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Artist / Curator Talk: Jean Marshall in Conversation with Linda Grussani

An image of two women: on the left, she has black shoulder length hair with eye glasses and on the right, a woman with grey/black hair with eye glasses

Artist / Curator Talk: Jean Marshall in Conversation with Linda Grussani

Friday, October 4, 2024, 12 p.m. to 2 p.m.

Please join us at Onsite Gallery for an exclusive Artist / Curator Talk with Jean Marshall and Linda Grussani. They will discuss the dynamic exhibition Anikoobijikewin and illuminate the profound connections between community, visiting, creating, and sharing it represents.

Anikoobijikewin is the second solo exhibition presented in the Mawadishiwewin (visits) series. Read more about it here

Anikoobijikewin is exhibited in the Special Projects Gallery and runs through November 30, 2024.

Register here

About the Artist

A woman smiling wearing eyeglasses with shoulder length black hair
Jean Marshall

Jean Marshall is a visual artist of Ahnishnaabe / English descent who was born and raised in Thunder Bay, Ontario. She is a member of the Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug, also known as Big Trout Lake, Treaty 9, and currently resides on the lands of the Animikii-Wajiw / Thunder Mountain, also known as Fort William First Nation.

Marshall has been practicing visual arts for the last 20 years, and she has earned a reputation for her vibrant artwork made of beads, porcupine quills, textiles, and hide. Marshall's passion for beadwork started when she was a child, surrounded by skilled craftsmanship, which taught her the importance of quality and using her hands. This admiration has grown into her present-day practice, where she focuses on beadwork and leatherworking. For the last seven years, Marshall has been dedicated to learning and sharing moosehide tanning with her community, which has become a significant aspect of her work. 

 

About the Curator

A woman smiling wearing eyeglasses with shoulder length gray hair
Linda Grussani

Linda Grussani (Kitigan Zibi Anishinàbeg / Italian ancestry) is a curator, art historian and former arts administrator born, raised and living on Anishinàbe Akì in the Ottawa area. Grussani has spent over two decades working to advance Indigenous arts and culture, promote positive structural change and advance Indigenous cultural diplomacy as a curator, arts administrator, academic and mentor.

Grussani most recently held the positions of Curator of Aboriginal Art at the Canadian Museum of History, Director of the Indigenous Art Centre for Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada and has held several curatorial positions at the National Gallery of Canada. She is currently a doctoral candidate in the Cultural Studies program at Queen’s University. Her research examines the recommendations, policies and methodologies that have influenced Indigenous and institutional relationships in museums and galleries on Anishinàbe Akì over the last 50 years. 

 

Onsite Gallery is generously supported by the Delaney Family

The Mawadishiwewin exhibition series is generously supported by the Ontario Arts Council, an agency of the Government of Ontario through the Curatorial Projects: Indigenous and Culturally Diverse program.