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Visiting Artist Talk: Catherine Blackburn

Friday, November 15, 1:30pm at the ZMA

The Artistic Practice of Wearable Art: Indigenous dress, Collaboration, and Community 

Inspired by her late Setsune虂鈥檚 (grandmother) incredible garment making, hide-tanning and adornment, Catherine Blackburn鈥檚 work grounds itself in the Indigenous feminine. Join us for an artist talk in which she reflects on her wearable art practice and its intersection between Indigenous dress, collaboration, and community.   
  
Catherine Blackburn was born in Patuanak Saskatchewan and is a member of the English River First Nation (Denes懦艂in茅). She is a multidisciplinary artist and jeweler, whose common themes address Canada's colonial past that are often prompted by personal narratives. Her work grounds itself in the Indigenous feminine and is bound by the ancestral love that stitching suggests. Through stitchwork, she explores Indigenous sovereignty, decolonization, and representation. Her work has been included in renowned national and international exhibitions including Radical Stitch, 脌badakone, Santa Fe Haute Couture Fashion Show, and Toronto Indigenous Fashion Week. She has received numerous awards including the Sobey Art Award longlist (2019/2023), a Forge Residency Fellowship (2022), and an Eiteljorg Fellowship (2021).  

beading art work

Applied Beading Workshop with Catherine Blackburn

Saturday, November 16, 12pm - 4:00pm at the ZMA

Join Catherine for an Applied Beading Workshop inspired by Aboriginal Classics, a series of works exploring themes of identity, language, and story. Participants will learn applied beading basics on an unconventional medium that utilizes a teabag as the vessel and story-holder.   

Portrait of a woman sitting

Annett Couwenberg: Windgate Artist-in- Residence Lecture

Wednesday, April 2, 3:30pm at the ZMA

Annet Couwenberg has pursued ongoing conversations between traditional textile production and digital technologies throughout her art and teaching career鈥 from her early work in the fashion industry, to creating sculptural forms and jacquard weavings, to working with fish fossils and skeletons inspired by her study with a fish scientist as a Smithsonian Artist Research Fellow at the National Museum of Natural History. Born in the Netherlands, Couwenberg received MFA degrees from Cranbrook Academy of Art and Syracuse University. She has worked internationally including in Korea, Turkey, Germany, Italy, Portugal, Poland and The Netherlands with one-person shows at the Center for Art Design and Visual Culture in MD, Textiel Museum in The Netherlands, Baltimore Museum of Art, Delaware Center for Contemporary Arts, American Textile History Museum, Lowell, MA and the City Gallery, Atlanta, GA.