Judy Anderson BIOGRAPHY
Judy Anderson is Nêhiyaw (Cree) from Gordon First Nation, Saskatchewan, Treaty 4 territory and an Associate Professor of Canadian Indigenous Studio Art in the Department of Art at the University of Calgary. Anderson’s practice includes beadwork, installation, hand-made paper, painting, three-dimensional pieces, and collaborative projects all of which are deeply personal with a focus on issues of spirituality, family, colonialism and Indigenous epistemological and ontological traditions.
Her current work is created with the purpose of honouring the people in her life and Indigenous intellectualizations of the world. She also has an ongoing collaboration with her son Cruz where they combine graffiti with Indigenous methodologies, and she has been researching traditional European methods and materials of painting.
Links:
Artist website: judy-anderson.com
REVIEWS:
Cree Artist Judy Anderson Wins Salt Spring National Art Prize, Canadian Art, 2017.
Calgary’s Judy Anderson Wins the Salt Spring Prize: The “Joan McConnell Award”, Galleries West, 2017.
Cree mother and son turn graffiti into traditional beading artwork, CBC, 2017.
Interviews:
Conversations with Creators: Judy Anderson, Dunlop Art Gallery, 2020.
Judy & Cruz Anderson on art, family & spiritual well-being, Kids Help Phone, 2020.