Disrupting colonialism: weaving indigeneity into the gallery in schools project of the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria

In 2015, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission made their final recommendations for Canadian society to address cultural genocide: by affirming stories of survivors, taking personal and professional inventory of their practices and making concrete steps to meet the Calls to Action. In particular,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Murphy, Tracey
Other Authors: Clover, Darlene E.
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/10515
id ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-10515
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-105152019-01-17T05:55:12Z Disrupting colonialism: weaving indigeneity into the gallery in schools project of the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria Murphy, Tracey Clover, Darlene E. decolonization Indigenous art education museum education art education Truth and Reconciliation Indigenous futurity critical pedagogy Community Based Research Decolonizing Theory In 2015, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission made their final recommendations for Canadian society to address cultural genocide: by affirming stories of survivors, taking personal and professional inventory of their practices and making concrete steps to meet the Calls to Action. In particular, the TRC recognized damage done by museums and art galleries to perpetuate colonialism and yet, believed that these institutions could be sites of justice, particularly in relation to arts and artists The Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, an institution steeped in colonialism and under pressure to create accountable relationships with Indigenous communities, began to act by revamping their education program for school age children entitled the Gallery in the Schools art program. My study asked Indigenous artists and educators to contribute their ideas for a new art program. I used a blended research of community based and decolonizing research models, contextualized within decolonizing and critical theoretical frameworks. Overall, research findings suggest that process is as important as the end product in the context of reconciliation and decolonization. Significantly, relationships were esteemed over the concept of reconciliation. These finding further imply that a successful art program would ground pedagogical content within a critical historical framework, be informed by a fluid understanding of identity and search out possibilities of hope. The theoretical implications of this study support increased contributions by Indigenous artists as key policy makers, who will challenge the deeply embedded power structures of institutions and offer alternative ways to share power and support Indigenous envisioned futures. Graduate 2019-01-16T00:01:57Z 2019-01-16T00:01:57Z 2019 2019-01-15 Thesis https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/10515 English en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic decolonization
Indigenous art education
museum education
art education
Truth and Reconciliation
Indigenous futurity
critical pedagogy
Community Based Research
Decolonizing Theory
spellingShingle decolonization
Indigenous art education
museum education
art education
Truth and Reconciliation
Indigenous futurity
critical pedagogy
Community Based Research
Decolonizing Theory
Murphy, Tracey
Disrupting colonialism: weaving indigeneity into the gallery in schools project of the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria
description In 2015, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission made their final recommendations for Canadian society to address cultural genocide: by affirming stories of survivors, taking personal and professional inventory of their practices and making concrete steps to meet the Calls to Action. In particular, the TRC recognized damage done by museums and art galleries to perpetuate colonialism and yet, believed that these institutions could be sites of justice, particularly in relation to arts and artists The Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, an institution steeped in colonialism and under pressure to create accountable relationships with Indigenous communities, began to act by revamping their education program for school age children entitled the Gallery in the Schools art program. My study asked Indigenous artists and educators to contribute their ideas for a new art program. I used a blended research of community based and decolonizing research models, contextualized within decolonizing and critical theoretical frameworks. Overall, research findings suggest that process is as important as the end product in the context of reconciliation and decolonization. Significantly, relationships were esteemed over the concept of reconciliation. These finding further imply that a successful art program would ground pedagogical content within a critical historical framework, be informed by a fluid understanding of identity and search out possibilities of hope. The theoretical implications of this study support increased contributions by Indigenous artists as key policy makers, who will challenge the deeply embedded power structures of institutions and offer alternative ways to share power and support Indigenous envisioned futures. === Graduate
author2 Clover, Darlene E.
author_facet Clover, Darlene E.
Murphy, Tracey
author Murphy, Tracey
author_sort Murphy, Tracey
title Disrupting colonialism: weaving indigeneity into the gallery in schools project of the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria
title_short Disrupting colonialism: weaving indigeneity into the gallery in schools project of the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria
title_full Disrupting colonialism: weaving indigeneity into the gallery in schools project of the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria
title_fullStr Disrupting colonialism: weaving indigeneity into the gallery in schools project of the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria
title_full_unstemmed Disrupting colonialism: weaving indigeneity into the gallery in schools project of the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria
title_sort disrupting colonialism: weaving indigeneity into the gallery in schools project of the art gallery of greater victoria
publishDate 2019
url https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/10515
work_keys_str_mv AT murphytracey disruptingcolonialismweavingindigeneityintothegalleryinschoolsprojectoftheartgalleryofgreatervictoria
_version_ 1718814301870882816