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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251011
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251101
DTSTAMP:20260428T020008
CREATED:20250915T180222Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251022T112753Z
UID:10000373-1760140800-1761955199@mayworkskjipuktukhfx.ca
SUMMARY:my inner child healing my immigrant identity
DESCRIPTION:Presented in partnership with the Khyber Centre for the Arts and Nocturne\nmy inner child healing my immigrant identity by Martha Mutale explores the immigrant experience – the self split between two homes. A series of rag dolls where each figure represents a point in time in the immigrant life\, softly positioned in space\, while the whole assemblage provides a grounded picture of who she is. Presented by Mayworks Kjipuktuk/Halifax and hosted at the Khyber Centre for the Arts\, the exhibition runs October 11-31\, 2025. Events include Nocturne: Art at Night Festival from 6PM-12AM on Saturday\, October 18\, and a closing reception Tuesday\, October 28th 6PM-8PM. \n \nmy inner child healing my immigrant identity is a continuation of Martha Mutale’s exploration of the immigrant experience through the making and presentation of rag dolls fabricated from Zambian fabrics overlaid with printed words. Each of the 40 inches tall dolls represents a different part of her life as an immigrant living in the Diaspora and what it means to hold two different identities grounded in two different homes – Canada and Zambia. What does it mean to call two places home at once? What does it mean to always have a foot in both worlds\, to feel unmoored by this dual self? What are the different ways in which each of these places is home and for which reasons? \nMutale was confronted with these questions when she returned to her birth home during her adult life. Everyday\, taxi drivers (themselves migrants from neighbouring African countries) would ask her about herself and where she came from. Growing up in Nova Scotia\, one of Mutale’s most vivid and concrete connections to Zambian culture was the process through which she and her sisters would continually measure each others’ bodies in order for their mother to sew clothing for them made of African fabric. These experiences and memories\, along with her love of poetry\, have been the crucible for her ongoing series of projects using rag dolls to convey her sense of identity. \nThe process of crafting is a journey in itself and the tactile medium of textiles provide for Mutale a method of self-exploration that is both meditative and very concrete at once. For my inner child healing my immigrant identity\, the dolls (smaller than in previous explorations) will be installed as a diorama in the window gallery of the Khyber Centre for the Arts through which passersby can windowgaze into Mutale’s life. As Mutale represents different facets and waypoints in her life through each rag doll\, she presents a fragmented picture of herself. The soft sculptures each convey a lack of weight and definite attachment to the ground. And yet\, the depiction of Mutale’s life as a whole through their assemblage in space\, all together\, offers her (and the observer) a sense of groundedness provided by the material expression of her identities and the added value of a sum crystallised by the joining of its parts. \nARTIST BIO\n \nMartha Mutale is a poet and veteran of the spoken word scene in Kjipuktuk/Halifax\, Nova Scotia. She grew up in Billtown\, Nova Scotia\, a small rural community in the Annapolis valley after emigrating from Zambia with her family when she was just under two years old. Her family is based in Nova Scotia. As an adult\, she relocated to North End Halifax where she began expressing herself as a poet while also working in the non-profit sector. She has worked as a housing support worker where she witnessed first hand the vulnerability and social disposability of those who have lost their homes – especially immigrants who\, without citizenship\, are not allowed access to shelters. In December 2022\, Martha relocated to Zambia to start over\, reconnect with herself and apply to regain her Zambian citizenship. Having been raised in the Diaspora and having called Nova Scotia home since a young child\, she longs for her birth home\, Zambia\, and yearns to learn more about her roots. While in Lusaka\, waiting for her paperwork to be approved\, she volunteered her time in an art gallery and completed two residencies which constituted her first forays into visual arts. During her second residency\, she made six dolls\, five feet long\, all sewn and painted by hand using upcycled textile fabrics and African materials she found while living in Lusaka\, Zambia. Martha is healing her inner child and making room for new and exciting adventures that await her in the future. \nHOURS & EVENTS:\nExhibition on view: October 11-31\, 2025 \nGallery hours: On display in the window gallery 24/7 | Open hours: 12-5PM Tuesday-Saturday + events \nAppointments/contact: info@khyber.ca \nAccessibility notes: www.khyber.ca/access \nNocturne hours: 6PM-12AM\, Saturday\, October 18\, 2025 \nClosing reception: Tuesday\, October 28th 6PM-8PM – Click here for details \nPresented concurrently with No Domain / No Dominion
URL:https://mayworkskjipuktukhfx.ca/event/my-inner-child-healing-my-immigrant-identity/
