Led in collaboration with the University of Victoria the Feminist Art Field School is an online course geared towards students, artists, curators and community members interested in gender, feminism and the porous boundaries between art, activism and academic practice.
Join Michelle Jacques and Chase Joynt for module 1 in the virtual field school as they start to frame this semester-long conversation and share some foundational investments, methods and research.
Learn more at: https://aggv.ca/feminist-art-field-sc…
The Art Gallery of Greater Victoria is located on the traditional territory of the lək̓ʷəŋən speaking peoples, today known as the Esquimalt and Songhees Nations. We extend our gratitude and appreciation for the opportunity to live and work on this territory.
Video editing by Marina DiMaio.Led in collaboration with the University of Victoria the Feminist Art Field School is an online course geared towards students, artists, curators and community members interested in gender, feminism and the porous boundaries between art, activism and academic practice. …
Key moments
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What Role Does Reading Play in Your Practice
What Role Does Reading Play in Your Practice
11:46
What Role Does Reading Play in Your Practice
11:46
Institutional Critique
Institutional Critique
17:03
Institutional Critique
17:03
What Does Institutional Critique Mean
What Does Institutional Critique Mean
17:11
What Does Institutional Critique Mean
17:11
Sally Mackay
Sally Mackay
18:38
Sally Mackay
18:38
Use CTRL+F to find key words if it is a longer transcript.
0:00
[Music] [Applause]
0:05
[Music] [Applause]
0:10
[Music] [Applause] well here we are
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here we are happy first lecture conversation of the feminist art field school
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it is a pleasure to be in your company likewise uh in service of our method which is
0:30
making explicit conversations between practitioners and makers and curators
0:35
and artists and activists i’m so looking forward to getting to
0:41
know you better and differently through this conversation because up until this point i think we would both say that we’ve
0:47
been in the bureaucratic side of field school preparation how do we pay for
0:52
things how do we invite people how do we involve our institutions and hoping that this conversation can serve
0:58
as a little bit more of a personal in-point to our work and our interests and our
1:04
obsessions perhaps i could throw to you the same question that we have
1:09
offered to others which is would you introduce yourself and tell us a little bit about what you do
1:16
uh sure um uh this is probably redundant but my name
1:23
is michelle jakes and i guess first and foremost i’m a curator
1:30
i am somebody who came to curating through art history so
1:36
sometimes i call myself an art historian too which
1:42
often raises eyebrows i’m not sure why art history has such a bad rap
1:48
i find it a fun fun space to flounder around in and
1:54
maybe that’s maybe that’s uh a key thing that i’m i’m a bit of a
1:59
dilatant when it comes to art history i don’t you know i’m probably really badly
2:05
trained uh and therefore it’s fun for me um
2:11
but after studying art history many many years ago um i started working at the
2:17
art gallery of ontario almost immediately and
2:23
it was a bit of a a long slow climb into curatorial
2:30
these days people do curatorial studies degrees and get a
2:36
lot of experience and end up in curating jobs um
2:42
[Music] on a much shorter timeline than than i did i have worked in fundraising and
2:51
human resources and the volunteer divisions of public
2:58
museums and have basically fulfilled every role that
3:04
one can fulfill in a curatorial department from secretary as i was called
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back in the day at the ago to now
3:17
chief curator and head of collections exhibitions and collections at raymie mater
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so um i am a quite devoted
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public museum curator i should say i’ve certainly dabbled in um
3:37
a lot of artist-run centers working at the center for art tapes and
3:42
halifax for a couple of years but also doing a lot of
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board and committee work at other artist run centers i’m still on the board of
3:56
v-tape for instance um so
4:02
i think that uh if i was going to describe what i do in museums
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i would say that i try to understand their structure
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um and figure out how to um
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sort of disrupt scenes like i don’t know if i can claim that word
4:29
given that given some of the people that we are speaking to in the feminist art field school series i’m not sure if i’m
4:36
a disrupter i’m like a a subtle
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nag that tries to make the institution do things that it
4:48
doesn’t really want to do i don’t know why that metaphor just came
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to me but it is seeming very apt that’s what i do
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um which has been really fun for me because i think that there’s
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a lot of potential in museums and
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as long as uh you know we can move away from this tendency to sort of say well that’s not
5:19
how things are done here museums can do great things and
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be wonderful spaces for all kinds of people
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i love this and the idea that you have self-identified as a
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subtle nag i think belongs on a t-shirt somewhere maybe
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that is you know part of our feminist art field school merch
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uh i would love a merch arm of this enterprise
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and of course one of the things that i love so much is that we are connected through a network of artists and we actually
6:05
only came to know each other upon my arrival at the university of victoria two years ago
6:12
and one of the things that i did immediately upon finding an apartment was find the art
6:19
institutions and it strikes me that you know there’s a way in which i tend to lead with my
6:27
