FRESH FISS

Saturday, April 16, 2022, 5-7 pm at Open Space

We are very excited to announce a very special event for Whess Harman’s (@ndn_bebop) exhibition, “chew the bones, they’re soft.” Please join us on Saturday, April 16, 2022 from 5-7 pm at Open Space for “Fresh Fiss.” The evening will begin with a performance by the Lək̓ʷəŋən Traditional Dancers, followed by readings from jaye simpson (@jaye_simpson) and Justin Ducharme (@jayuhstin), ending with a solo performance by Black Belt Eagle Scout (@blackbelteaglescout). We will be serving bannock from Songhees Catering and light refreshments. With a limited capacity of 30 people, we are requiring registration through Eventbrite in order to attend, so get your tickets while you can!

Limited capacity - 30 people, Register for event tickets via Eventbrite

REGISTER HERE

Artist Bios

The Lək̓ʷəŋən Traditional Dancers are highly sought after to represent the Lək̓ʷəŋən people at significant events throughout the region. They have performed to welcome visiting royalty, the Lieutenant Governor and the Prime Minister, Mayor and Councils and many others. One of their favourite performances is to greet Indigenous people from around the world. There are about 25 in the group when they are all together, the youngest being Baby Jesse at 8 and Momma being the oldest going to be 79 this year, they are truly blessed to have her along with all the amazing kids.

  • jaye simpson

    jaye simpson is an Oji-Cree Saulteaux Indigiqueer from the Sapotaweyak Cree Nation. simpson is a writer, advocate and activist sharing their knowledge and lived experiences in hope of creating utopia. they are published in several magazines including Poetry Is Dead, This Magazine, PRISM international, SAD Magazine: Green, GUTS Magazine, SubTerrain, Grain and Room. They are in four anthologies: Hustling Verse (2019), Love After the End (2020), The Care we Dream Of (2021), and the forthcoming Queer Little Nightmares (2022). Their first poetry collection, it was never going to be okay (Nightwood Ed.) was shortlisted for the 2021 ReLit Award and a 2021 Dayne Ogilvie Prize Finalist while also winning the 2021 Indigenous Voices Award for Published Poetry in English. they are a displaced Indigenous person resisting, ruminating and residing on xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), səl̓ilwətaɁɬ (Tsleil-waututh), and sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish) First Nations territories, colonially known as Vancouver.

  • Justin Ducharme

    Justin Ducharme is a filmmaker, writer, dancer and curator from the Métis community of St. Ambroise on Treaty 1 Territory. He is the writer/director of four short films and is currently in development on his first feature film. Justin was the recipient of TIFF's Barry Avrich Fellowship and is an alumni of their 2021 Filmmaker Lab. Justin’s curatorial efforts have been seen at the Vancouver Queer Film Festival, SUM gallery, and grunt gallery’s community art screen. His writing has been featured in Canadian Art, Room Magazine and Prism International Magazine. He currently lives and works on Unceded Coast Salish Territory.

  • Katherine Paul

    Katherine Paul is Black Belt Eagle Scout. Released in September of 2018, Mother of My Children was the debut album from Black Belt Eagle Scout, the recording project of Katherine Paul. Heralded as a favorite new musician of 2018 by the likes of NPR Music, Stereogum, and Paste, the album was also named as a “Best Rock Album of 2018” by Pitchfork, and garnered further end-of-year praise from FADER, Under The Radar and more. Arriving just a year after that debut record, At the Party With My Brown Friends is a brand new full-length recording from Black Belt Eagle Scout. Where that first record was a snapshot of loss and landscape and of KP’s standing as a radical indigenous queer feminist, this new chapter finds its power in love, desire and friendship.

a shoal of ever sick fiss

This mini-exhibition within the exhibition chew the bones, they’re soft, invited contributors from the forthcoming zine and giveaway package to show some of their work. A shoal is formed by a group of multiple, complimentary fish species, who move together both to confuse predators, but also to allow one another to rest by riding in each other's slipstreams to conserve energy.

It featured artworks from bailey pitt, Cole Pauls, Kirsten Hatfield, Hue Nguyen, and Melissa Pipe. Whess Harman has worked with each of these artists in varying capacities through the years and considers their friendships and work to be entwined with how they’ve been shaped as an artist.

Accessibility information

Open Space is not wheelchair accessible and is accessed by a flight of 23 stairs with two landings. There are two gender-inclusive washrooms, one multi-stall and one single stall with a urinal. If you have any other questions or concerns about accessibility, please contact office [at] openspace.ca or 250-383-8833.