maria Hupfield

Curator
¤ Carolin Köchling

Themes
¤ Alterity
¤ Film, Video & Performance
¤ Gender & Feminisms
¤ Sculpture & Installation



Home » Exhibitions » Maria Hupfield: The One Who Keeps on Giving

Return to search results

Maria Hupfield: The One Who Keeps on Giving

Maria Hupfield, Jingle Spiral
Maria Hupfield, Jingle Spiral

Maria Hupfield, Jingle Spiral 2015
17 Mar 2018 – 20 May 2018

The exhibition is a production of The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, Toronto in partnership with Southern Alberta Art Gallery, Lethbridge; Galerie de l’UQAM, Montréal; Mount Saint Vincent University Art Gallery, Halifax; and Canadian Cultural Centre, Paris. It was sponsored by TD Bank Group and supported by Julia & Robert Foster.

Objects contain meanings beyond their materiality, meanings that we bring to them or receive from them. Objects are the result of an action, entail a trace of a human gesture and trigger reactions and memories. They have the potential to be read collectively or personally. In her artistic practice, Hupfield reveals the inter-relational potential triggered by objects between humans or cultural environments.

Hupfield’s new two-channel video installation, The One Who Keeps On Giving, gathers around an object: an oil painting of a seascape by the artist’s late mother who painted it as a young woman and signed it as Peggy Miller. It is this personal narrative that informs a performance, which took place in Parry Sound, Ontario on Georgian Bay—the setting that is also depicted on the canvas. Hupfield invited her siblings to contribute to this performance, which surrounds the memory evoked by the painting. To ground the filmed performance and to accompany the painting in the exhibition context, the contributors re-enacted the performance within the gallery space at The Power Plant, the setting of the second film.

Alongside Hupfield's new commission, the exhibition features a selection of objects that have been activated regularly in performances over recent years: a canoe, a snowsuit, a snowmobile helmet, mitts and boots, a cassette recorder with headphones, a light bulb and seven items solicited from individuals. All of these objects are replicated in felt and displayed alongside a selection of films within an environment of wooden structures.

In the film It Is Never Just about Sustenance or Pleasure, Hupfield is wearing custom-made mitts and boots to cover her extremities while walking through the desert of Santa Fe where there was once a waterway. The forms of the objects – not their material – reference wetlands. The gloves are based on contemporary snowmobiling and traditional moose hide mitts for hunting, while the boots recall rubber hip-waders worn for river fly fishing. These objects, which are grounded in regionally specific lifestyles, appear de-contextualized and serve as tools for acknowledging the desert’s past and the need for adaptability in the face of global climate change.

In her performance Contain that Force, Hupfield activates seven objects that she received from seven artists in a gesture of social exchange. Some of them – the tape, the photograph and the two texts – are by nature representatives of something that lies outside of their materiality; for example, the tape captures a sound, the photograph is an extract of reality and the two texts tell a story. Hupfield uses felt because she considers it to be neutral. The meanings of her objects unfold beyond their material limitations.

The title of the exhibition and the new commission is an English translation of Maria Hupfield’s mother’s Anishinaabe name.

The exhibition is a production of The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, Toronto in partnership with Southern Alberta Art Gallery, Lethbridge; Galerie de l’UQAM, Montréal; Mount Saint Vincent University Art Gallery, Halifax; and Canadian Cultural Centre, Paris. It was sponsored by TD Bank Group and supported by Julia & Robert Foster.

Maria Hupfield (born 1975 in Parry Sound, Georgian Bay, Ontario) is a member of Wasauksing First Nation, Ontario, and is currently based in Brooklyn, New York. Solo exhibitions include MSVU Gallery, Halifax (2018); Galerie de l’Uqam (2018); Southern Alberta Art Gallery, Lethbridge (2017); The Power Plant, Toronto (2017); MacKenzie Art Gallery, Regina (2015); Galerie Hugues Charbonneau, Montréal (2015); and Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba, Brandon (2011). She has participated in group exhibitions and performances at Trestle Projects Brooklyn (2016); SITE Santa Fe Biennial (2016); Winsor Gallery, Vancouver (2016); A Space Gallery, Toronto (2015); Campo dei Gesuiti, Venice (2015); Aboriginal Art Centre, Ottawa (2015); The Bronx Museum, New York (2015); Vox Populi, Philadelphia (2015); Musée d’art contemporain des Laurentides, Saint Jérôme (2015); North Native Museum (NONAM), Zurich (2014); SBC Gallery of Contemporary Art, Montréal (2013); The Power Plant, Toronto (2013); and Vancouver Art Gallery (2012). Hupfield is the founder of 7th Generation Image Makers, Native Child and Family Services of Toronto; Co-owner of Native Art Department International; and was Assistant Professor in Visual Art and Material Practice appointed to the Faculty of Culture and Community, Emily Carr University of Arts and Design (2007-11).

A video interview with Maria Hupfield, produced by The Power Plant, Toronto.

PERFORMANCE Saturday 17 March at 2-4pm
For her performance Maria Hupfield has invited three Halifax artists Raven Davis, Ursula Johnson, and Amy Malbeuf, current resident artist at NSCAD to join her in a public platform for collaborative engagement and art-performance. The artists will activate select work within the exhibition, The One Who Keeps on Giving. Characteristic of Hupfield’s live interdisciplinary performances, she aims to craft a visually rich and multi-sensory atmosphere for an active exchange of ideas across cultures, disciplines, and borders. Hupfield is invested in collaborative approaches to sustaining trust and support developed in the Brooklyn Performance Art community, one which Hupfield has contributed to for the past 7 years.

American Sign Language interpretation is available for all public programs. Please contact the Art Gallery (art.gallery@msvu.ca) by March 5 to request.

Return to search results



Exhibition Images
Click on an image to enlarge it.
Maria HupfieldMaria HupfieldMaria HupfieldMaria Hupfield, Jingle Spiral 


E-mail OrderingHome           Exhibitions           MSVU Collection           Publications           Posters           Working Title           Resources