artist filmmaker identity much more so than i lead with my professor identity
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and if you identify as a as a subtle nag i identify as
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someone who is
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only ever strategically aligning with institutions and trying to think of ways
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to move artistic and activist practice in and out of academia and so for me the
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field school is a really exciting opportunity to think across institutions and you know just as you say i think
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that there’s so much good that can come of a museum if you ask a different set of questions i feel the same way about
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academia and i completely recognize the structures and limitations and also
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what might be possible when we shift the terms of what a classroom space could feel like or what collective
7:23
collaborative learning can do and so one of the things that i feel so excited about doing together throughout these
7:29
next 12 weeks is to be thinking out loud with artists who are actively engaged
7:35
with pushing the boundaries of institutions broadly defined and thinking about art and aesthetic
7:42
practice more broadly as one of the ways in which to promote produce
7:49
problematize social change well it’s it’s so interesting to hear
7:56
your response to my introduction of myself and understand how how much sense
8:02
this collaboration makes because i do i do think it’s it’s quite funny um
8:10
to think about how we came together around this project um
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you got your appointment to uvic like a year before you actually started
8:22
so there was a year of our mutual acquaintances saying chase is moving to
8:27
victoria you have to connect with chase and um
8:32
when we finally connected it was as though we almost went directly into
8:38
planning mode and you are
8:44
easier to um you know know in a way because of your
8:50
work than perhaps i am so um
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i know about what you have made i know you’re your artist self
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but um i’m just realizing i have i don’t even know what you what you have
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been teaching before teaching the feminist art field school ah what an
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unusual question that i was not prepared for uh so before arriving to the university
9:20
of victoria i was on a post-doctoral fellowship at the university of chicago and part of that fellowship allowed me
9:26
to teach these wild practice-based experimental classes where students put
9:31
on large-scale installation style exhibitions when i was in graduate school i taught many
9:38
courses in the cinema and media studies department where i got my degree and then upon my arrival here i teach the
9:44
core gender power and difference class i teach a social media and pop culture class some queer film some queer and
9:52
trans cultural production and in some ways i could make an argument for the relationship between all of those
9:57
courses of course but i am motivated to think across the lines of cinema and
10:02
media studies and gender and sexuality studies and you know depending on how you organize those disciplines you get
10:08
very different outcomes and so i’m very enduringly curious about the role media
10:15
plays in our lives and the ways in which media can
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control rights discourses and the ways in which media produces new identities
10:26
and new community formations and i came to thinking about feminism and
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feminist art critically in graduate school and was
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able to learn from many people who identify as scholar practitioners so artists who have active
10:45
practices but who are also teaching and for me that was a real light bulb opportunity which was to say we don’t
10:52
have to be only thinking about work and reading about work but rather we can be making work that does a kind of
10:59
theoretical lifting that people only tend to assume is happening on the page
11:04
and i think that kind of practice-based relationship to theory into reading is
11:10
really exciting and so i am thrilled to be learning from other
11:16
artists with you in this field school about tips and tools and strategies for how to
11:23
make that work and so one of the things that i really enjoyed in our preparation and planning is that you know we’re
11:28
co-curating the readings and offerings with the artists alongside their work which is to
11:36
say we get to read with them the work that inspires the things that
11:41
they’re thinking about and the things that they’re making and i’m wondering from a curatorial standpoint what role
11:47
does reading play in your practice
11:54
and there’s a question that i didn’t expect um and
12:00
well to tie a bunch of things together um thinking back to my graduate school
12:07
experience uh it was in the early 1990s york was sort of in the throes of
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um a struggle between kind of um
12:21
the old school and the professors who were trying to introduce theoretical discourses
12:28
to their teaching and one of the things that happened out of
12:36
that struggle was that it seemed that everybody every professor
12:41
no matter how resistant they were to the idea um tacked two weeks of
12:47
feminism onto the end of every syllabus
12:54
and the amazing thing was that
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feminism was so much more practical the tact on feminism was so much more
13:07
practical and understandable and relatable than the
13:12
the sort of true theory courses that we were taking
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um because we wanted to be uh cutting edge and
13:22
on the forefront so i can remember sitting in a class with a
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a derrida specialist and um one of the artists in the class i was
13:35
studying art history but this course was taken by um
13:41
people doing their mfa’s as well one of the artists just like threw down
13:47
her books and said but what does this have to do with real life and um
13:53
you know the interesting thing is that that professor could not come up with any
13:59
