- In Search of Queertopias
- In Search of Queertopias
- In Search of Queertopias
- In Search of Queertopias
In Search of Queertopias
James Albers, Amanda Amour-Lynx, Rylan Friday, Alex Gibson, and Queer Code
15 July–
12 August 2023
Curated by: Nathan Clark
In Search of Queertopias
James Albers, Amanda Amour-Lynx, Rylan Friday, Alex Gibson, and Queer Code
Curated by: Nathan Clark
“How does the object appear when it is no longer familiar?”
– Sara Ahmed, Queer Phenomenology: Orientations, Objects, Others
Queertopias begin where the boundaries of the body end. As they are activated by the individual’s own movements through space, Queertopias bleed outside the boundaries of their own making, immersing themselves into everyday existence to overlap and dispute with what is perceived as familiar, or “normal.” In Search of Queertopias evokes queer intimacy and relationality out of worldbuilding through storytelling, with the body as the threshold between these worlds. Each Queertopia offers a different point of entry to explore how queerness pushes beyond a universalized or objective experience, as an assemblage of diverse and infinite perspectives.
In Search of Queertopias is an immersive experimentation with feminist theorist Sara Ahmed’s methodology of disorientation for how one can explore unfamiliar worlds. This exhibition uses disorientation to allow these digital narratives to both invite and refuse the viewer’s own positionality in order to make familiar the complexity and beauty of queer(ed) perspective(s). This exhibition features four artists and an artist collective—James Albers, Amanda Amour-Lynx, Rylan Friday, Alex Gibson, and collective Queer Code—whose works begin in spaces which may appear at first familiar, but are soon reminiscent of a dream, or of the uncanny. Each artist uses storytelling tools to guide the viewer through unfamiliar, disorienting, and dreamlike Queertopias. These spaces are opportunities to encounter personal and intimate experiences that are at once collective and individual.
Ultimately, immersive storytelling opens up new ways of seeing and positioning themselves in the world.
Exhibition Booklet (398.84 KB)
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Artist Bios
James Albers
James Albers (they/he) is an emerging artist, curator, writer, organizer, performer and drag artist based in Vancouver on the stolen and ancestral lands of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixwh (Squamish), and səl̓ilw̓ətaʔɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) First Nations. In their recent endeavors, James is thinking through subjects like queer fantasy, sci-fi, virtuality, digitization, futurism, poetics, nostalgia, humour, embodiment, and spirituality. They are interested in exploring the queer potentials of revisionist histories and choose to believe in the magic of fiction. Recently, James has been thinking through the truth that a perfect lie may hold, and vice versa. They graduated from the department of Art History, Visual Art & Theory at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, with a double major in Visual Arts and Art History. During their final year, they were the Assistant Director of the Hatch Art Gallery, UBC’s only student-run art space.
www.instagram.com/ladyboibangkok
Amanda Amour-Lynx
Amanda Amour Lynx (they/she/nekm) is a Two Spirit, neurodivergent, mixed urban L’nu (Mi’kmaw) interdisciplinary artist and facilitator. Lynx was born and grew up in Tiohtià:ke (Montreal) and is a member of Wagmatcook FN, and currently works and resides in Guelph, Ontario. Their art making is a hybridity of traditional l’nuk approaches with new and traditional art media guided by the Mi’kmaq principles netukulimk (sustainability) and etuaptmumk (two-eyed seeing). Lynx’s artistic practice discusses land and relationality, environmental issues, navigating systems and societal structures, cultural and gender identity, (L’nui’smk) language resurgence, quantum and spiritual multiplicities. Their facilitation work focuses on designing community spaces committed to healthy Indigenous futurities guided by lateral love, accessibility and world-building. Their writing was published as part of grunt gallery’s Together Apart anthology (2020), and revue esse (2020). Lynx also worked as program assistant at Xpace Cultural Centre. They most recently curated Shapeshifters at Beaver Hall Gallery (Toronto) as part of the annual Bi+ Arts Festival.
https://www.amour-lynx.art/
www.instagram.com/amour.lynx
Rylan Friday
Rylan Friday (he/him) is a multi-faceted, award-winning filmmaker and curator from Cote First Nation, Saskatchewan who currently works and resides in Vancouver on the stolen and ancestral lands of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixwh (Squamish), and səl̓ilw̓ətaʔɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) First Nations. His focus is to bring honest representations to the LGBTQ2+ and Indigenous communities. He produced and implemented a peer-to-peer mentorship for Trevor Mack’s debut feature, Portraits From a Fire. He recently won the Kevin Tierney Emerging Producer Award, CMPA Indie Screen Awards, Prime Time Ottawa 2022 and the Leo Award for Best Motion Picture for his efforts on Mack’s debut feature. Rylan works include: Terror/Forming (2022) with plans of it becoming his debut feature film; The Sound of You Collapsing (2023); and, Musk (2023). Rylan has programmed for VIFF’s Catalyst Mentorship Program, and curated the highly successful #Indigeneity series for Reel Causes. Rylan was also the lead curator for the Who We Are Indigenous film series in collaboration with VIFF and the Museum of Vancouver.
https://www.rylanfriday.com/
www.instagram.com/thndr.bae
Alex Gibson
Alex Gibson (they/them) is a queer, non-binary Barbadian artist who currently lives and works in Vancouver on the stolen and ancestral lands of the xʷməθkʷəyə̓ m (Musqueam), Sḵwxw̱ ú7mesh (Squamish) and səl ̓ ilwətaɁɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) First Nations. Gibson is a MFA candidate at the University of British Columbia, whose practice explores transgressive queer identities in relation to their Caribbean background. As an immigrant genderfluid artist, their practice focuses on queer identity, space and temporality, and how these relate to memory and place, time and geography, experience and ecosystem. Their work has been exhibited at Capture Photography Festival (Vancouver), Wil Aballe Art Projects (Vancouver), Tomato Mouse (New York), Number 3 Gallery (Vancouver), Caribbean Fine Arts Fair (Bridgetown, Barbados), Artists Alliance Barbados (Bridgetown, Barbados), RBC Media Gallery (Vancouver).
http://www.caribbeanboy.com/
www.instagram.com/alexgibson___
Queer Code
Queer Code is a design and research-based studio that designs, develops, and researches new models of code and coding with queer and trans experiences at the forefront. They explore computing at the intersections of critical theory, virtual reality, complexity, and interactive art. Leading team members for the exhibited project, Mementorium, include Dylan Paré, Scout Windsor, and John Craig.
https://queercode.org/
www.instagram.com/queercodestudio
Curator Bio
Nathan Clark
Nathan (Nate) Clark (they/ them) is a genderfluid nonbinary second year candidate in the Master of Art History in Critical Curatorial Studies at the University of British Columbia, where they also received their Bachelor of Art History and Museum Anthropology. Nathan currently works and resides in Vancouver on the stolen and ancestral lands of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixwh (Squamish), and səl̓ilw̓ətaʔɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) First Nations. Nathan’s research focuses on the phenomenology and narrative poetics of virtual reality and digital immersive installations and the importance of embodied, affective relations between the viewer and the work of art. They also research digital queerscapes and the disembodiment of users within cyberspaces, and how artists are responding to this “Wild West” of new mediums and artistic processes. The body is the primary point of concern in understanding how we interact with this new “ontological turn.” Nathan will be pursuing their PhD of Art History at the University of Toronto in Fall 2023.
www.instagram.com/armchair.anarchist