Full metadata
Title
'My World is Surreal,' or 'The Northwest Coast' is Surreal
Description
“My world is surreal” says Yuxweluptun (b. 1957). The Coast Salish artist lives in Vancouver and therefore on un-ceded native land, where the ‘rights’ of Native people are, contradictorily, defined by the 1876 Indian Act. Yuxweluptun accounts for the surreal in his paintings as retaliation for a mode that drew on Indigenous sources to define itself. They are part of a capacious, populist discursive history that has long informed production and reception of Northwest Coast Native art. ‘The Colour of My Dreams: the Surrealist Revolution in Art’, at the Vancouver Art Gallery (2011) helped to establish its historical framework.
Date Created
2013
Contributors
- Townsend-Gault, Charlotte (Author)
Resource Type
Extent
12 Pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
Yes
Open Access
Yes
Series
Journal of Surrealism of the Americas, VOL 7, NO 1 (2013)
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.18660
Level of coding
minimal
Cataloging Standards
System Created
- 2013-10-08 04:04:09
System Modified
- 2021-06-18 02:51:00
- 3 years 5 months ago
Additional Formats