間眅埶AV

Susan Point, Written in the Earth, 2000, cast aluminum and red cedar. 間眅埶AV Art Collection. Gift of the Salish Weave Collection of George and Christiane Smyth, 2018. 間眅埶AV Galleries. 

Episode 7 | July 28
C抶OSINIYE Paul and Sage Paul on Susan Point

One way we did write in the earth was through farming. As Coast Salish People, we farmed by thinking of the future, asking ourselves, How do we help the land as it provides for us? How do I care for the earth as she cares for me?

Written in the Earth (2000) is a series of four engraved aluminum and cedar works by Susan Point installed in the Saywell Atrium at 間眅埶AVs Burnaby campus. A x妢m庛kwym Coast Salish artist who was born in Alert Bay and grew up on the x妢m庛kwym Reserve, Point's artistic practice combines contemporary and traditional techniques to assert Coast Salish culture. At the outset of Points career over three decades ago, there were few visible precedents of women carving, though traditionally women did practice carving. Coast Salish artists and sisters C抶OSINIYE Paul and Sage Paul speak on the legacy and techniques of Points expansive practice and her influence on new generations of Indigenous artists.


C抶OSINIYE Paul is a Coast Salish artist, born in the year 2000 to artist Chris Paul and raised in Tsartlip territory. Their traditional Coast Salish name, which means Star Woman, was given to them by their aunt Linda Eilliott. Their work often features astrological elements, like the stars and moon, with new-age colour palettes and bold lines. Besides printmaking they work in illustration, logo design, wood, metal, glass, and jewelry design. Their work has been exhibited in Alcheringa Gallery, Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, and UVIC.
 
Sage Paul is a Coast Salish artist, born in 1995 to artist Chris Paul. Her work is influenced by the natural world around her, and often features animals stylistically rendered with a bright colour palette. Her work has been exhibited in Alcheringa Gallery, the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, and UVIC Legacy Art Gallery. She is the recipient of the YVR Art Foundations Frank ONeill Award for her sandblasted piece titled Grandpa.

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[Image description: Hanging along a cement wall are four aluminium works in the shape of bell-curves. Each carved metal surface depicts an etched face in a Coast Salish design, flanked by a different pair of birds: hummingbirds, thunderbirds, owls, and phoenixes, that represent the Earth, stars, moon, and sun, respectively. Each work is lined with a strip of red cedar. The works alternate between facing upwards and downwards.]

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