ROM Presents Being Japanese Canadian: reflections on a broken world

Royal Ontario Museum Michael Lee-Chin Crystal. Bloor Street Entrance.

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Press Release

ROM-original installation explores artistic responses to the 1940s internment era

TORONTO, November 27, 2018 — The Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) is pleased to present the contemporary art installation Being Japanese Canadian: reflections on a broken world. Featuring works by eight Japanese Canadian artists from across the country, Being Japanese Canadian explores multi-generational responses to the exile, dispossession, and internment of Canadian citizens of Japanese descent during the 1940s. Designed as a series of artworks interspersed throughout the ROM’s Sigmund Samuel Gallery of Canada, the installation opens Saturday, February 2, 2019.

“Being Japanese Canadian reflects on a period of Canadian history that is explored through the deeply personal narratives of eight contemporary artists grappling with the effects of the internment era,” says Josh Basseches, ROM Director and CEO. “This compelling artistic examination of our shared national history furthers the discussion on multiculturalism and belonging in today’s society.”

This installation is a collaboration between curators from the ROM and the Japanese Canadian community: Dr. Heather Read, Rebanks Postdoctoral Fellow in Canadian Decorative Arts & Material Culture at the ROM, and Dr. Arlene Gehmacher, the ROM’s Curator of Canadian Paintings, Prints & Drawings, worked with Bryce Kanbara, artist and Gallery Curator at the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre (JCCC) in Toronto, and Dr. Katherine Yamashita, arts educator and Art Committee member at the JCCC.

The works in Being Japanese Canadian: reflections on a broken world tell powerful, personal stories varied in approach, technique, and emotional tone:

  • Lillian Michiko Blakey (Newmarket, Ont.) expresses the pain and injustices her family endured with mixed media works Taking The Nancy, British Columbia 1942 and Canadian Born, Alberta 1943, and the painting Reiko, Alberta 1945.
  • Ceramic artist David L. Hayashida (Kings Point, N.L.), confronts racism and its reverberations throughout generations in Low tea in '43 (BRITISH Columbia) still boils.
  • Emma Nishimura (Toronto, Ont.) investigates memory, loss, and meaning in her etchings and photo-based print sculptures entitled An Archive of Rememory, Collected Stories, and Constructed Narratives.
  • Steven Nunoda’s (Calgary, Alta.) Ghostown and Ladder to the Moon is a striking memorial to internment sites in British Columbia that pays homage to the struggles and aspirations of Japanese Canadians.
  • Laura Shintani’s (Toronto) project, Emissaries of Mission ‘42, encourages curiosity and engagement with the past, to ensure the history of the 1940s is known and understood by younger generations.
  • In Interior Revisited, painter Norman Takeuchi (Ottawa, Ont.) reflects on the conflicting duality of the reality of life in internment camps and a sense of “Japanese-ness” imposed on him by others.
  • Marjene Matsunaga Turnbull (Onoway, Alta.) explores the anger and hurt of racism, the history of Japanese Canadians and her particular family’s story with her ceramic sculptures Jerry, Army Cadet and Continuum: A Cake History.
  • Yvonne Wakabayashi (Burnaby, B.C.) honours the strength and resilience of her parents in coping with exile, internment and dispossession with her textile piece Tribute.

Being Japanese Canadian also includes a selection of hand-crafted objects and artwork created during the period, and copies of the official acknowledgment that was a part of the 1988 Redress agreement between Japanese Canadians and the Canadian government. These historical references provide context for the contemporary artworks.

Research for the installation was conducted with support from the Landscapes of Injustice Research Collective and the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre in Toronto.

Being Japanese Canadian: reflections on a broken world will be included with ROM general admission and will be on display until Monday, August 5, 2019. The ROM will present complementary programming throughout the installation’s engagement. ROM Members receive free admission and exclusive opportunities to experience exhibitions and programs. For details, visit www.rom.on.ca.

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ROM MEDIA CONTACT
Josslyn Johnstone, ROM Communications
jjohnstone@rom.on.ca | 416.586.5784

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INFORMATIVE REFERENCES
For more information about the ongoing cultural life of Japanese Canadians in Canada, see the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre (Toronto, Ontario) and the Nikkei National Museum & Cultural Centre (Burnaby, B.C.).
For more information about the history of Japanese Canadians in Canada, see the National Association of Japanese Canadians and the video series Nikkei Stories.
For more information about Japanese Canadian artists, see the new Japanese Canadian Artists Directory, a partnership created by the National Association of Japanese Canadians, the Powell Street Festival Society, and the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre.
For more information about the Landscapes of Injustice Research Project, see Landscapes of Injustice.

ABOUT THE ROM
Founded in 1914, the Royal Ontario Museum showcases art, culture and nature from around the world and across the ages. Among the top 10 cultural institutions in North America, Canada’s largest and most comprehensive museum is home to a world-class collection of 13 million art objects and natural history specimens, featured in 40 gallery and exhibition spaces. As the country’s preeminent field research institute and an international leader in new and original findings, the ROM plays a vital role in advancing our understanding of the artistic, cultural and natural world. Combining its original heritage architecture with the contemporary Daniel Libeskind-designed Michael Lee-Chin Crystal, the ROM serves as a national landmark, and a dynamic cultural destination in the heart of Toronto for all to enjoy.

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