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LOT

1958 -
Canadian

Gaak (Porcupine)
embossed paper, ink, birch bark, capacitors, copper, brass, vintage glass trade beads, raffia, porcupine quill and wood
on verso signed, titled and dated 2020
16 1/8 x 8 3/4 in, 41 x 22.2 cm

Estimate: $0 - $0 CAD

Preview at: Heffel Montreal

PROVENANCE
Collection of the Artist

EXHIBITED
La Guilde, Montreal, A Journey from Coast to Coast, February 23 - May 7, 2023


Ampacity is an electrical term that applies to the measurement of current and the maximum load a conductor, like a wire, can carry. When the conductor is burdened with a load beyond its capacity, the system may malfunction or shutdown. Barry Ace uses these electrical terms and objects as metaphors to think through the mechanism of colonization and the physical as well as spiritual burdens placed on Indigenous communities post-contact. In the work Ampacity, Ace has created an assemblage of objects and components that appear to be disparate: a quill, wire, a circuit board and the figure of a thunderbird cut out of metal. The conductive copper wire feeds into the top of the circuit board; extending from the bottom edge Ace uses electrical components to simulate traditional Anishinaabe floral beadwork. Copper is a sacred element in Anishinaabe cosmology; the flora and fauna depicted in traditional beadwork represents plants with healing properties. The birch bark upon which the composition rests references wiigwaasabakoon, the birch bark scrolls used by the Anishinaabe for recording-keeping. As with Synthesis (2018), Ace considers the way culture is transmitted. As the interlocutor between the copper wire and floral motif, the circuit board, like the birchbark, has the capacity to relay instructions for cultural continuance, yet if the load travelling via the wire conductor is in excess it can “render a functioning circuit board inoperative but this does not mean it is beyond repair.” As with culture, there is the capacity to restore.

In Gaak (Porcupine) the minimalist composition includes an embossed porcupine purchased in Paris during Ace’s trip for Robert Houle’s Paris/Ojibwa at the Canadian Cultural Centre and Ace’s accompanying site specific performance, A Reparative Act. The metal piece framing the porcupine is an electrical measurement gauge that reacts to fluctuations in ambient temperature, a metaphor for cultural flux. Below, Ace has stitched a porcupine quill to signify a “sharp and poignant point” regarding the abrupt disruption caused by contact. Beyond the quill hangs a strand of trade beads, goods used in the service of colonial seduction. Each work’s composition is a visual haiku of objects, that when read together, are a critique of the impact of colonization - as Ace states, a “mnemonic device through which multilayers of meaning are expressed.”

We thank Leah Snyder, digital designer and writer, The L.Project, for contributing the following essays. Snyder writes about culture, technology and contemporary art, and is a contributor to the National Gallery of Canada’s Gallery magazine and other Canadian art and architecture publications.

All quotes attributed to the artist unless otherwise noted.

This work is accompanied by a letter of authenticity and provenance signed by the artist


Estimate: $0 - $0 CAD

All prices are in Canadian Dollars


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