Uncommon Bonds: Labrador 2023 Open Houses

Uncommon Bonds: Labrador 2023 Open Houses

Mark David Turner, Co-Principal Investigator

may 25, 2023

Uncommon Bonds: Labrador Inuit and Moravian Missionaries is a three year partnership between the Nunatsiavut GovernmentMoravian Archives (Bethlehem, Pennsylvania), Moravian Church in Newfoundland and Labrador, Memorial University Libraries and the National Heritage Digitization Strategy focussing on the digitization and digital return of nearly 60,000 pages of archival resources concerning Labrador Inuit. This website is intended to help with the interpretation of these record as well as the broad range of digitized records resulting from contact between Labrador Inuit and Moravian missionaries.

The project is supported by a Digitizing Hidden Collections grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR). The grant program is made possible by funding from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

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On Thursday, May 25 we will be embarking on a series of Open Houses in Labrador to promote “Uncommon Bonds: Labrador Inuit and Moravian Missionaries”. We are very excited for these events which will be a mix of short presentations and informal discussion. Our goal is to introduce you to the project, to introduce you to some of the people that have been involved in its development and to learn ways we might enhance Uncommon Bonds during its next phase.

In addition to a large roster of people involved in the project, Tom Gordon will also be joining us to launch his new book, