Stonecroft Foundation Visiting Artist Lecture: “Maria Hupfield on Maria Hupfield”
November 2, 2023, 6pm
National Gallery of Canada
380 Sussex Dr
Ottawa ON K1N 9N4
Canada
Eighth annual Stonecroft Foundation Visiting Artist Lecture: “Maria Hupfield on Maria Hupfield”. Event in-person and online via Zoom livestream.
The Department of Visual Arts at the University of Ottawa, in collaboration with the National Gallery of Canada (NGC) is proud to present Maria Hupfield for the Eighth Annual Stonecroft Foundation Visiting Artist Lecture on Thursday, November 2, at 6pm. The University of Ottawa is located on the unceded territories of the Anishinabe Algonquin Nation, who are the traditional guardians of this land.
This lecture series is made possible thanks to a significant gift from the Stonecroft Foundation for the Arts, in support of contemporary art discourse. The annual Stonecroft Foundation Visiting Artist Lecture Series allows the University of Ottawa students and general public to discover prominent Canadian artists’ practices.
A transdisciplinary artist, Maria Hupfield crosses boundaries at the intersection of performance art, design and sculpture. In her work, the art object is positioned as active belongings where sculptures become performers in a form of object choreography between artist, audience, and art gallery. She is engaged in an ongoing series of relations with community, places, ideas, and materials. An Urban off-reservation member of the Anishinaabek People belonging to Wasauksing First Nation in Ontario, Hupfield is deeply invested in embodied practice, Native Feminisms, and ethical collaborative process. Her art was included in the exhibition “Beat Nation”, as solo project “Nine Years Towards the Sun” at the Heard Museum, and “The One Who Keeps on Giving” at The Power Plant, which travelled nationally. Her work was also shown at the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal, Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Galerie de l’UQAM, Art Gallery of Ontario and the National Gallery of Canada, NONAM – Nordamerika Native Museum Zurich, National Museum of the American Indian, Museum of Arts and Design in New York, Abrons Arts Center, Center for Art – Research and Alliances (CARA), BRIC House gallery, The Bronx Museum, Museum of Fine Arts Boston, SITE SANTA FE amongst others.
For more information: Talia M Boileau, Department of Visual Arts, University of Ottawa. T +1 613 562 5868 / <a href="https://www.e-flux.com/announcements/553567/stonecroft-foundation-visiting-artist-lecture-maria-hupfield-on-maria-hupfield/#" onclick="location.href='znvygb:[email protected]" gnetrg="_oynax'.replace(/[a-zA-Z]/g,function(c){return String.fromCharCode((c=(c=c.charCodeAt(0)+13)?c:c-26);});return false”>arvsec [at] uottawa.ca.
University of Ottawa MFA in Visual Arts
The University of Ottawa is committed to research excellence and interdisciplinary knowledge creation. The Department of Visual Arts provides attentive teaching, mentoring, and a close-knit academic community that fosters student engagement with various art institutions and professionals. For details, visit the Department of Visual Arts.
The University of Ottawa’s MFA in Visual Arts program offers a bilingual two-year curriculum. Students delve into contemporary art and image culture theories, gaining exposure to current artistic and cultural discourse. The program uniquely features a Professional Internship course, offering students opportunities to work with regional art institutions or professional artists.
Information about the application process is available here.
The National Gallery of Canada
Ankosé—Everything is Connected—Tout est relié. The National Gallery of Canada is dedicated to amplifying voices through art and extending the reach and breadth of its collection, exhibitions program, and public activities to represent all Canadians, while centering Indigenous ways of knowing and being. “Ankosé”—an Anishinaabemowin word that means “Everything is Connected”—reflects the Gallery’s mission to create dynamic experiences that open hearts and minds, and allow for new ways of seeing ourselves, one another, and our diverse histories, through the visual arts. The NGC is home to a rich contemporary Indigenous international art collection, as well as important collections of historical and contemporary Canadian and European Art from the 14th to 21st centuries. Founded in 1880, the National Gallery of Canada has played a key role in Canadian culture for more than a century. To find out more about the Gallery’s programming and activities visit gallery.ca and follow us on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and Instagram. #Ankose #EverythingIsConnected #ToutEstRelié.