By pmnationtalk on October 10, 2025
By pmnationtalk on October 10, 2025
By pmnationtalk on October 10, 2025
By ahnationtalk on October 10, 2025
By ahnationtalk on October 10, 2025
You can use your smart phone to browse stories in the comfort of your hand. Simply browse this site on your smart phone.
Using an RSS Reader you can access most recent stories and other feeds posted on this network.
SNetwork Recent Stories
![]() | ![]() |
by ahnationtalk on October 9, 202543 Views
Oct 09, 2025
History is Painted by the Victors looks back at celebrated Cree artist’s career
It’s 10 a.m. at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. Press and curators fill the room as Kent Monkman prepares to discuss his first major Canadian retrospective. The land acknowledgment — delivered in French, recognizing the territories of the Haudenosaunee, Anishinaabe, Wendat and Abenaki peoples — sets the tone. Then Monkman and co-curator Léuli Eshrāghi begin unpacking History is Painted by the Victors, an exhibition co-curated with John Lukavic of Denver Art Museum, where the show premiered earlier this year.
The retrospective features 42 works centred on Miss Chief Eagle Testickle, Monkman’s two-spirit drag persona. In meticulously painted recreations of 19th-century Western and European masterpieces, Miss Chief appears in stilettos and flowing fabrics, transforming from the marginalized background figures of colonial art into commanding protagonists.
Read More: https://www.cbc.ca/arts/kent-monkman-history-is-pained-by-the-victors-9.6932305
Clients: | No Clients |
---|
Categories: | Arts & Entertainment, Mainstream Aboriginal Related News |
---|
This article comes from NationTalk:
https://nationtalk.ca
The permalink for this story is:
https://nationtalk.ca/story/career-retrospective-shows-why-kent-monkman-will-always-matter-cbc
Comments are closed.