Parastoo Anoushahpour, Faraz Anoushahpour, Ryan Ferko
Hamilton Artist Inc, Hamilton, ON, August 28 – November 20, 2021
In the mid 1950s the Ontario government announced its plans to build a hydroelectric dam near Cornwall, Ontario, on the Saint Lawrence River. When the engineering plans were released for the project, it became clear that the rural settler towns along the north shore of the river would be carefully relocated into a new suburban community, as that land would soon be submerged under an artificial lake feeding the dam. Meanwhile, the forced alteration of this landscape was planned and executed with no communication or dialogue with the Mohawks of Akwesasne, whose territory was permanently flooded, polluted, and further divided by new Canadian border control policies.
Part of an ongoing series of exhibitions surrounding the unnatural disasters of flood and fire brought to this landscape, Radiant Temperature of Openings offers a new iteration of materials drawn from community archives, government reporting, and oral testimony in order to address how the events of 1958 continue to exert control over the contemporary political landscape. On one hand, this settler-colonial logic manipulates a river into both a piece of infrastructure and a political boundary. On the other, it sets the stage for an empirical study into how fire spreads through family homes. Between archival paintings of rapids that no longer exist and celluloid of homes burning against a dried-up river lingers the question of whose future safety is being secured, and whose will be ignored.
More documentation coming soon
Radiant Temperature of Openings, book including commissioned writing from Aisha Sasha John and Felix Kalmenson, second printing, avaliable for free from gallery
– parastoo.faraz.ryan@gmail.com –
Parastoo Anoushahpour, Faraz Anoushahpour, Ryan Ferko