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Photo of Billy Gauthier

 

Big Ideas in Art and Culture Lecture Series: Billy Gauthier

Tuesday, November 15: 7:00pm
Kitchener Waterloo Art Gallery (101 Queen St N, Kitchener)
ASL Interpretation provided

Join us for an artist talk with renowned sculptor, Billy Gauthier. Currently based in North West River, NL, Gauthier is an accomplished Inuit and Métis artist and activist whose work often depicts traditional Inuit practices, cosmologies, spirituality and personal memories. His powerful work brings together traditional carving techniques with contemporary narratives of modern life, from ancient spiritual understandings to the negative impacts that southern economic interests have brought to northern health and lifestyles. The evening will end with an open conversation and questions from the audience.

This Big Ideas in Art and Culture Lecture is presented in partnership between Kitchener Waterloo Art Gallery, Longhouse Labs, Contemporary Art Forum Kitchener + Area, University of Waterloo Art Gallery and Musagetes.

 

About the Artist: Born in Happy Valley-Goose Bay, Nunatsiavut, NL, Billy Gauthier is an Inuit and Métis artist and activist currently based in North West River, NL. He initially began to carve in 1996, and was inspired by his cousin, John Terriak, a skilled Nunatsiavut sculptor, to create further works.

Gauthier creates intricately detailed, mixed-media sculptures with various materials, such as stone, bone, antler, ivory, sinew and baleen (whalebone). His work often depicts traditional Inuit practices, cosmologies, spirituality and personal memories. Gauthier’s carvings also address contemporary challenges that many Inuit families and communities experience across Inuit Nunangat, such as food insecurity, substance abuse, the impacts of environmental degradation and concern for the environment and wildlife. The undated Narwhal Hunt exemplifies the artist's practice. Created with anhydrite, serpentine, whalebone, sinew, labradorite, caribou antler and moose antler, it features a number of diminutive hunters amongst a swirling, light grey mass of sculpted waves and walruses. Narwhal Hunt highlights traditional hunting practices as well as the importance of the walrus as a food source for many communities across the North.

His inaugural solo exhibition -- Billy Gauthier: Visions From Labrador -- was featured at Spirit Wrestler Gallery in Vancouver, BC in 2010. Gauthier's work was also included in the touring exhibition SakKijâjuk: Art and Craft from Nunatsiavut from 2017 to 2019, with his first-mid career retrospective -- Saunituinnaulungitotluni | Beyond Bone -- presented at The Rooms in St. John’s, NL in summer 2019.

Gauthier is also an activist as well as an environmental advocate and activist. In October 2016, he participated in a thirteen-day hunger strike with other members of his community, Delilah Saunders and Jerry Kohlmeister, to protest the flooding of the reservoir at Muskrat Falls, which posed a risk of contaminating the Churchill River with methylmercury and could flow downstream impacting many Inuit families. The strike ended on October 26, 2016, when an agreement was made between Gauthier, Saunders, Kohlmeister and Premier Dwight Ball. 

Gauthier's work has been exhibited at various art galleries across Canada, including the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia in Halifax, NS, the Winnipeg Art Gallery in Manitoba, and the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa, ON, among many others. In 2009, Gauthier's work was featured on the cover of the Inuit Art Quarterly and in 2011, he received the Newfoundland and Labrador Art Council's "Emerging Artist of the Year."

 

  

                    

Longhouse Labs would like to acknowledge this Big Ideas in Art and Culture Lecture is supported by Waterloo Region Community Foundation - Community Fund - The Musagetes Fund.