間眅埶AV

Roy Kiyooka, #3 Court, 1971, silkscreen, ed. 2/50. 間眅埶AV Art Collection. Gift of Toronto Dominion Bank, 1998. Photo: Lief Hall. 

Episode 2 | June 23
Christian Vistan and Kiel Torres on Roy Kiyooka

to court is to crush
to court is to woo
to court is to peruse
to court is to pursue

Roy Kiyooka (1926 1994) was a painter, photographer, musician, and poet, whose legacy is still profoundly felt in artistic and literary circles of the Northwest Coast. A regular participant in the Emma Lake Artists Workshops in the 1950s in Saskatchewan, Kiyooka moved to Vancouver in the 1960s and taught at the Vancouver School of Art, where he explored various modes of abstraction. Christian Vistan and Kiel Torres honour Kiyookas work with a poetic response provoked by viewing his silkscreened print #3 Court (1971). They question how meaning is made through language, shapes, reflexes, and memory. While Vistan and Torres move through an exchange of impressions and relations, their dialogue embodies the playful and confined parlay of a court game.

Kiel Torres is a writer and editor who lives and works on the unceded territories of the x妢m庛kwym, Skwxw繳7mesh, and Sl穩lwta Nations. Her work considers friendship, reading, embodiment, and fandom as apparatuses to navigate social and emotional worlds. Torres is a 2022 curatorial resident at Artspeak, and holds a BA in Art History from the University of British Columbia.

Christian Vistan is an artist from the peninsula now known as Bataan, Philippines, currently living and working on unceded and traditional x妢m庛kwym, Skwxw繳7mesh, Scwa庛n Msteyx妢, and Sl穩lwta territories. They run dreams comma delta with Aubin Kwon, a space for artist projects and exhibitions located inside their family home in Delta, BC.

Podcast

Transcript
 

[Image Description: A squarish silkscreen of coloured ovals are grouped within a series of colour blocks. The centre shows a silver block, which is framed by a duotone onewith magenta above and a greyish purple below. Within the centre silver block, twelve ovals are in groups of four at the left and right, and two at the top and bottom. The ovals are in different solid colours: cobalt blue, lime green, and the same magenta and purple of the outer colours.]

Print