Skip to content

New OMAH exhibit explores representations of identity in visual arts

Brooklyn-based photographer's work explores the interplay of race, heritage, immigration, and identity as it pertains to the Caribbean diaspora
20240603-stacey-tyrell
The Orillia Museum of Art and History has launched a new exhibition, entitled Backra Bluid, featuring the work of Brooklyn, New York based photographer, Stacey Tyrell.

NEWS RELEASE
ORILLIA MUSEUM OF ART & HISTORY
************************
The Orillia Museum of Art & History (OMAH) has launched a new exhibition, entitled Backra Bluid, featuring the work of Brooklyn, New York based photographer, Stacey Tyrell. A special reception will be held on Wednesday, June 5, from 4-7:30 p.m., which will include a moderated talk about representations of identity in the visual arts.  

Stacey Tyrell (b.1978) is a photo-based conceptual artist. She was born and raised in Toronto to parents of Nevisian heritage. She attended OCAD University where she majored in photography. Her work explores the interplay of race, heritage, immigration, and identity as it pertains to the Caribbean Diaspora.

For the series Backra Bluid, Tyrell started experimenting with herself as the model. The title of this series draws from words of both West Indian and Scottish origins.

โ€œBackraโ€ is an archaic Caribbean slang of West African origin meaning white master or white person, and โ€œBluidโ€ is the Scottish word for the blood of men or animals as well as kin.

Staceyโ€™s ancestors hail from the West Indies, which was colonized by Europeans after Christopher Columbus arrived in 1492. These Europeans brought African slaves to work alongside enslaved local people to work on the sugar plantations during the Sugar Revolution after 1625. In acknowledging her Scottish, English and Irish ancestors, Stacey is directly addressing slavery and its impact on her family.  

Fourteen large-scale photographs are Staceyโ€™s attempt to interpret and explore distant relatives from both her past and present. The images are also a reflection on her own perceptions and preconceptions of โ€œWhitenessโ€ in particular as it relates to white Anglo-Saxon people. She feels there is a dualism that is inherent in the constructs of โ€œWhitenessโ€ and โ€œBlacknessโ€ in Western societies.  

We are thrilled to present this exhibition to OMAHโ€™s community, in hopes that it will encourage a conversation about our own stories; who we are, where we came from and where we hope to end up. 

On Wednesday, June 5, at 5 p.m., Stacey will join us via zoom from her Brooklyn studio to share her thoughts on representation of identities within the visual arts. At OMAH, she will be joined by Triti Shah, a Grade 10 student and digital artist from Orillia Secondary School and Allie Bradford, Culture Coordinator with the City of Orillia who will moderate the discussion.  

OMAH is open Tuesday to Saturday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

************************


Verified reader

If you would like to apply to become a verified commenter, please fill out this form.