LOCATION:The Khyber Centre for the Arts\, 1880 Hollis St\, Halifax\, Nova Scotia\, B3J 1W6\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mayworkskjipuktukhfx.ca/app/uploads/2025/09/Doll-Slide.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Mayworks Kjipuktuk/Halifax":MAILTO:info@mayworkskjipuktukhfx.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251011
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251101
DTSTAMP:20260428T020008
CREATED:20250904T141921Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251022T112656Z
UID:10000372-1760140800-1761955199@mayworkskjipuktukhfx.ca
SUMMARY:No Dominion/No Domain
DESCRIPTION:Presented in partnership with the Khyber Centre for the Arts and Nocturne\nMayworks Kjipuktuk/Halifax presents No Dominion/No Domain\, where Eva Grant and Curtis Botham trace land\, life\, labour\, and pathways across speculative digital ancestral architectures and charcoal industrial landscapes. \n“Homeless Shelters Before Police Raid” by Curtis Botham\nNo Dominion/No Domain brings together two artists\, Eva Grant and Curtis Botham\, whose works reflect on land\, labour\, infrastructure\, and ecological movement. Presented by Mayworks Kjipuktuk/Halifax and hosted at the Khyber Centre for the Arts\, the exhibition runs October 11-31\, 2025. Events include Nocturne: Art at Night Festival from 6PM-12AM on Saturday\, October 18\, and a closing reception Tuesday\, October 28th 6PM-8PM. \nEva Grant’s WILD INTERFACE is a work of St’át’imc speculative futurism that reimagines longhouses and Salish structures as though assembled from salmon bones. These digital works depict architecture not as idealized pasts or utopian elsewheres\, but as living interfaces: porous inter-species networks where technologies and ancestral knowledge converge. Through computational geography and postnatural territories\, Grant reconsiders space and place as co-constructed with ecologies\, where memory and labours of love entwine. \nCurtis Botham’s Effluents and Urban projects confront the landscapes of extraction that underpin industrial modernity. His large-scale charcoal drawings—made in a volatile medium that mirrors the precarity of his subject matter—document the sites of resource economies on Mi’kma’ki/Nova Scotia and their cascading impacts: inequities of wealth\, the precarity of workers\, and the hidden infrastructures behind everyday consumer life. Botham traces these environments with stark fidelity\, inviting viewers to recognize their own embeddedness in these cycles of labour and consumption. \nTogether\, Grant’s and Curtis’ works stage a dialogue on dominion—over land\, life\, and labour—and on domains\, whether in digital terrains of speculative ancestral architectures or in the charcoal-rendered landscapes and machinery of industrial capitalism. \nNo Dominion/No Domain invokes the dual refusal of control and possession within colonial constructs and systems. The title\, created by Grant\, arose in response to the effectiveness of messaging between the blend of analog and virtual material. Through charcoal and digital works\, the exhibition resists the illusion of permanence that dominion or domain implies. Charcoal\, itself the residue of combustion\, unsettles the idea of industry as stable progress\, while Grant’s architectures utilize the digital realm to glitch and dissolve systemically oppressive boundaries. Both practices gesture towards knowledge\, labour\, and survival beyond grids of ownership. \nDigital piece from the WILD INTERFACE series by Eva Grant\nARTIST BIOS:\n \nEva Grant is a Queer\, St̓át̓imc-Eurasian filmmaker\, curator\, and new media artist. She studied philosophy and literature at Stanford University and is the founder of Tooth & Nail Pictures. Her world-building practice hybridizes moving image\, animation\, game engines\, interactive digital media\, data visualization\, and speculative design to prototype decolonial and capacious futures. She is a former Sundance Native Lab fellow\, a BIPOC TV & Film Episodic Writers Lab participant\, an Artengine NEW SUNS Worldbuilding Lab artist-in-residence\, a Vancouver Queer Film Festival Programming Disruptor\, a Netflix-BANFF Diversity of Voices fellow\, an Art Gallery of Ontario AGO x RBC emerging artist-in-residence\, and an alumna of the imagineNATIVE Originals Commission program and the Screenwriting Shorts Fellowship. Her work has been supported by Mayworks Kjipuktuk\, Nocturne: Art at Night\, CFC Satellites\, Debaser/Pique Festival\, the Indigenous Curatorial Collective\, Lay*Away\, Black Star Film Festival’s William and Louise Greaves Filmmaking Seminar\, and the Ottawa Animation Festival\, and her films have screened at festivals around the world. \n \nCurtis Botham is an award-winning artist based in Halifax\, Nova Scotia. He graduated from NSCAD University in 2017 with a bachelor of fine arts. His accolades include the Canada Games Young Artist of Excellence Award\, and numerous grants from Arts Nova Scotia and the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation. Since 2017\, he has depicted the impact and labour of industries in the Maritimes\, examining the social and environmental effects of material culture on our lives. He has participated in residencies around Nova Scotia in order to create a broad portrait of the province and its relationship to its land\, people and resources.\ncurtisbotham.weebly.com \nHOURS & EVENTS:\nExhibition on view: October 11-31\, 2025 \nGallery hours: 12-5PM Tuesday-Saturday + events \nAppointments/contact: info@khyber.ca \nAccessibility notes: www.khyber.ca/access \nNocturne hours: 6PM-12AM\, Saturday\, October 18\, 2025 \nClosing reception: Tuesday\, October 28th 6PM-8PM – Click here for details \nPresented concurrently with my inner child healing my immigrant identity
