Anishinaabe visual storyteller opens exhibit at Art Gallery of Ontario's community gallery - Action News
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Indigenous

Anishinaabe visual storyteller opens exhibit at Art Gallery of Ontario's community gallery

A new art exhibition of 23 original works by Anishinaabe visual storyteller Nyle Miigizi Johnston will be at the AGO until September.

23 pieces by Nyle Miigizi Johnston tell visual interpretations of stories through symbolism and pictography

Nyle Miigizi Johnston is launching an exhibit at the Art Gallery of Ontario of visual interpretations of Anishinaabe stories. (Vito Amati/Vito Amati Photography )

A new art exhibitionof 23 original works inspired byAnishinaabestories that have been passed down through generations is on now at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto.

Connecting With OurFirst Family features the work ofvisual storytellerNyle Miigizi JohnstonfromChippewas of Nawash Unceded First Nation.

"It's our responsibility as the next generation ofAnishinaabeto add to this legacy,"saidJohnston.

Johnston left his community at 15 but has remained connected to its history and cultural traditions, taking it upon himself to keep the stories of his ancestors alive.

"Coming from a storytelling background,it's like you have to share these stories and stories need to be pushed into the next generation. There has to be some way to communicate these," said Johnston.

The Connecting With Our First Family exhibit stems froma distance learning series with schools in remote and rural parts of Ontario that the Art Galleryof Ontario undertook withTakingITGlobal,a non-governmental organization with the goal of empowering global youth to create a more inclusive and sustainable world.

Johnston was tasked with developing an Anishinaabemowinlanguage and education resource kit.Anishinaabemowin, also known as Ojibway,is the language spoken by theAnishinaabe.

The exhibit is a collection of 23 images of animals, birds, fish insects and other creatures based on Anishinaabe teachings.Johnston's approach to maintaining the cultural legacy is through visualinterpretations of the stories with symbolismand pictography.

The Connecting with Our First Family exhibit will be on until September in the AGO's Community Gallery. (Submitted by TakingITGlobal)

He's been drawing and painting for as long as he can remember, and he draws on his gift to teach others these stories.

The images he creates are rooted inAnishinaabemowinstories, which he says is how he was able to learn about botany, astrology, mathematics and environmental studies.

"If you understand the language, youunderstand the world view," he said.

"If you understand the world view, you understand everythingthe world around us, creation, each otherandour place within it."

The use of visual imagery and traditional language are at the heart of Indigenous teaching methods, he said, and are just as relevant as Western methods that have been forced upon Indigenous Peoples.

Connecting With OurFirst Familyconsists of artworks that depict animals, birds, fish, insects and other creatures in a pictographic style to tell stories of their interconnectedness through Anishinaabecreation stories.

The Connecting With Our First Family exhibit is a collaborative effort between Nyle Miigizi Johnston, the AGO and TakingITGlobal, an group that strives to empower youth across the globe. (Submitted by TakingITGlobal)

Jennifer Corriero, co-founder and executive director of TakingItGlobal, said the project is a catalyst to help invite everyone,Indigenous and non-Indigenous,to be creative and to come together tosupport the revitalization of Indigenous languages and cultures.

"We're all learners.... I hope that students feel empowered to have that courage in the way that Nyle did to findhis own his own creative way through his art practice," she said.

The exhibit will be on display until September in the community gallery of the AGO.