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Lara Kramer
In Blankets, Herds and Ghosts

From April 28, 2021 to May 15, 2023



Two new public billboard works, located on the façades of Café Cherrier and the Bonsecours Market.

The present edition of Dazibao satellite is the result of a special partnership between Dazibao and the MAI (Montréal, arts interculturels). In Blankets, Herds and Ghosts is a new work by multidisciplinary artist and choreographer Lara Kramer.

“This is a practice of labour, of love, and mobility. A practice that works with our soft hands, hard hands, our ancestor hands. A practice for sharing, in the way that kinship positions us in relation to past, present and future voices, territories, one another and other, memories, traditions, stories, materials, sound and spirit. The practice is durational but offers an experience of non-time. It proposes a pacing and invitation for embodiment, a connection to prayer, healing, creation, memory and reflection on past, present and future. A practice of deepening the intergenerational knowledge that comes from my mother, my children, family and kin, all in dialogue with one another.

The process and care involved in how we position the blanket and jingles together has become the anchor of the work. What traces do we leave for upcoming generations to reflect upon? How are the ways we continue to assert our existence through generational time, upholding our agency with care? What are the invisible and visible energies and dreams that we weave, that pave healthy foundations for future generations?

In a time where we are confronted with a pandemic, the materials of the Trade Blanket and jingles resurfaced intuitively. Trade Blankets hold a multi-dimensional meaning, used in ceremony and trading of goods, and also used for warmth. And they were used in the spreading of smallpox for the purpose of eradicating Indigenous communities across Turtle Island. The Jingle Dress was visioned and created during the time of the Spanish Flu, a tumultuous time, carrying healing, meaning and knowledge of treatment and care. The sounds and textures of the jingles offer a unique soundscape that differs from the soft sound of the blankets. Exploring the sound of blanket and jingles offers further extension of voice(s), dream(s), vision(s) and histories.

In relation to the natural elements and gifts of mother earth, our creator allows for voice to continue emerging. Performance in photography opens up to further mobility, growth. The images are not static. They speak and are connected to a blood memory. What has yet to be discovered through the experience of transformation, in relation to the practice and process of the work is on-going. A living breathing creation.”

— Lara Kramer


Two public billboards, located at Café Cherrier and Marché Bonsecours, feature images of Kramer cloaked in a Trade Blanket designed and fabricated collaboratively with her mother and artist, Ida Baptiste. The images were created in collaboration with photographer Stefan Petersen and are accompanied by a podcast including conversations between Lara Kramer, Ida Baptiste, as well as Anishinaabe Elder Emerson Nanigishki’ing. The project also comprises a selection of texts, including a prayer and a historical text contextualizing the Trade Blanket and Jingle Dress.


Lara Kramer is a performer, choreographer and multidisciplinary artist of mixed Oji-cree and settler heritage, raised in London, Ontario. She lives and works in Tiohtià:ke/Mooniyang/Montreal. Her choreographic work, research and field work over the last twelve years has been grounded in intergenerational relations, intergenerational knowledge and the impacts of the Indian Residential Schools of Canada. Her creations in the form of dance, performance and installation have been presented across Canada and Australia, New Zealand, Martinique, the US and the UK.

Lara Kramer was appointed a Human Rights Advocate through the Holocaust Memorial Centre of Montreal (2012) following the national tour of her work Fragments, a performance piece inspired by her mother’s stories and lived experience as a survivor of the Indian Residential Schools of Canada. She has received multiple awards, acknowledgements and prizes for her work both as an emerging and established artist. Lara Kramer has participated in several residencies including the Indian Residential School Museum of Canada in Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, and is Dancemakers Resident Artist from 2018-2021.

Native of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Ida Baptiste is an artist and retired Ojibwa language teacher based in Rama, Ontario. She is a member of Berens River First Nation, Manitoba, Treaty 5 and presently living in Chippewas of Rama Mnjikaning First Nation, Ontario, Williams Treaties First Nation. She attended Fanshawe College for Fine Arts as well as the Beal Art program in London, Ontario. In 2004 she completed her BA in Native Studies at Trent University, and subsequently attended Kenjgewin Teg Educational Institute at M’Chigeeng First Nation, Mniddo Mnising Manitoulin Island, Ontario.

Ida Baptiste’s early artwork was widely shown between 1975 and the early 90’s in Ontario. Her works are displayed across Turtle Island and have been a part of major museum exhibitions. Her artistic practice is primarily in traditional contemporary art, beading and making regalia. Between 2011-2019 Ida Baptiste worked as an Ojibwa language teacher at Mnjikaning Kendaaswin Elementary school in Rama. She is a traditional pow wow dancer.


Emerson Nanigishki’ing is an Elder, Knowledge Keeper and Language carrier. He is a historian in pow wow song and dance, and a historian of Mnjikaning and Chippewas of Rama Mnjikaning First Nation Anishinaabe Community and a member. He has worked at the Native Friendship Centre in Thunder Bay, Barrie and Toronto as well as Union of Ontario Indian.

Emerson Nanigishki’ing is a noted Elder for Rama First Nation and Healer of Anishinaabe spirit. He was the appointed Elder for Lara Kramer’s work Eating bones and Licking bread that premiered in January 2020 in Toronto.

Stefan Petersen is a settler and multidisciplinary artist, based in Tiohtià:ke/Montreal, unceded Mohawk Territory.

Feeling lucky to be a part of this important collaboration, Stefan Petersen has an art practice which centres around digital image creation, as well as long-standing, if sporadic, involvement in performance, installation and textile work.

Currently exploring contemporary instances of temporary structures on the edges of public/private space and whether mobile shelters might provide an opportunity to re-conceptualize eurocentric norms of property ownership, Petersen’s work endeavours to ask questions about the role of settlers in a late colonial context and their myriad responsibilities toward supporting inclusivity and fighting disenfranchisement through ongoing colonial policies.

He is a regular collaborator with Lara Kramer, most notably with the performance/installation Phantom stills and Vibrations (2018).

Conceived, textile design, scenography and performer | Lara Kramer

Visual artist, textile design and creation | Ida Baptiste

Elder and Anishinaabe knowledge keeper | Emerson Nanigishki’ing

Photographer | Stefan Petersen

 

This project is presented by Dazibao, in collaboration with the MAI.


 
Dazibao thanks Lara Kramer, Ida Baptiste, Emerson Nanigishkang, Stefan Petersen, the MAI, the Café Cherrier (Alexandre and Jacques Boisseau) and the Bonsecours Market (Claude Pronovost) for their invaluable assistance as well as the Musée d’art urbain for the donation of the billboards.

Dazibao receives financial support from the Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec, the Canada Council for the Arts, the Conseil des arts de Montréal, the ministère de la Culture et des Communications and the Ville de Montréal.

Dazibao acknowledges that we are located on unceded territory of the Kanien'kehá: ka Nation and that Tiohtiá: ke / Montreal is historically known as a gathering place for many First Nations, and today, is home to a diverse population of Indigenous as well as other peoples.