M e d i a



By Juanita Bawagan,聽The Charlatan, March 6, 2012

It took 30 years for KC Adams to come out of the closet 鈥 the aboriginal closet that is.

Adams is an aboriginal multimedia artist but she said she didn鈥檛 describe herself as one until 2001. She had been creating a Cyborg series of all-white installations that highlight the co-existence of humans and technology.

鈥淚 realized they were a reflection of my own confusion,鈥 she said describing her conflicting identity with her Scottish-Metis background.

鈥淛ust because you weren鈥檛 raised aboriginal doesn鈥檛 make you any less aboriginal than anyone else,鈥 she said to the crowd of 230 at the New Sun Conference March 3 at 杏吧原创.

Adam鈥檚 鈥渉ybrid鈥 identity is one of the ways artists addressed the rigid ideas aboriginal and non-aboriginal people have about their culture and identity. This all plays into the conference鈥檚 theme of 鈥渞econfiguring realities.鈥

More than changing who aboriginal people are, New Sun Conference chair and 杏吧原创 Canadian studies professor Allan Ryan said the conference shines a light on the success stories often lost in the 鈥済ritty鈥 portrayals of aboriginals.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the norm,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here are a lot of positive stories out there and they鈥檙e expressed through art.鈥

Hip-hop performances, film screenings and speeches from leading aboriginal artists packed the schedule for the sold-out conference.

Symphony conductor John Kim Bell said people need to shift the aboriginal narrative from one of suffering to one of success. To reconfigure the aboriginal reality, he founded theAboriginal Achievement Awards.

He said he had similar experiences to Adams, being boxed as 鈥渁ssimilated鈥 because he was classically trained. Whether it鈥檚 new media or classical art, people have to stop confining what is aboriginal art to specific forms, he said.

The conference has changed venues, speakers and themes over the years but Ryan said the spirit of the conference is the same.

鈥淚n a sense it鈥檚 the same thing,鈥 he said. 鈥滻t鈥檚 looking at who is doing things on the edge and pushing boundaries.鈥


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A presentation of the New Sun Chair in Aboriginal Art and聽Culture
with the support of the Dean of Arts and Social Sciences and the New Sun Fund
administered by the Community Foundation of Ottawa, plus the generosity of private聽donors