Saturday Session
One Saturday each month, CAG invites guest hosts to lead walkthroughs of our current exhibitions, offering their insights and response to the works on view. In November, we welcome Kay Slater and Laurie M. Landry to speak on the work of Christine Sun Kim.
Accessibility
An ASL interpreter will be present.
RSVP
No advance registration required.
Biographies
Kay Slater is a multidisciplinary artist, accessibility consultant and arts worker. Their artistic practice explores value as it relates to process and expectations. Kay’s work is rooted in anti-oppression practices, and they employ open source and community-engaged approaches to support ongoing knowledge transfer with makers and creators at all stages of their careers. Kay is dedicated to expanding art making opportunities where verbal and non-verbal communication is used and where no one is ever turned away for lack of skill or understanding. They subscribe to the philosophy of the New Sincerity which strives to “be more awesome”. Kay is queer and hard of hearing. They are a settler working as an uninvited guest on the stolen lands of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh peoples.
Laurie M. Landry is a Deaf Canadian contemporary artist influenced by painters Jenny Saville, Colin Davidson, Rembrandt and Frida Kahlo. She focuses on contemporary portraiture of marginalized subjects. In her figurative art, she is currently exploring the corporeality of heterogeneous bodies. Laurie has participated in art residencies across Canada and her art has been shown in art galleries across BC. She has been awarded Canada Council for the Arts grants to support her art practice. Laurie currently lives and works in Vancouver on the unceded territories of thexʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and Sel̓íl̓witulh (Tseil-Waututh) Nations.