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Public Lecture Series

Cancelled – Marie Watt

EVENT LOCATION:
Paul O'Regan Hall, Halifax Central Library
5440 Spring Garden Rd, Halifax

EVENT DATE & TIME
April 2, 2026 7:00 pm

Image of work: Marie Watt Forest Shifts Light (Sequoia, Crest, Canopy), 2025 Jingles, twill tape, mesh

Printmaking, Painting, Textiles & Sculpture

This event has been cancelled. 

Marie Watt’s lecture will explore many of the topics found in her work, including story, biography, Haudenosaunee protofeminism, and Indigenous teachings, as well as the intersection of history, community, and storytelling.

Artist statement from Marie:

I am a member of the Seneca Nation (Turtle Clan), and my work draws on images and ideas from Haudenosaunee protofeminism and Indigenous teachings. My practice is interdisciplinary, incorporating printmaking, painting, textiles, and sculpture. I conduct both solo and collaborative projects, but in all of them I explore how history, community, and storytelling intersect.

A significant part of my practice involves setting a multi-generational and cross-disciplinary table for conversation and collaboration. This can take the form of sewing circles, printing circles, community-built sculptures, or crowd-sourced participation via social media. I believe that exchanging ideas like this, one story at a time, can help us understand and strengthen what I call our companion relationships – our connection to place, to one another, to animals, and to the universe.

Many of the materials I use — blankets, beads, tin jingles, steel I-beams — are associated with my Seneca heritage. Conceptually, I’m drawn to their DNA and deploy them as a vehicle for understanding history, place, and community. Language, both literal and metaphorical, also weaves through my practice even as I struggle with the historical baggage it carries, and its impact on Indigenous communities. Twinned words such as “Mother Mother,” “Deer Deer,” and “Sky Sky” open up space and create urgency, hurling a call longer and louder in space, back to our ancestors, and forward to future generations.

Image of work: Marie Watt, Forest Shifts Light (Sequoia, Crest, Canopy), 2025, Jingles, twill tape, mesh, Dimensions variable.

 

This talk is presented as part of NSCAD’s Visiting Artist program, supported by the Daglish Family Foundation Visiting Artist Fund.

Photo of artist Marie Watt by Sam Gehrke

About the Artist

Marie Watt (she/her, b. 1967, Seattle, WA) is a member of the Turtle Clan of the Seneca Nation of Indians, and also has German-Scot ancestry. Her interdisciplinary work draws from history, biography, Haudenosaunee protofeminism, and Indigenous teachings; in it, she explores the intersection of history, community, and storytelling. Through collaborative actions, she instigates multigenerational and cross-disciplinary conversations that might create a lens and conversation for understanding connectedness to place, one another, and the universe.

Watt holds an MFA in painting and printmaking from Yale University; she also has degrees from Willamette University and the Institute of American Indian Arts; and in 2016 she was awarded an Doctor Honoris Causa from Willamette University.

She has attended residencies at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture and the Vermont Studio Center; and has received fellowships from Anonymous Was a Woman, the Joan Mitchell Foundation, the Harpo Foundation, The Ford Family Foundation, and the Native Arts and Culture Foundation, among others.

Watt served two terms on the board of VoCA (Voices in Contemporary Art) from 2017–2023. She serves on the Native Advisory Committee at the Portland Art Museum, where she also became a member of the Board of Trustees in 2020. She is a fan of Crow’s Shadow, an Indigenous-founded printmaking institute located on the homelands of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla; as well as Portland Community College, where she taught from 1997–2004. Selected collections include the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Seattle Art Museum, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Buffalo AKG Art Museum, Yale University Art Gallery, the Crystal Bridges Museum, the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of the American Indian and National Museum of American Art, the Tacoma Art Museum, the Denver Art Museum, and the Portland Art Museum. She is represented by PDX Contemporary Art in Portland, OR; Catharine Clark Gallery in San Francisco, CA; and Marc Straus Gallery in New York, NY.

Photo by Sam Gehrke