Rebecca Belmore The Performance Art of Rebecca Belmore Facing the Monumental Rebecca Belmore: March 5, 1819 Rebecca Belmore: Rising to the Occasion Fountain The Named and the Unnamed Indian Princess and Cowgirls: Stereotypes from the Frontier
Rebecca Belmore - Wikipedia Rebecca Belmore RCA (born March 22, 1960) is a Canadian interdisciplinary Anishinaabekwe artist who is notable for politically conscious and socially aware performance and installation work [ 1 ] [ 2 ] She is Ojibwe and a member of Obishikokaang ( Lac Seul First Nation )
Rebecca Belmore - National Gallery of Canada Rebecca Belmore’s work in performance, installation, photography and video addresses the politics of representation Her images of provocation, subtle intervention and resistance are rooted in the tragic history of native cultures in North America
Rebecca Belmore | Biographies | National Arts Centre Rebecca Belmore is a member of Lac Seul First Nation (Anishinaabe) Her works are rooted in the political and social realities of Indigenous communities and make evocative connections between bodies, land and language
Rebecca Belmore Paintings, Bio, Ideas | TheArtStory Similar to James Luna, Coco Fusco and Guillermo Gómez-Peña in the United States, Canadian Rebecca Belmore has contributed to the international contemporary art world by developing a performance vocabulary for the representation of a (distinctly female) First Nations identity in art
Rebecca Belmore - The Canadian Encyclopedia Rebecca Belmore, visual artist (born 22 March 1960 in Upsala, Ontario) In 2004, Belmore was made a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts and received the prestigious VIVA Award
From the Collection: Rebecca Belmore - Art Gallery of . . . Today we’re exploring the work of Indigenous contemporary artist, Rebecca Belmore, from the AGP Permanent Collection Belmore is well known for speaking about identity through performative acts – integrating natural materials and repetitive movements to say something with her body