Search
Close this search box.

SHELTERED IN PLACE

Portraits of Self, Family and Community

February 20, 2021
 - November 7, 2021

Curators: Catherine Sinclair, Rebecca Basciano, and Michelle Gewurtz

Chantal Dahan, Max Dean, Christopher Lea Dunning, Robert S. Hyndman, Patrice James, Martha Kyak, Kosisochukwu Nnebe, Ron Noga nosh, Faisa Omer, Jessie Oonark, Annie Pootoogook

This drastic, clean-cut deprivation and our complete ignorance of what the future held in store had taken us unawares; In fact, our suffering was twofold; our own to start with, and then the imagined suffering of the absent one ... "-
—Albert Camus, The Plague, 1947

The COVID-19 pandemic has evoked new feelings in us all, whether isolation as we work alone, fear of exposure as essential workers, or claustrophobic anxiety if we live in close quarters.

Emotional states such as isolation, fear, or anxiety have given us fresh perspectives on ourselves, our families, and our communities. Reflecting these challenging times, the exhibition Sheltered in Place offers an expanded definition of portraiture - a traditional artistic genre that should be reconsidered from our current vantage point.

The selected artworks, by historical and contemporary artists based primarily in the Ottawa-Gatineau region, include film, installation, sculpture, photography, painting and drawing. Through their varied strategies, these artists raise provocative questions about who we are, and how we perceive and acknowledge others.

Perhaps then, living through the pandemic has offered a potential shift in perspective, as we encounter the people in these portraits. From this fresh frame of mind, we can now more fully understand what these artists have been telling us about themselves and their communities all along.

Sheltered In Place: Portraits of Self, Family and Community, installation view, Ottawa Art Gallery, 2021. Photo: Chris Snow.

1 Albert Camus, "The Plague" (1947), trans. Stuart Gilbert (1948), printed in Albert Camus: The Plague, The Fall, Exile and the Kingdom and Selected Essays { New York: Everyman's Library, 2004), p. 60

Tour the Exhibition

Play Video

Related Events

Additional Resources

GIVE TO GET ART AUCTION | MAY 16 | GET YOUR TICKETS! | OAG is Open from 10 AM to 6 PM Tuesday, Wednesday and Sunday | from 10 AM to 9 PM on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Admission is always FREE.