
Artist Talk
We invite you to join us for an artist reception with Nadya Kwandibens.
Saturday, May 3rd | 2 – 4pm
Artist Talk: 3pm
Exhibition: Bizaanigaabawi
He or she stands still
May 1- 31, 2025
April 15, 2025
“Bizaanigaabawi (He or She Stands Still)”
An Exhibition by Nadya Kwandibens
Dates: May 1- 31, 2025
We invite you to join us for this artist reception on:
Saturday, May 3rd – 2 to 4pm
Artist Talk: 3pm
For more information, contact [email protected].
Nadya Kwandibens is Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) from the Animakee Wa Zhing #37 First Nation in northwestern Ontario. She is an award-winning photographer, a Canon Ambassador, and the current Photo Laureate for the City of Toronto. Nadya’s artistic practice encompasses three key bodies of work: Concrete Indians, which explores contemporary urban Indigenous identity and decolonial resistance; Red Works Outtakes, which challenges the “stoic Indian” stereotype through uplifting portraiture; and emergence, another open-call series focused on acts of decolonization and Indigenous intelligence. Her latest project, The Red Chair Sessions, emphasizes the reclamation of Indigenous spaces and languages.
We, as Indigenous people, are often portrayed in history books as Nations once great; in museums as Nations frozen stoic; in the media as Nations forever troubled. These images can be despairing; however, my goal seeks to steer the positive course. If our history is a shadow, let this moment serve as light. We are musicians, lawyers, doctors, mothers and sons. We are activists, scholars, dreamers, fathers and daughters. Let us claim ourselves now and see that we are, and will always be great, thriving, balanced civilizations capable of carrying ourselves into that bright new day.
Pictured: Concrete Indians: Tee Lyn Duke (née Copenace) Toronto, Ontario March 2010, Photograph by Nadya Kwandibens
Art is Everywhere, Peterborough, Ontario, September 2024, Photograph by Nadya Kwandibens
The Riverdale Hub houses numerous gallery spaces, located on the first, second, and third floors of the community center building. The Riverdale Hub Gallery is dedicated to employing the transformative power of art to engage Toronto’s east-end community, connect with other communities across the city, and provide a platform for local, national, and global conversations.
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