Afros in tha City

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Esker Foundation - Deanna Bowen: Black Drones in the Hive

Project Space: Wei Li: Skinbound until 6 June, Upcoming: Levin Ifko: Tender To The Flame opens on 17 June to 20 October. In Bridge Space: Tap, Tap, & Unwrap.

Curated by Crystal Mowry

Organized by the Kitchener-Waterloo Art Gallery

Circulated in partnership with the MacKenzie Art Gallery, Regina.

Deanna Bowen Black Drones in the Hive 25 MAY–25 AUGUST 2024 Curated by Crystal Mowry Organized by the Kitchener-Waterloo Art Gallery.

Circulated in partnership with the MacKenzie Art Gallery, Regina. For more than twenty years, Deanna Bowen’s practice has evolved from its roots in experimental documentary video into a complex mapping of power as seen in public and private archives.

Research and exhibitions are rarely mutually exclusive modes for Bowen, in part because her subjects are capable of revealing new perspectives over time. Whether it is through strategies of re-enactment or dense constellations of archival material, Bowen’s work traces her familial history within a broader narrative of Black survival in Canada and the United States. Originally produced by the Kitchener-Waterloo Art Gallery, Black Drones in the Hive unfolds in a series of visual chapters to reveal the strategic erasures which have enabled Canadian canons such as the Group of Seven to exist without question or complication.

The exhibition draws its title from a racist assessment of William Robinson, a Black journeyman, as written by a city official in Berlin, Ontario (now Kitchener) in the records of the Waterloo County House of Industry and Refuge (1869–1950). This sentiment echoes the centuries-long project of devaluing Black labour and the promise of autonomy. Combining historical texts, petitions, and archives ranging from local to international, Bowen weaves together narrative threads of migration, power networks, and hierarchies of remembrance.