Weight We Carry | Kristy Janvier
Reflecting on the vulnerability and temporal nature of our bodies and consciousness through abstract qualities of medical imaging, the exhibition explores the psychological impact of the familiar appearing foreign.
Reflecting on the vulnerability and temporal nature of our bodies and consciousness through abstract qualities of medical imaging, the exhibition explores the psychological impact of the familiar appearing foreign.
Using motion capture to document the evanescent beauty of a dancer’s movement through time. The image lingers, slowly fading away conveying the body’s momentum and elegance like the Northern Lights, dynamic displays of multicoloured luminosity.
Reflecting on the vulnerability and temporal nature of our bodies and consciousness through abstract qualities of medical imaging, the exhibition explores the psychological impact of the familiar appearing foreign.
Using motion capture to document the evanescent beauty of a dancer’s movement through time. The image lingers, slowly fading away conveying the body’s momentum and elegance like the Northern Lights, dynamic displays of multicoloured luminosity.
Contemplates healing and explores how we carry so much while gracefully dancing through the transition to motherhood – balancing it all in our day-to-day existence.
Utilizing beading, basket weaving, dreamcatcher technique, hide, and sinew to understand the intergenerational effects of the Residential Schools.
Approaches storytelling as a part of our everyday lives and explores the different ways artists, whether from ancestors or through myths, experience and create stories, either re-telling history or recounting new stories from their own experience.
Contemplates healing and explores how we carry so much while gracefully dancing through the transition to motherhood – balancing it all in our day-to-day existence.
Approaches storytelling as a part of our everyday lives and explores the different ways artists, whether from ancestors or through myths, experience and create stories, either re-telling history or recounting new stories from their own experience.