Dana Claxton wins Audain Prize for Visual Art

Multi-disciplinary artist’s apply “investigates Indigenous magnificence, the physique, the socio-political and the religious.”

Critiques and proposals are unbiased and merchandise are independently chosen. Postmedia could earn an affiliate fee from purchases made by way of hyperlinks on this web page.

Dana Claxton, a UBC professor and Indigenous multidisciplinary artist, has been awarded the 2023 Audain Prize for Visible Artwork, the highest artwork award in B.C.

“Dana Claxton is certainly one of B.C.’s best artists,” says Michael Audain, chairman of the Audain Basis. “Moreover having an impressive worldwide repute, Ms. Claxton has had a substantial affect on youthful artists and her UBC artwork college students.”

Claxton stated she’s “in a daze” after receiving the award.

Requested how she decides which artwork kind to work in, she stated “instinct, impulse after which analysis.”

“You see the picture and then you definately’ve bought to make it,” stated Claxton, an Indigenous artist who’s a member of the Wooden Mountain Lakota First Nation in Saskatchewan. “I get impressed by on a regular basis life, I get impressed by religious practices, my very own Lakota tradition. I’m impressed by reconciliation, I’m impressed by this advanced historical past all of us share, we reside in a treaty nation. There’s quite a bit to be impressed by. I’m impressed by the great thing about the pure world.”

She’s identified for mixing historic and modern themes in her artwork, “collapsing the historic, the traditional, the fashionable and the modern, and generally even the longer term.”

instance is Buffalo Bone China, a multimedia work that features a video displaying scenes of buffalo galloping on the prairie, a bleached white bison cranium and fingers caressing china on a desk.

Buffalo had been slaughtered to near-extinction within the nineteenth century, actually killing off the meals provide for Native folks. Bizarrely, a few of their bones had been made into bone china in Britain.

“It’s unimaginable,” stated Claxton. “Whereas my circle of relatives was ravenous, the British had been consuming off the plates.”

buff
Buffalo Bone China, single channel video, damaged china, stanchions, by Dana Claxton.PNG

The 64-year-old Claxton was born in Yorkton, Sask., grew up in Moose Jaw and moved to B.C. along with her household when she was 11 years outdated. She credit her mom along with her humanism and “instructing me learn how to see.”

“There was a fellow (in Moose Jaw) who was a avenue particular person, and he had no legs,” she recounts. “He travelled about downtown on his home made board with wheels, and he at all times had his little black glove that was so worn out in entrance of him. My mother would give me cash to go put in his glove.

“You may think about, you’re 4/5/six years outdated, and I used to be scared of him, as a result of he was totally different than me. However I at all times needed to give him cash. By that he was humanized. I noticed him as a human being, and I might stay up for my mother giving me 25 cents to go put in his glove. She taught me learn how to see folks.”

She bought her first digicam at age 16, however she stated it was her expertise at Spirit Music, the Native theatre group in Vancouver, that actually helped her discover her path creatively.

“Within the ’80s, it was this place the place all city Indians who had been inventive went to,” she stated. “We bought theatre coaching, dance and music and script writing. I wrote my first script there, the Purple Paper, which is referencing the White Paper, (Pierre) Trudeau’s White Paper (on Native folks). I made it into an experimental movie, and by no means stopped from there.”

She hasn’t — her newest challenge is writing a script for a function movie with actor Sam Bob and Courtenay Crane.

“It’s a Vancouver story, and it’s depraved,” she stated. “A wonderful Vancouver story from the mid-Seventies of a younger Salish man.”

clax
Headdress, Duratran print in gentle field, by Dana Claxton.PNG

horse
Child Boyz Gotta Indian Horse, by Dana Claxton.Photograph by Handout /Vancouver Solar

mustang
Daddy’s Gotta New Journey, by Dana Claxton.Photograph by Handout /Vancouver Solar

dance
Cultural Belongings, LED firebox with trans-mounted chromogenic transparency, by Dana Claxton.PNG

clax 2
Artist Dana Claxton at her North Vancouver dwelling on Sept. 23.Photograph by Jason Payne /PNG