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Kosi Nnebe

From Resilience to Regeneration and Reciprocity

part of a series on Resilient

47:05

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Interrogating the common trope of resiliency so often associated with the resistance , success, or mere survival of marginalized groups against all odds

Kosisochukwu will unpack her own relationship with the word, from her recovery from burnout to the ways in which she has seen the term be used to not only hide but also perpetuate structural and systemic inequities. Drawing on her work as both a visual artist and a policy analyst, she will explore alternative readings of what it means to be resilient, including, potentially, moving towards a focus on that which is regenerative instead.

About the speaker

To be resilient is to be adaptable. It’s a way of being that’s flexible and alive, bouncing with the stuff of survival: learning, evolving and intertwining our roots to share resources and to create a strong anchor of collective care. Like trees in a storm, it means swaying instead of snapping.

To speak to this month's theme 'resilient' we're welcoming Nigerian-Canadian visual artist, Kosisochukwu Nnebe to the virtual stage.

Interrogating the common trope of resiliency so often associated with the resistance, success, or mere survival of marginalized groups against all odds, Kosisochukwu will unpack her own relationship with the word, from her recovery from burnout to the ways in which she has seen the term be used to not only hide but also perpetuate structural and systemic inequities. Drawing on her work as both a visual artist and a policy analyst, she will explore alternative readings of what it means to be resilient, including, potentially, moving towards a focus on that which is regenerative instead.

An economist by training and a policy analyst by profession, Kosisochukwu's art practice aims to engage viewers on issues both personal and structural in ways that bring awareness to their own complicity. Through her interactive and installation-based pieces, audiences are made hyperaware of their positionality within the physical space of a room, as in society, and how this shapes what is seen and unseen, what is understood and what remains undecipherable.

Kosisochukwu's work has been exhibited at AXENEO7, the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Place des Arts, the Art Gallery of Guelph, the Nia Centre, Studio Sixty Six, Z-Art Space, Station 16, and the Mohr Gallery in Mountain View, California. She has given presentations on her artistic practice and research at universities across Quebec, including Laval, McGill and Concordia, and has facilitated workshops at the National Gallery of Canada, the Ottawa Art Gallery, and Redwood City High School in California.

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