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Transit shelter ad by Shawna Dempsey and Lorri Millan | One Gay City, 1997. Photo courtesy of the artists.

School of Art Gallery presents: One Queer City

November 5, 2020 — 

 

From November 16, 2020, to February 14, 2021, the School of Art Gallery presents One Queer City, a multi-site exhibition featuring the work of Jean Borbridge, Mahlet Cuff, Dayna Danger, Shawna Dempsey & Lorri Millan, Larry Glawson, and Ally Gonzalo. Curated by Blair Fornwald, SOA Gallery Director/Curator.

One Queer City revisits and builds upon the premises of One Gay City, a not-fully-realized public art installation by collaborative duo Shawna Dempsey and Lorri Millan, who created three prints for transit shelters in 1997.  Each image featured smiling Winnipegger and the slogan “Winnipeg: One Gay City!” – a somewhat facetious claim aimed at then-Mayor Susan Thompson, who refused to officially sanction Gay Pride Day. The works were never installed in transit shelters, as the ad agency objected to the gay content.

One Queer City will see Dempsey and Millan’s project finally installed in transit shelters as it was intended. Public perceptions and attitudes toward gay people have shifted so significantly over the last two decades that is seems strange these images would arouse such controversy. Presenting them now makes this shift in attitudes toward queerness visible, and in doing so, underscores the radical potential of this work, and of art in general – by imaging more just and equitable realities, it can actually help will that reality into being.

One Queer City will also include bus shelter ads created by an intergenerational cohort of queer photo-based artists from Winnipeg whose works represent a range of intersectional identities. Brought together, they remind the viewer that there is no one queer experience, no homogeneous queer community, and that access and privilege is not granted equally or simultaneously to all. The artists employ a variety of representational strategies: some, like Dempsey and Millan, make carefully staged performative photographs, some take candid snapshots that capture moments of queer joy, and some capture their sitter’s careful performances of self in traditional portraiture. All are imbued with utopian glimmerings, articulating theorist José Esteban Muñoz’s assertion that queerness is a destination always just out of reach. Winnipeg wasn’t queer in the nineties, isn’t yet queer, but these glimmerings may help us to imagine a queer future on the horizon. By claiming public space to present these glimmerings, we can bring that future closer to the present.

 

One Queer City

Presented by the School of Art Gallery at the University of Manitoba in partnership with PLATFORM centre for photographic + media arts

November 16, 2020 – February 14, 2021

 

Associated Programming:

 

  • Artists in Conversation

Online artist talk with Jean Borbridge, Mahlet Cuff, Dayna Danger, Shawna Dempsey & Lorri Millan, Ally Gonzalo, and curator Blair Fornwald.

November 19, 7:00 – 8:30 pm CST

Online via Zoom and live streamed via Youtube

 

⁣⁣⁣ALS interpretation available on Zoom.

 

Jean Borbridge, Cladding: the application of one material over another to provide a skin or layer., 2020, digital photograph. Photo: courtesy of the artist.

  • Jean Borbridge: Cladding an Animation

POSTPONED: Unfortunately due to the critical code red phase in Manitoba, Jean’s performance is currently postponed until January 30, 2021 at 5:00 pm.

Jean Borbridge’s contribution to One Queer City is a richly layered self-portrait entitled Cladding: the application of one material over another to provide a skin or layer. By photographing herself in heavily-collaged environments, cropping details from these photographs, and then re-photographing them back in the same heavily-collaged environment, the artist highlights the failures of photography to accurately represent the subject, the complex performance of gender, and queer femme invisibility. Adding yet another layer to an almost comically dense work, the artist re-animates this work in a site-specific performance combining sound and live collage action. Curated by Blair Fornwald, Director/Curator.

 

 

School of Art Gallery

255 ARTlab

180 Dafoe Road

Winnipeg MB R3T2N2

http://umanitoba.ca/schools/art/gallery

 

 

The University of Manitoba campuses are located on original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation.

We respect the Treaties that were made on these territories, we acknowledge the harms and mistakes of the past, and we dedicate ourselves to move forward in partnership with Indigenous communities in a spirit of reconciliation and collaboration.

 

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