The Art of Ursula Johnson featured on CBC Ideas
Atlantic - Ursula Johnson
Ideas · CBC · Posted: Jan 16, 2018 3:58 PM ET | Last Updated: January 16, 2018
The Sobey Art Award is Canada's pre-eminent award for contemporary Canadian art. The annual prize is given to an artist under age 40, who has exhibited in a public or commercial art gallery within 18 months of being nominated.
MORE: The 2017 Sobey Art Award
Ursula Johnson is an emerging performance and installation artist of Mi'kmaw First Nation ancestry. Since graduating from NSCAD in 2006, she has participated in over 30 group shows and 5 solo exhibitions. Johnson has been exploring various mediums including performance art; sculpture, music, printmaking and utilizing delegated performers as well as collaborative processes of making new works. Her performances are often place-based and employ cooperative didactic intervention. In Land Sings she has been using topographical terrain mapping to delineate a journey, which she translates into a drawn line, her collaborators use this line to score songs that they perform durationally.
2017 Sobey Art Award Juror Sarah Filmore on Ursula Johnson
Nova Scotian artist Ursula Johnson's remarkable practice is built on memory and community. At this time when Canadians are celebrating and challenging the memory of nationhood, Johnson's work embodies a considered, critical, yet generous lens through which multiple histories and communities may be considered. A member of the Eskasoni Mi'qmaw First Nation from Cape Breton Island, Johnson's own circle of family members are accomplished basket-weavers. Drawing on this history, that of a skill specific to her own Mi'qmaw community, passed from generation to generation, Johnson explores what it means to honour and preserve those things that cement a culture or people. Bringing out the very best with her collaborators, she finds commonality among their differences. As Johnson's work centres on memory and community, words she spoke at the outset of her performance, re(al)-location resonate deeply. Calling on all those gathered in Highland Park, she noted that water holds memory, and that on that very day, in that place, we were changing it and making new memory. This is at the core of Johnson's practice: she honours what exists and what has come before, and calls on the active, conscious action of those around her to change what is yet to come.
Ursula Johnson’s upcoming solo exhibition at Central Art Garage