proper articulation of why we had to study daradat in the way that we were
14:06
studying darida like there was no attempt to make it relatable
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so i think that uh reading does play a really important role in
14:22
curatorial work um but it has been such a relief to
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sort of move into a space and i’m not saying that all curators work in this way but many do
14:35
um you know if if you work in a way where you’re um
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trying to relate to communities whether it’s the communities of artists that you work with or the communities that can
14:49
compose the audiences that come to the museum you have to understand uh
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basically um how to translate all different kinds of
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ideas amongst people with different world views
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and um so there’s a lot of reading around um
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uh those world views but also
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reading that is about musiology i suppose and um uh
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sort of understanding learning how to how to make those translations
15:32
in the museum space
15:38
i love your derrida anecdote because one of the things that you said
15:44
was in the way that we were studying so there’s a way in which one could read
15:51
and there could be explosive and incredible connections to people’s archival pursuits theoretical thinking
15:58
etc but the way in which one approaches those texts is so key to their uptake
16:04
and their translation and you know i think that there’s something very interesting to me about the fact
16:10
that our original brainstorming about this field school was going to be an
16:15
in-person incubator in a very condensed period of time and i recognized the ways
16:21
that that would have produced a different experience to what we are now collaboratively curating and organizing
16:28
together which extends and i feel so excited because i think one of the things that’s come out of our
16:35
need to pivot online and our need to think safely
16:40
together considering the geographic location of many of our
16:46
guests is the fact that we get to have so many more conversations across a more extended time
16:53
and you know i wonder one of the things that we have spent time talking about i think off the page
17:00
and and out of side of recorded zooms is the role of institutional critique
17:06
as a kind of through line in our thinking and i’d be curious
17:12
what does institutional critique mean to you in your everyday
17:18
um it has it has
17:24
meant many things over the many years that i’ve been working in institutions
17:29
working and going to school in institutions you know
17:34
as a university student i was
17:41
[Music] often a person sitting in the corner like being annoyed because
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what was being taught to me was being so poorly taught
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i don’t know if that was early institutional critique it was it was a you know a growing awareness that
18:04
things could be better and
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uh when i started when i first started curating i was a curatorial assistant at
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the art gallery of ontario that was my first curating job so for the most part i
18:23
was in a support role on other people’s projects and the first time
18:30
i was given the chance to curate something the artist that i
18:36
worked with uh is named sally mackay and she teaches at mcmaster
18:43
university now and sally
18:48
made absolutely brilliant artists books and multiples
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that you could buy at art metropol for as little as a dollar um
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and we transformed this little gallery
19:05
at the ago into a artist’s multiple shop
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um and i’m not even sure if we really did it
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kind of consciously sally was an artist whose work i liked
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we liked each other we did this project together but um
19:31
we made the museum do things that it wasn’t used to doing
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you know selling work in a gallery space
19:42
showing work that was made on a photocopier
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like when some of sally’s flyers or little brochures ran out
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i would make them on the photocopier upstairs
20:01
so um you know i think i think that was um
20:08
certainly an early sort of intuitive reaction to
20:15
where i was working and what i was seeing in the museum and knowing that i wanted things to
20:20
to shift a little and and as i have
20:26
grown and aged and sort of learned more about how the museum is
20:32
complicit in much larger inequities and oppressions
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um the kinds of critiques that i’m interested in and this is not to say
20:45
that sally mackay is not a voice of profound critique of institutions
20:51
because she is but um i think the the the
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kinds of critique that i have um aimed to um
21:03
engage with and infuse in the museum um are are really in line with
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you know inequities that i feel personally and within the communities that i i belong to so
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hence uh um you know a greater alignment with um
21:24
feminist issues with anti-racist movements with
21:31
you know all all kinds of uh conversations that we have to have to
21:36
to really welcome everybody into the museum if that’s what we say we’re doing
21:46
and um it’s interesting to me that you
21:51
started out by um talking about you know maybe your your
21:58
clearer alignment with your role as an artist and um
22:04
the the kind of more tenuous relationship to academia
22:10
um because in our conversations um you know thinking about my
22:17
my early recognition of bad teaching i have come to realize
22:22
how deeply you think about how people learn
22:28
in the space of a university classroom and and how you
22:35
you can structure things differently to create um a more
22:40
active and full of potential learning experience for people
22:46
