|
Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun, Government DIA Man Official comes to
check on Indians at Reservation. 1999, acrylic on canvas. Courtesy
Buschlen-Mowatt Gallery, Vancouver, BC

Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun is a multi-media artist, a performance
artist, and a sculptor. He has experimented with virtual-reality based
artwork and he traveled to England to perform An Indian Act: Shooting
the Indian Act.
He may be best known, however, for his paintings that incorporate
elements traditionally associated with Northwest Coast art: 'ovoids',
'u-shapes' and other conventions and motifs. These elements are
reconfigured and re-presented as parts of larger tableaus that draw
upon traditions of twentieth century European painting, resulting in
bright, yet stark, hybridised landscapes.
Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun's painted world becomes the site for
asserting the artist's First Nations heritage and for critiquing the
abuse of land, revealing environmental problems that have stemmed from
land appropriation and the pursuit of values that run contrary to those
traditionally held by First Nation's peoples.
Yuxweluptun's work is specific to BC but resonates widely beyond our
provincial borders. His focus on land and environmental issues,
particularly in light of recent developments regarding BC land claims,
and the ongoing debate around logging and other resource extraction
practices, make his work timely and relevant to us all.
Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun is a contemporary artist of Coast Salish
ancestry now living in Vancouver. He has exhibited internationally.
Work for this exhibition has been borrowed from the Vancouver Art
Gallery, the National Gallery of Canada and the Buschlen-Mowatt
Gallery, Vancouver, BC. Project support was received from the Canada
Council for the Arts and the Spirit of BC Arts Fund. The Two Rivers
Gallery is grateful for the support of these organizations.
Lawrence Paul Yuxwelutun
A Bad Colonial Day
May 13 to July 10 2005 |