Kali Spitzer (born 1987) is a Canadian indigenous photographer. She is Kaska Dena from the Yukon and then Daylu (Lower Post, British Columbia). Her father is Kaska Dena and her mother is Jewish from Transylvania, Romania.[1][2]

Education

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Spitzer earned her certificate in professional photography from the Western Academy of Photography and has studied at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico, under the mentorship of Will Wilson.[3]

Career

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Spitzer has worked with film in 35mm, 120 and large format, as well as wet plate collodion process using an 8-by-10 camera.[3] She works in portraiture, and photographs cultural practices and ceremonies in her community. At the age of 20, she returned to the Yukon, where she is originally from, and documented the cultural practices around hunting, fishing, trapping, tanning moose and caribou hides, and beading.[4] She is also known to use tintype photography as a means to place her work "in dialogue with the problematic history of Native American imagery by white photographers".[2]

Spitzer received a Reveal Indigenous Art Award in 2017[5] from the Hnatyshyn Foundation.

Spitzer's photograph Sister (2016) is the image used as the basis for the sculpture Every One, which is part of the social engagement work called the MMIWQT Bead Project by artist Cannupa Hanska Luger.[6] The work was made up of over 4,000 clay beads made by people all over North America as to create portrait in a way to "rehumanize data" surrounding missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls, queer and trans people.[7]

Exhibitions

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Spitzer's work was showcased at the 2018 Contemporary Native Art Biennial.

She has done exhibitions at the Sherbrooke Museum of Fine Arts, Sherbrooke, Quebec,[8] the Portland Art Museum's Center for Contemporary Native Art,[3] the Never Apart Centre in Montreal, Quebec,[4] and the grunt gallery in Vancouver, British Columbia.

References

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  1. ^ Spitzer, Kali. "Kali Spitzer Photography: About". Kali Spitzer Photography.
  2. ^ a b Berger, Maurice (October 8, 2018). "Reclaiming an old medium to tell new stories of Native Americans". National Geographic. Archived from the original on March 30, 2019. Retrieved March 30, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c "CCNA: Dene bāhī Naabaahii". Portland Art Museum.
  4. ^ a b Jay, Mikela (January 16, 2017). "Kali Spitzer: Exploring Resilience". Never Apart. Retrieved March 30, 2019.
  5. ^ "150 Indigenous Artists Receive $1.5 Million in Awards". Canadian Art. April 12, 2017. Retrieved March 30, 2019.
  6. ^ Luger, Cannupa. "Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls, Queer and Trans People BEAD PROJECT (EVERY ONE)". cannupahanska. Retrieved March 30, 2019.
  7. ^ Edge, Sami (February 24, 2018). "Bead project aims to 'rehumanize' tragic statistic". The New Mexican. Retrieved March 30, 2019.
  8. ^ Beavis, Lon (December 2018). "Contemporary Native Art Biennial/La Biennale d'art contemporain autochtone 2018". Border Crossings. 37 (148): 102–104 – via Proquest.
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