A mural unveiled at SFUB次元官网网址檚 Vancouver campus during Black History Month is shining a spotlight on Black women like Breonna Taylor, who was killed at the hands of U.S. police last spring.
Titled B次元官网网址渦n/settled,B次元官网网址 the poetic work is about B次元官网网址渢he constant reminder that some people cannot be seen to be of these lands,B次元官网网址 said SFUB次元官网网址檚 writer-in-residence Okot Bitek.
The 240-square foot installation also showcases the photography of Chantal Gibson, an arts and technology lecturer at the university.
It acknowledges the ongoing systematic violence against Black, Indigenous, and people of colour in countries like Canada and the U.S.
B次元官网网址淲e know the empty space in our arms that our lost children will never fill,B次元官网网址 reads part of the work at West Hastings and Richards streets. ItB次元官网网址檚 draped over SFUB次元官网网址檚 Belzberg Library, which remains closed during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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The artists have repurposed the street-level library window for onlookers passing by.
Head librarian Ebony Magnus said, B次元官网网址渦n/settled is a resistance, itB次元官网网址檚 our response, itB次元官网网址檚 about monumental and unapologetic Black life.B次元官网网址
B次元官网网址淓specially now, when we hear too often about the over-policing and oppression of Black men, women, like Breonna Taylor and Regis Korchinski-Paquet, and children in the media and in our public spaces,B次元官网网址 Magnus added.
Taylor was a Louisville medical worker, 26, killed by police officers in Kentucky during a botched raid on her apartment. Korchinski-Paquet was a 29-year-old multiracial Toronto woman who died in the presence of police in May.
The installation will remain on display until May 31.
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sarah.grochowski@bpdigital.ca
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