Senate celebrates Black artists; minister says ‘do more’ to promote black history
OTTAWA — The first art historian to be appointed to the Senate says the work of Canada’s Black artists is not sufficiently recognized or celebrated.
But now Sen. Patricia Bovey, former director of the Winnipeg Art Gallery and a National Gallery of Canada board member for many years, has set out to change that.
She has brought about the first exhibition of works by Black artists in the Senate. Pieces by celebrated Black artists now hang in the foyer of the Senate, the second set of pictures in a series honouring their contribution to Canadian culture.
They comprise anacrylic work on paper by the late Trinidadian Canadian painter Denyse Thomasos, entitled “Wyoming Saddle,” as well as “Light Laureate,” a mixed-media piece by American-born Tim Whiten.