Thursday, February 16, 2023

Artist of the Day, February 16, 2023: Christi Belcourt, an Indigenous visual artist, designer, community organizer, environmentalist, social justice advocate (#1780)

 Christi Belcourt (apihtâwikosisâniskwêw / mânitow sâkahikanihk) is a visual artist, designer, community organizer, environmentalist, social justice advocate, and avid land-based arts and language learner.  Her ancestry originates from the Metis historic Cree speaking community of Manitou Sakhigan (Lac Ste. Anne) Alberta, Canada.  Raised in Ontario, Christi is the first of three children born to political Indigenous rights leader Tony Belcourt and Judith Pierce Martin. Her brother Shane Belcourt is a respected filmmaker and her sister Suzanne is a graphic designer and emerging visual artist.

Like generations of Indigenous artists before her, the majority of her work explores and celebrates the beauty of the natural world and traditional Indigenous world-views on spirituality and natural medicines while exploring nature’s symbolic properties. Following the tradition of Metis floral beadwork, Belcourt uses the subject matter as metaphors for human existence to relay a variety of meanings that include concerns for the environment, biodiversity, spirituality and awareness of Métis culture.  Although known primarily as a painter, she has for years been also practicing traditional arts in an informal way. Working with beads, hides, clay, copper, wool trade cloth and other materials. Most recently with birch bark, ochre, quills and tattoo ink.

In 2016 she received both the Premiers Arts Award and a Governor General’s Award for Innovation and was named the 2014 Aboriginal Arts Laureate by the Ontario Arts Council. Her work can be found within the public collections of the National Gallery of Canada (Ottawa), the Gabriel Dumont Institute Museum Collection (Saskatoon), the Art Gallery of Ontario (Toronto), the Indian and Inuit Art Collection (Hull), the Thunder Bay Art Gallery, the Canadian Museum of Civilization (Ottawa/Hull), The Minneapolis Institute of Art among others. She also won the “Influential Women of Northern Ontario” award for her community work. And her artwork was voted #1 “People’s Choice” at the Art Gallery of Ontario in 2015.

In 2011, her work titled Giniigaaniimenaning (Looking Forward), was created to commemorate the resilience and strength of Residential School Survivors and their descendants. It was selected and installed as stained glass for permanent exhibit above the main entrance for Members of Parliament, in Centre Block, Parliament Hill (Ottawa). She also designed the PanAm / ParaPan Medals for the Toronto 2015 Games. And in 2016 collaborated with Italian fashion designer The House of Valentino for a collection featuring her work Water Song.

In 2012 she began the Walking With Our Sisters project to honour the lives of murdered Indigenous women and girls in Canada and the United States. It has grown to an astounding international seven-year touring memorial involving over 1500 artists and thousands of volunteers. The impact this community-based work is having cannot be overstated. The project wrapped up in 2019, with its final memorial in Batoche, Saskatchewan. Over 100,000 people were estimated to have visited the 19 communities during its seven year run.

Christi also previously co-created and co-lead the Willisville Mountain Project (2010-2013) a community arts juried exhibit which involved 40 artists who used art to draw attention to the Willisville Mountain within the LaCloche Mountain range on the North Shore of Lake Huron, Ontario, that was slated for quarrying. The Project and subsequent political and media pressure it applied, secured a decision by Vale Corp. who agreed not to mine the mountain for quartz.

In 2015 Christi formed the Onaman Collective with her friend Isaac Murdoch.  Together they have organized and produced over 50 important events and works of community driven art and activism. They are deeply committed to the reviltalization of Indigenous languages, arts, culture, land-based learning and the #landback movement.

In 2017, she and Isaac along with others initiated and built Nimkii Aazhibikong, a year round language, arts and culture camp located within Anishinaabeg territory north of Elliot Lake, Ontario. The camp is committed to the revitalization of Anishinaabemowin language, the arts and sustainable living practices based on foundational cultural knowledge.

Christi donates the proceeds from her collaborations and awards to Nimkii Aazhibikong, the year-round Indigenous language and traditional arts camp started in 2017.

© 2023. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Christi Belcourt or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only

 Ms. Christi Belcourt
Prayer. 2008
Water Song. 2010–11
This Painting is a Mirror, 2012
Black & White. 2014
Conversation, 2014
From Earth To Sky II. 2014
Growing. 2014
Quiet Moment of Gratitude, 2014
So Much Depends Upon Who Holds The Shovel. 2014
 The Wisdom of the Universe. 2014 detail
 The Wisdom of the Universe. 2014 detail
 The Wisdom of the Universe. 2014
 Wisdom of the Universe II, 2014 detail
 Wisdom of the Universe II, 2014 detail
Aabaakawad Anishinaabewin. 2015
Celebration. 2016 detail
Reconciliation with the Land and Waters. 2016
The Great Mystery of Water. 2016.
Water is Life. 2016
Offerings to Save The World. 2017
New Beginnings
Portrait of Gabriel Dumont
Portrait of Jean Teillet. 2014
Portrait of Rose Fleury
Revolution of Love

 

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