Postcommodity: Time Holds All the Answers
Time Holds All the Answers
- Publisher
- Remai Modern
- Initial publish date
- Mar 2022
- Category
- General, Monographs
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9781896359946
- Publish Date
- Mar 2022
- List Price
- $49.95
Add it to your shelf
Where to buy it
Description
This monograph accompanies the exhibition "Time Holds All the Answers," Postcommodity’s most significant museum presentation to date. Curated by Dr. Gerald McMaster, the exhibition takes on subjects including environmental crises, Indigenous sovereignty and land stewardship, the forces of capitalism, and the mythologies of modern art and architecture.
The publication generates a vital new body of knowledge on Postcommodity. Dr. McMaster’s expansive essay considers Postcommodity’s most recent work alongside key projects from the last decade, unpacking the collective’s distinctive formal and conceptual strategies. Roberto Bedoya, a long-time correspondent of the artists, reflects on their work through the powerful idea of Sovereignty of Context. Bill Kelley, Jr. draws multiple voices into dialogue, including historian Dr. Xóchitl Flores-Marcial and artists José Luis Macas, León David Cobo and Jorge González, to consider hemispheric knowledge and the future of Indigenous epistemologies. Elise Y. Chagas offers a perceptive analysis of Postcommodity’s use of sound as “a weapon, a medicine, a hacker’s tool.” Floyd Favel shares knowledge on the role of ceremony in nêhiyawuk (Plains Cree) culture, providing insights to think alongside Postcommodity’s aim to transform the museum through their own concept of reimagined ceremony. Designed by Sébastien Aubin, the publication reflects Postcommodity’s own approach to Indigenous Knowledge Systems as adaptive and relational.
Postcommodity is an interdisciplinary arts collective, currently comprised of Cristóbal Martínez and Kade L. Twist. They create works of art that personify a shared Indigenous lens and voice, examining aspects of 21st-century life to inspire a uniquely Indigenous vision of the future.
About the authors
Gerald McMaster, PhD, is the Fredrik S. Eaton Curator of Canadian Art at the Art Gallery of Ontario. During his tenure as Curator of Contemporary Indian Art at the Canadian Museum of Civilization (1981-2000), he established the first Indian and Inuit gallery at the CMC. In 1992, he curated Indigena for the Canadian Museum of Man and co-authored the book Indigena: Contemporary Native Perspectives in Canadian Art. His publications include Reservation X (1998), Native Universe (2004) and Remix: New Modernities in a Post-Indian World (2007). In 1995, he served as Canadian Commissioner and curated Edward Poitras's exhibition at the Venice Biennale. From 2000 to 2004, he was Deputy Assistant Director for Cultural Resources at the National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institution. At NMAI, he curated First American Art (2004) and New Tribe / New York (2005). He was awarded the Order of Canada (2007) and the National Aboriginal Achievement Award in 2005.
Excerpt: Postcommodity: Time Holds All the Answers: Time Holds All the Answers (curated by Gerald McMaster; by (author) Bill Kelley & Roberto Bedoya; by (artist) Postcommodity)
"It is a delicate act of diplomacy (or resolana) and self-determination, but over the course of their career Postcommodity has developed an engaging and accessible method that works though the nuanced layers of erasure and reappearance present at sites affected by colonial domination. In doing so, they manifest conditions that give rise to critical and constructive dialogues, building a new public consciousness founded on reciprocal respect and human dignity in the tradition of Indigenous Knowledge Systems."
-- Dr. Gerald McMaster
Other titles by
Richard Harrington
Arctic Photography 1948-53
Arctic/Amazon
Networks of Global Indigeneity
Tawâskweyâw ᑕᐋᐧᐢᑫᐧᔮᐤ
A Path or Gap Among the Trees A Touring Survey of Artworks by Jason Baerg
The Writing on the Wall
The Work of Joane Cardinal-Schubert
Troubling Abstraction
Robert Houle
Inuit Modern
Masterworks from the Samuel and Esther Sarick Collection
Reservation X
The Power of Place in Aboriginal Contemporary Art