- Sensing of the Wound –Whess Harman & Pamila Matharu
- Sensing of the Wound –Whess Harman & Pamila Matharu
- Sensing of the Wound –Whess Harman & Pamila Matharu
- Sensing of the Wound –Whess Harman & Pamila Matharu
Sensing of the Wound
Whess Harman & Pamila Matharu
5 March–
30 April 2022
Curated by: Denise Ryner
Sensing of the Wound
Whess Harman & Pamila Matharu
Curated by: Denise Ryner
Through their combination of visual art and practices of convening collectives, artists Whess Harman’s and Pamila Matharu’s works configure DIY publishing, youth culture, and archival material into constellations that question what lies beyond, or remains invisible to the colonial and institutional gaze.
Artist Bios
Whess Harman
Whess Harman (they/them) is Carrier Wit’at, a nation amalgamated by the federal government under the Lake Babine Nation. They graduated from the Emily Carr university’s BFA program in 2014 and currently live and work on the territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh as the curator at grunt gallery. Their multidisciplinary practice includes beading, illustration, text, poetry and curation. As a mixed-race, trans/non-binary artist they work to find their way through a tasty plethora of some kind of undiagnosed attention deficit disorder, colonial bullshit and queer melancholy. To the best of their patience, they do this with humour and a carefully mediated cynicism that the galleries go hog wild for. Their current projects include the Potlatch Punk series, various text-based works, zines, and comics.
Pamila Matharu
Pamila Matharu is a settler of Panjabi, Indian descent (Jalandhar and Kapurthala), born in Birmingham, England, and arrived in Canada in 1976. Based in Tkarón:to (Toronto) – Treaty 13 territory – on the lands of the Mississaugas of the Credit, the Anishinaabe, the Haudenosaunee, and the Wendat. She holds a BA in Visual Arts, and a Fine Arts B.Ed. from York University. Approaching contemporary art from the position of critical pedagogy and using an interdisciplinary and intersectional feminist lens, her work culminates in a broad range of forms including: installation art, social practice, and experimental media art. Her 2019 solo exhibition debut One of These Things Is Not Like the Other, presented at A Space Gallery (Toronto), won the 2019 OAAG Award for Best Exhibition and the 2019 Toronto Images Festival Homebrew Award. Her project INDEX (SOME OF ALL PARTS) received the 2020 CONTACT Festival’s Edward Burtynsky Award. Her forthcoming monograph will launch at Brampton, Ontario’s PAMA (Peel Art Museum and Archives) in May 2023.