Morgan Wood
Morgan Wood (born in southern Saskatchewan) is a curator and artist who is Stony Mountain Cree. Her family is from the Michel Callihou Band in Alberta and her great-grandmother was Victoria Callihou.[1] Wood received a Bachelor of Indian Art from the First Nations University of Canada, at the University of Regina in Regina, Saskatchewan.[citation needed]
In 2003, Wood participated in the Aboriginal Curatorial Residency at the Mendel Art Gallery in Saskatoon. During that time, she wrote Wildfire on the Plains: Contemporary Saskatchewan Art.[citation needed]
She was a member of the Saskatchewan Aboriginal Museum Advisory Board for the Saskatchewan Museum Association.[2]
Work
[edit]"Here and Now" was an exhibition at the Dunlop Art Gallery, in Regina in 1999 that brought together contemporary Aboriginal art work from the southern half of Saskatchewan.[3] Wood created "Exxxposed: Aesthetics of Aboriginal Erotic Art" with the MacKenzie Art Gallery, Regina in1999. [4]
Her art piece, "Hands Off My Genes" (1997), was on display at the MacKenzie Art Gallery. It is a sculpture made of a pair of found blue jeans in the surrealist and dadaist style. The jeans have been left open to resemble a woman's legs and abdomen, equipped with protruding porcupine quills in white and blue.[5] Wood referred to porcupine quills in another work titled "Love & Sex" (1995).[6]
Her work was included in an exhibit curated by Leah Taylor titled "Towards Action" at the Kenderdine Art Gallery in 2017 alongside the works of Allyson Clay, Marcel Dzama, Angela Grossmann, Istvan Kantor, Alastair Mackie, Jane Ash Poitras and John Scott.[7]
Writing
[edit]- Odjig, Daphne; Wood, Morgan; Gallery, Kamloops Art (2005). "Daphne Odjig". Daphne Odjig: four decades of prints. Kamloops Art Gallery. p. 9–22. ISBN 1-895497-61-2..[8]
- Wild fire on the plains : contemporary Saskatchewan art : Anthony Deiter, David Garneau, Cheryl L'hirondelle-Waynohtêw, Neal McLeod.[9]
- Lee-Ann Martin; Morgan Wood (Summer 1998). "Shaping the Future of Aboriginal Curatoral Practice" (PDF). Inuit Art Quarterly. 13 (2): 22–25.
References
[edit]- ^ "Our Story". Michel First Nation. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
- ^ "Aboriginal Faces of Saskatchewan - Morgan Wood". Saskatchewan Indigenous Cultural Centre. Retrieved 10 March 2017.[dead link ]
- ^ "Here and Now". Dunlop Art Gallery. Retrieved 10 March 2017.[dead link ]
- ^ "The 2015 Rita Friendly Kaufman Lecture". Agnes Etherington Art Centre. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
- Martin, Lee-Ann; Wood, Morgan (27 November 1999). Exxxposed: aesthetics of aboriginal erotic art. Regina: MacKenzie Art Gallery. ISBN 1896470254. OCLC 43277701. - ^ Wood, Morgan. "Hands Off My Genes". www.artsask.ca. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
- ^ Cardinal-Schubert, Joane (1997). Mark Makers. Saskatoon: MacKenzie Art Gallery. p. 3.
- ^ "Art Exhibit: TOWARDS ACTION". Global News. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
- ^ Odjig, Daphne; Wood, Morgan (2005). Daphne Odjig: four decades of prints. Kamloops, B.C.: Kamloops Art Gallery. ISBN 1895497612. OCLC 60369595.
- ^ Wood, Morgan; Mendel Art Gallery (1 January 2003). Wild fire on the plains: contemporary Saskatchewan art : Anthony Deiter, David Garneau, Cheryl L'hirondelle-Waynohtêw, Neal McLeod. Saskatoon: Mendel Art Gallery. ISBN 1896386326. OCLC 52920470.