i wonder if you could talk about how you think about teaching a little bit
22:52
sure i think that my
22:58
investment in teaching is really a product of learning from
23:04
those who have taught me which is to say i think that the only reason i’ve remained
23:10
in academia is because i have had the opportunity to work with those who are
23:16
really deeply invested in a choice and b
23:23
cross-disciplinary pursuits and i think if i could isolate those two as anchoring methods in my teaching i
23:30
could probably speak for more than a minute which is to say you know choice is such a key and fundamental part of
23:38
learning i think that it is a missed opportunity to over direct students
23:44
collaborators interlocutors to predetermine what an assignment outcome
23:49
should be i think that we have all been products of school systems that have been
23:56
you know structured as racist and homophobic and transphobic environments
24:01
that are committed to producing certain kinds of knowledge and expertise and
24:08
thinking with those who are trying to decolonize institutions and modes of learning i think that opening toward
24:15
choice and change as necessary parts of the learning experience it has to be a foundational commitment and you
24:23
know so often people will say ah but you have to evaluate but you have to grade you have to do all these things i don’t love grading i don’t love evaluating
24:30
and i also think there can be choice there so what does it mean to create opportunities for students to
24:36
evaluate themselves and i think that what’s really exciting about a self-evaluative process is the chance to
24:43
reckon with your own efforts and to say yeah sometimes it’s just a b like it’s
24:50
just not always gonna be an a plus effort and i feel the same way as a teacher in no way do i imagine a world
24:56
where i am an a plus lecturer every day of the week it doesn’t take into account my life it doesn’t take into account the
25:03
ebbs and flows of one’s process of learning and so i think
25:08
choice for me is also deeply related to a kind of cross-disciplinary investment
25:14
which is to say you know disciplines are like identity categories modes of
25:21
categorization and any mode of categorization is a mode of boundary making and exclusion and so when we stay
25:28
too neatly packaged within a lane or within a discipline or an identity we’re making choices to close off other modes
25:36
of thinking and other modes of inquiry and other modes of disruption which is to say the way in which you approach
25:42
those questions is not the same depending on who you are and where you’re coming from and so trying to foreground and make visible all of those
25:48
choices i think opens up new pathways but i very much identify as a new teacher and someone who’s still
25:54
continuing to learn and trying to pivot within an institutional context that i’m still learning
26:00
and i think that moving outside of the classroom space moving on and off of screens moving into cultural production
26:08
and welcoming different forms of engagement are some of the strategies that feel most exciting to me at this
26:13
stage um i feel like
26:21
i should make reference to i’m sitting in my office at rainey modern
26:26
in saskatoon but um i’d like to talk a little bit about the art gallery of greater victoria in response to
26:35
to what you’ve you’ve just said because i i found it to be
26:41
quite a remarkable space for a public museum and i can remember when
26:48
i um i did my interview the director saying to me you know this is this is a
26:55
museum where we welcome failure and then he like second guessed himself
27:01
and he and he said not that we want to fail but it’s okay if you do
27:07
um and uh
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i don’t think that the art gallery of greater victoria fails at a lot of things but
27:19
there is um a remarkable willingness to enter into
27:25
projects that actually make no sense within the context of an art museum
27:32
um you know they will do things because they’re good for artists or they’re good
27:38
for communities or they allow them to explore interesting
27:44
questions and somehow the institution has
27:49
um sort of separated it itself from this sort of hamster wheel that museums
27:56
can get on as just producers of cultural product
28:01
um so i’m really interested to see how this
28:08
program the feminist art field school translates into the space of
28:13
the art gallery of greater victoria’s website and you know what
28:20
what happens when the space
28:25
and procedures of museum education intersect with
28:31
university education particularly when we’re working with somebody who’s
28:36
thinking through the potentials and challenges of of education in the way that you are
28:44
i love that and it feels to me related to a conversation that we had with sean lee
28:51
in service of the field school when he said that tangled arts has a
28:57
clause in their contract called a care clause and it makes me wonder what something
29:03
like that in the context of a field school could be you know how can we take care of each
29:10
other differently what does a relationship across institutions and across contexts allow
29:17
us to imagine and you know perhaps it’s not a care clause we won’t borrow it so directly
29:23
but maybe there’s something that we can think about together over the next 12 weeks and and and return
29:30
to to the possibility that there’s something else that’s going to happen
29:36
here that we can not yet predict
29:41
amazing and i that makes me think all the way back to my first year of undergrad when
29:47
i was a biochemistry major with uh
29:53
sites set on going to medical school and i ended up in
29:59
you know this this class of people who were so competitive somebody um
30:06
somebody sabotaged my chemistry experiment
30:12
in the second semester of first year and i thought this is not for me at all
30:20
and uh not not that there was anything as explicit
30:25
as a care clause and first i transferred into psychology and
30:30
then art history but um it was subtly there that people
30:36
interacted in a very different way than they they did in those pre-med spaces
30:44
i love it and i think you know there is something to be said for
30:52
imagining a world together and a container of the field school and looking back on it and realizing that
31:00
something different occurred there and i think part of that is because we are only two bodies in what
31:08
will be a room of 50 plus who can co-create the contours of the
31:16
next 12 weeks fantastic
31:21
thanks for joining me on the journey it is my absolute pleasure to be here
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