Toronto gallery to unveil cross-cultural Canadian and Indigenous art centre
TORONTO — The curatorial team tasked with re-envisioning the Art Gallery of Ontario’s permanent collection of Canadian and Indigenous works says the overhaul signals a creative culture shift for the Toronto institution.
Georgiana Uhlyarik and Wanda Nanibush said they sat in a park last fall and sketched out a vision for a collection that would break from institutional custom not only in its display, but its conception of Indigenous-Canadian artistic relations.
The result is the rebranded J. S. McLean Centre for Indigenous & Canadian Art, set to reopen Sunday after months of renovation, featuring 132 works spanning the country’s cultural heritage, 40 per cent of which were created by Indigenous artists, according to numbers provided by the gallery.
“It’s a major shift,” Nanibush, curator of Indigenous art, told reporters during a preview of the collection Tuesday.