URL:https://mayworkskjipuktukhfx.ca/event/no-dominion-no-domain/
LOCATION:The Khyber Centre for the Arts\, 1880 Hollis St\, Halifax\, Nova Scotia\, B3J 1W6\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://mayworkskjipuktukhfx.ca/app/uploads/2025/09/No-Dominion-No-Domain-Slide.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Mayworks Kjipuktuk/Halifax":MAILTO:info@mayworkskjipuktukhfx.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20251028T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20251028T200000
DTSTAMP:20260428T020008
CREATED:20251022T112602Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251022T112602Z
UID:10000374-1761674400-1761681600@mayworkskjipuktukhfx.ca
SUMMARY:Closing Reception with Curtis Botham\, Eva Grant and Martha Mutale
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a casual conversations with the artists behind No Dominion/No Domain and my inner child healing my immigrant identity. \nCurtis Botham and Martha Mutale will be joining us in person\, and Eva Grant will be joining us via video call. All will be available to answer questions about their works on display only until October 31st. \nA brief facilitated Q&A will take place at 7PM. \nRefreshments will be served! \nARTIST BIOS:\n \nEva Grant is a Queer\, St̓át̓imc-Eurasian filmmaker\, curator\, and new media artist. She studied philosophy and literature at Stanford University and is the founder of Tooth & Nail Pictures. Her world-building practice hybridizes moving image\, animation\, game engines\, interactive digital media\, data visualization\, and speculative design to prototype decolonial and capacious futures. She is a former Sundance Native Lab fellow\, a BIPOC TV & Film Episodic Writers Lab participant\, an Artengine NEW SUNS Worldbuilding Lab artist-in-residence\, a Vancouver Queer Film Festival Programming Disruptor\, a Netflix-BANFF Diversity of Voices fellow\, an Art Gallery of Ontario AGO x RBC emerging artist-in-residence\, and an alumna of the imagineNATIVE Originals Commission program and the Screenwriting Shorts Fellowship. Her work has been supported by Mayworks Kjipuktuk\, Nocturne: Art at Night\, CFC Satellites\, Debaser/Pique Festival\, the Indigenous Curatorial Collective\, Lay*Away\, Black Star Film Festival’s William and Louise Greaves Filmmaking Seminar\, and the Ottawa Animation Festival\, and her films have screened at festivals around the world. \n \nCurtis Botham is an award-winning artist based in Halifax\, Nova Scotia. He graduated from NSCAD University in 2017 with a bachelor of fine arts. His accolades include the Canada Games Young Artist of Excellence Award\, and numerous grants from Arts Nova Scotia and the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation. Since 2017\, he has depicted the impact and labour of industries in the Maritimes\, examining the social and environmental effects of material culture on our lives. He has participated in residencies around Nova Scotia in order to create a broad portrait of the province and its relationship to its land\, people and resources.\ncurtisbotham.weebly.com \n \nMartha Mutale is a poet and veteran of the spoken word scene in Kjipuktuk/Halifax\, Nova Scotia. She grew up in Billtown\, Nova Scotia\, a small rural community in the Annapolis valley after emigrating from Zambia with her family when she was just under two years old. Her family is based in Nova Scotia. As an adult\, she relocated to North End Halifax where she began expressing herself as a poet while also working in the non-profit sector. She has worked as a housing support worker where she witnessed first hand the vulnerability and social disposability of those who have lost their homes – especially immigrants who\, without citizenship\, are not allowed access to shelters. In December 2022\, Martha relocated to Zambia to start over\, reconnect with herself and apply to regain her Zambian citizenship. Having been raised in the Diaspora and having called Nova Scotia home since a young child\, she longs for her birth home\, Zambia\, and yearns to learn more about her roots. While in Lusaka\, waiting for her paperwork to be approved\, she volunteered her time in an art gallery and completed two residencies which constituted her first forays into visual arts. During her second residency\, she made six dolls\, five feet long\, all sewn and painted by hand using upcycled textile fabrics and African materials she found while living in Lusaka\, Zambia. Martha is healing her inner child and making room for new and exciting adventures that await her in the future.
URL:https://mayworkskjipuktukhfx.ca/event/closing-reception-with-curtis-botham-eva-grant-and-martha-mutale/
LOCATION:The Khyber Centre for the Arts\, 1880 Hollis St\, Halifax\, Nova Scotia\, B3J 1W6\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://mayworkskjipuktukhfx.ca/app/uploads/2025/10/Reception-Slide.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Mayworks Kjipuktuk/Halifax":MAILTO:info@mayworkskjipuktukhfx.ca
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