Daphne Cockwell Gallery dedicated to
First Peoples Art & Culture
Location
Admission
Collection Update
The First Peoples Gallery opened in 2005 with input from Indigenous advisors. Since then, additional cultural specialists worked with the museum to update sections of the gallery. We are grateful to those who forged paths for more accurate representation of First Peoples.
Over the years, Indigenous people have advocated for a shift from advisement to greater authority over how we are represented in museums.
In a new process at ROM, Indigenous museum professionals will lead critical changes to this gallery. The process will be experimental. We will engage Indigenous advisors, artists, and knowledge holders and work in partnership with ROM curatorial, exhibitions, and learning staff.
Together, we will create a gallery that shares Indigenous lifeways, cultural expressions, and worldviews from our perspectives. During your next visit to the gallery, keep an eye out for ongoing changes.
The participation of knowledge holders and Indigenous leaders, scholars, artists, and members of our communities is critical to the success of this project. Visit rom.on.ca/FPGcontact to share your thoughts.
— Independent consultants Tim Johnson (Mohawk) and Adrienne Lalli Hills (Wyandotte Nation)
About the Gallery
Located on the main floor of the Hilary and Galen Weston Wing, the Daphne Cockwell Gallery dedicated to First Peoples art & culture is one of ROM’s premiere cultural spaces, featuring more than one thousand works of art and cultural heritage.
The continuing First Peoples legacy comes alive in this multi-layered gallery that discusses the complex relationship between traditions and present life, the work of collectors who sought to document the unique experiences of Indigenous cultures, the development of museums where First Peoples’ material culture could be preserved, and through contemporary art, provide a sense of what it means to be an Indigenous person in the contemporary world.
Explore a rich cultural legacy embodied in objects devoted to travel, subsistence, family life, the spiritual world, and artistic expressions. Space devoted to rotating exhibitions brings First Peoples contemporary works into focus and multimedia spaces allow visitors to experience Indigenous languages, music and performance. Included is a circular theatre devoted to the screening of films and live performances by First Peoples.
As part of ROM’s broader effort to foster a greater appreciation of the Indigenous ancestral objects in the Museum's collections, and to support the recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission report, admission to the Daphne Cockwell Gallery dedicated to First Peoples art & culture is free of charge to the public.
What?
More than 1,000 objects provide a cultural context and examine the economic and social forces that have influenced Indigenous culture and art.
Where?
Canada, west to the Pacific Ocean, north to the Arctic, east to the Atlantic, with some objects from cultures in Alaska and south of the Canada-United States border.
When?
From Pre-European times to the present day.
Sovereign Allies/Living Cultures
Stories of the War of 1812 and its aftermath from a First Nations perspective
Sovereign Allies/Living Cultures explores the participation of First Nations warriors in the War of 1812 and, in the War’s aftermath, the fate of their communities and cultures.
The Sovereign Allies section focuses on the First Nations who allied themselves with the British Crown in their efforts to prevent American expansion into their territories. The British, for their part, needed and valued the warriors’ forest warfare skills.
The Living Cultures section explores the ways in which First Nations cultures have remained vital despite centuries of contact with European cultures.
Curated in collaboration with First Nations advisors, the exhibition features nearly 100 objects and original art works exclusively drawn from the ROM’s collections. It is complemented by videos which cover topics ranging from conservation of a British Red Ensign to First Nations elders and historians reflecting on the War of 1812 and the importance of traditional beliefs and cultural practices today.
Gallery Highlights
Jane Ash Poitras
Four paintings explore colonialism and traditional knowledge of the therapeutic properties and spiritual significance of plants.
Four paintings acquired by the ROM explore colonialism and traditional knowledge of the therapeutic properties and spiritual significance of plants, wisdom now lost but which we hope to reclaim. These works incorporate knowledge that is taught and knowledge that is revealed, in combination with a powerful artistic vision.
I think that the role of an artist today is to become free, to transcend. Then they can transform, enlighten, and become empowered.