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BAMPFA Curator Victoria Sung Discusses Working With Cree Artist Duane Linklater on New Exhibit mymotherside
On Friday, Berkeley News published an interview with Victoria Sung, a senior curator at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA), about the museum’s new exhibition by Canadian Cree artist Duane Linklater. The exhibit, titled mymotherside, provides a survey of Linklater’s multidisciplinary career, and Sung was responsible for bringing the show to Berkeley. According to the exhibit description, it seeks to “explore the contradictions of contemporary Indigenous life within settler systems of knowledge, representation and value”.
Mymotherside is the first exhibit Sung has organized since joining the museum earlier this year. In the interview, Sung discusses the process of working with Linklater. Describing him as one of the most “thoughtful” artists she has ever worked with, she expresses how Linklater’s art “interrogates” the institutions that show his pieces. This has particular meaning at UC Berkeley, which has a troubled history with collecting Indigenous arts and sacred objects. Linklater’s work directly addresses the complicity of museums and academic institutions in contributing to the dispossession and erasure of historical and contemporary Native people.
When Linklater visited Berkeley early in October, he made it a priority to make meaningful connections with Native students on campus. For Sung, who strongly believes in making museums welcoming to marginalized groups, it was also important to ensure that the gallery space provided a meaningful space for Indigenous visitors, and to show their cultures as alive and vibrant.
The gallery is therefore hosting several live events in conversation with the exhibition. This week, Canadian Studies is cosponsoring a series of open rehearsals by Alutiiq dance artist Tanya Lukin Linklater, who is Linklater’s wife. Then, in January, the museum will host a roundtable focused on Indigenous knowledge and reviving ancestral practices, featuring Canadian Studies faculty affiliate Beth Piatote. Finally, in February, Linklater will return to Berkeley with his son Tobias to close out the exhibit with a live musical performance.
Mymotherside runs at BAMPFA through February 25, 2024. Admission to the museum is free to UC Berkeley faculty, staff, and students.
Photo of Duane Linklater at BAMPFA by KLC Photos, via Berkeley News. |