Feature Story: Exhibit speaks to student’s exploration of her Métis heritage
The walls of the U of R’s Fifth Parallel Gallery’s current exhibit are dotted with a dozen portraits of the same little black dress. On each one, viewers will discover a colourful accent of a specific berry plant, native to Saskatchewan. The exhibit, Little Medicine Dress, is the work of artist Sara...
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Format: | Other/Unknown Material |
Language: | English |
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External Relations, University of Regina
2019
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10294/8588 |
Summary: | The walls of the U of R’s Fifth Parallel Gallery’s current exhibit are dotted with a dozen portraits of the same little black dress. On each one, viewers will discover a colourful accent of a specific berry plant, native to Saskatchewan. The exhibit, Little Medicine Dress, is the work of artist Sarah Timewell, a fourth-year Indigenous Arts student at First Nations University of Canada. Her solo show is her BFA graduating exhibition. Staff no |
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