Publishing since 1992 from Kahnawake Kanien'kehá:ka Territory

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Your search for Art installation returned 36 results.

  • November 21, 2017

    Spotlight on Indigenous artists at Beaux Arts

    Pipe Beads from the series Code Switching, 2017, digital print. Digital print, 110 x 166 cm. (Courtesy CARCC and Art Mûr) The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (MMFA)

  • October 20, 2017

    Cowboys and Indians examined like never before

    Alien Thunder by Claude Fourneier, 1974. Courtesy of Elephant: memoire du cinema Quebecois. (Courtesy MMFA) Gunslingers, the noble Indian, Buffalo Bill’s stagecoach, Sergio Leone, Russell Means, Kent Monkman, and the majestic herd of buffalo.

  • August 29, 2017

    Mohawk change makers grace brand new mural

    Shanna Strauss’ mural can be seen at 4617 St. Jacques in St. Henri. (Courtesy Shanna Strauss) Kanien’kehá:ka activists Ellen Gabriel and Mary Two-Axe Earley are front and centre of a mural that was recently completed in St. Henri.

  • July 21, 2017

    Path of Resilience highlights Indigenous artists

    Skawennati Fragnito’s Celestial Tree blooms by the corner of Pine Avenue and McTavish, as a part of the Path to Resilience exhibition on Montreal’s new Promenade Fleuve-Montagne.

  • July 7, 2017

    Walking With Our Sisters steps into Kahnawake

    Hundreds of moccasin vamps cover the floor of Kateri School’s gymnasium for Walking With Our Sisters, a commemorative art installation to honour the lives of missing and murdered Indigenous women.

  • June 30, 2017

    Painting sunsets for stolen Onkwehón:we sisters

    Twenty participants painted works of art on Monday eveningas a part of a fundraising event organized by Walking With Our Sisters Kahnawake.

  • June 21, 2017

    First Peoples Fest gives big nod to creation story

    Feature-length films and living arts are the focus of this summer’s First Peoples Festival. The 27th edition of the annual event will transform Place des Festivals from August 2-9, organizers announced on Tuesday morning.

  • May 29, 2017

    Missing and murdered, not forgotten

    The Montreal 375 celebration has been a mix of parties, reflection and some reconciliation, and artist Hannah Claus’s “je me souviens” series of window displays draws dramatic attention to the missing and murdered Indigenous women in Quebec and Canada.

  • April 19, 2017

    Walking the Steel casts light on ironworkers

    From installations, paintings, and photography, the focus of the Iroquois Indian Museum’s latest exhibition focuses on a familiar story.

  • March 3, 2017

    Nuit Blanche exhibition brings us back to the 60s

    This early 1960s photo of Phyllis Snow (standing) and Mary Armstrong will be among the dozen photos a part of an exhibition for Nuit Blanche tomorrow night.