Whitney Biennial 2022: 
Quiet as It’s Kept

Apr 6–Oct 16, 2022


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Rebecca Belmore

6

Floor 6

Born 1960 in Upsala, Canada
Lives in Vancouver, Canada
Anishinaabe

To make the figure in this sculpture, a sleeping bag was draped to suggest the contours of a human body and then cast in clay. The thousands of empty bullet casings that surround the ceramic form become a protective barrier. “In some way,” Belmore has said, “the work carries an emptiness. But at the same time, because it’s a standing figure, I’m hoping that the work contains some positive aspects of this idea that we need to try to deal with violence.” The title of the work, iskhode, means “fire” in Anishinaabemowin.

In addition to calling attention to seemingly unending violence, the sculpture points to the centrality and precarity of earth itself. As Belmore has observed: “Everything we use to make our lives is of the earth, no matter how far removed its lineage. We are makers, who destroy and make again.”

Prototype for ishkode (fire), 2021

An erected, stick-club shaped object in the center with many bullets scattered outwards
An erected, stick-club shaped object in the center with many bullets scattered outwards

Rebecca Belmore, ishkode (fire), 2021. Clay and bullet casings. Collection of the artist. Photograph by Sandenwolff


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