Gardiner Museum welcomes first curator of Indigenous ceramics - Action News
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Toronto

Gardiner Museum welcomes first curator of Indigenous ceramics

The Gardiner Museum is about to undergo a massive transformation, and the new space will have a greater focus on Indigenous art. To help oversee the process, the museum has welcomed its first curator of Indigenous ceramics.

Toronto museum will be closed for 4 months, set to undergo massive transformation

Gardiner Museum welcomes first curator of Indigenous ceramics

4 months ago
Duration 2:50
The Gardiner Museum is about to undergo a massive transformation, and the new space will have a greater focus on Indigenous art. Franchesca Hebert-Spence will oversee the narrative and content development of the museums new Indigenous gallery space. CBC's Talia Ricci got a tour.

TheGardiner Museum isabout to undergo a massive transformation,and the new space will have a greater focus on Indigenous art.

The downtown Toronto museum says itsnew, ground floor Indigenous gallerywill be guided by the principles of access, connectivity and Indigeneity.

Franchesca Hebert-Spence, the museum'sfirst curator of Indigenous ceramics, will oversee thedevelopment of the new spaceand lead the stewardship of Indigenous collections at the museum.

"I majored in ceramics and it'ssomething that I've been really passionate about," Hebert-Spence said. She says it was the community aspect that really drew her to the art.

The gallerywill feature work from local regions, includinghistorical and contemporary pieces.

"There's been an uptick in beadwork and craft based customary production within Indigenous art," she said. "I am excited to engage critically with artists using clay and topresenta snippet of that within the permanent galleries."

The Indigenous gallery space is being designed by architect Chris Cornelius of studio:indigenous, in consultation with the Gardiner's Indigenous Advisory Circle: Mary Anne Barkhouse, Kent Monkman, Andre Morrisseau, Duke Redbird, and Tekaronhihkhwa / Santee Smith.

"For a really long time we've had narratives superimposed on Indigenous cultural production by folks who aren'tIndigenous," Hebert-Spence said.

"Presenting Indigenous works withingalleries through an Indigenous lens is incredibly important, in terms of visual and cultural sovereignty."

Construction will startin July, and the museum will be closed for fourmonths. It will partly re-open in October, with the full renovation set to be complete in fall 2025.