Jeremy Dutcher on art, truth & memory

Don’t miss this amazing chance to hear a free public discussion with award-winning Indigenous & two-spirit singer/musicologist Jeremy Dutcher (Tobique First Nation) from noon – 1:20pm Friday, Sept 9 in the Chief Dan George Theatre, Phoenix Building.

Joining the Polaris Prize and Juno Award-winning Dutcher for the discussion “Art, Truth and Memory” will be Ry Moran (UVic Libraries) Lindsay Delaronde (Audain Professor, UVic Visual Arts) and both Chaa’winisaks & Carmen Rodriguez de France (UVic Indigenous Education). Together, they will explore how the arts, archives and language can further the goals of Truth & Reconciliation.

Tickets are also still available for his performance at The Farquhar at UVic 7pm Friday, Sept 9.

A classically trained operatic tenor and composer who takes every opportunity to blend their Wolastoq First Nation roots into the music he creates, Dutcher blends their distinct musical aesthetics that shape-shift between classical, traditional, and pop to form something entirely new. Their debut release, Wolastoqiyik Lintuwakonawa, involved the rearrangement of early 1900s wax cylinder field recordings from his community.

“Many of the songs were lost because our musical tradition was suppressed by the Canadian government,” says Dutcher. “I’m doing this work as there’s only about a hundred Wolastoqey speakers left. It’s crucial that we’re using our language because, if you lose the language, you’re losing an entire distinct way of experiencing the world.”

We will need fine arts graduates in a post-COVID-19 world

As Prime Minister Justin Trudeau noted during his daily pandemic briefing on April 17, “Since the beginning of the current crisis, artists have been bringing comfort, laughs and happiness into our lives.” He’s right: the arts are important, particularly during a pandemic. In fact, COVID-19 has proven the arts are a social necessity. Creativity is always an assertion of hope​.

But how and where are artists trained? In addition to exposure to the arts in elementary and secondary schools, the fine arts degree programs offered by many postsecondary institutions across Canada are crucial to the development of the next generation of artistic leaders.

Art History & Visual Studies student Ashley Riddett curated a community COVID exhibit both online & at Oak Bay’s Gage Gallery in June

Incubators for future creative leaders

A fine arts education—be it in music, theatre, dance, creative writing, visual arts or art history and visual studies—is not always an easy sell. The social utility and financial feasibility of the arts are often underrated. This is an erroneous view at best, given the more than 700,000 jobs and nearly $60-billion direct economic impact the cultural industries have in Canada.

As they write novels, sculpt, create digital art or compose music, our students are also learning transferrable skills that are essential for countering situations defined by uncertainty. Innovation and adaptability are an essential component of any fine arts education. The arts community was one of the first to pivot online after the sweeping cancellations of performances, concerts, readings, exhibits and arts-related events and conferences.

Here in the Faculty of Fine Arts at the University of Victoria, we teach our students to think critically and creatively, to problem-solve and adjust to quickly changing circumstances—often with an audience watching. When you are performing in a play and the sound system suddenly cuts out or you forget your next line, you have to think on your feet. You have to perform under pressure. The show must, of course, go on.

With the theatres closed due to COVID, alumni group Theatre SKAM project took live theatre to the streets with a mix of students & alumni (Photo: Samantha Duerksen)

Learning how to swiftly adjust

The abrupt end of the term meant most students could not complete their creative projects as originally planned. I was delighted—though not surprised—to see how our graduating students responded to the pandemic by recording their recitals or shifting exhibitions online. Some assisted in repurposing equipment in our buildings, using sewing machines to make face masks and 3D printers to contribute to UVic’s face shield initiative.

Organizations and corporations are built on a combination of individual achievement and teamwork. Studying the piano or any other instrument requires dedication and self-discipline; playing in an orchestra, jazz ensemble or singing in a choir develops attentiveness to others around you, while providing the kind of satisfaction that only comes from collective accomplishments. To write a poem is to distill emotion and ideas; it’s an art form where precision is demanded and the power of words heeded—excellent training for careers requiring meticulous and thoughtfully written communication.

With his graduation recital cancelled, Masters of Music candidate Jorge Eduardo Flores Carrizales used the School of Music’s facilities to record his performance for online viewing

Creative entrepreneurs

Will there be jobs for fine arts students when they graduate? Maybe. This is the same answer I offered before the pandemic. Some of our graduates will enter the arts sector while others will pursue other options. All, however, will be well-positioned thanks to their education in the fine arts, because we train our students to be creative entrepreneurs, to be aware that they need to generate their own opportunities. We teach the importance of thinking creatively for the moment we are in … and the moments yet to come.

I often muse that that the Faculty of Fine Arts should really be called the Faculty of Social Engagement. As we move forward, artists will continue to respond to social calamity as they have for millennia: their performances, paintings, movies, stories and curatorial activities will invite us to consider the significance of the pandemic, both personally and communally. Ideas are already percolating in the imaginations of many Fine Arts students at my university.

The community-engaged and Indigenous-related research and creative activities that many students in fine arts are currently pursuing promises to build intercultural alliances and to help decolonize academic institutions through the arts. They will also foreground the impact of the pandemic across diverse populations while using the arts to dismantle systemic racism.

When the outbreak abruptly cancelled Victoria’s UNO Festival, our Indigenous Resurgence Coordinator Lindsay Delaronde adapted her live performance for a livestream audience instead

Students are our future

Fine arts graduates will not only teach us new ways to create art online, but their design capabilities and inventiveness will help us explore the potential of our increased social reliance on interactive technologies. Will online streaming of performances, concerts and gallery exhibits become the new normal? It’s too early to say, but the COVID-19 generation of artists will be well prepared to do so.

As we wait to see what September brings for a postsecondary fine arts education (will we be leading online orchestras or creating new Zoom plays?), we will also have to wait for today’s students to show us what artistic ingenuity truly looks like in a post-COVID-19 world.

Acting Dean Allana Lindgren

I am confident that fine arts schools across the country will remain vital incubators for our future creative leaders within the arts community and beyond.

—Allana Lindgren

Allana Lindgren is the acting dean of the Faculty of Fine Arts at the University of Victoria. This opinion piece originally ran in University Affairs magazine on July 9, 2020.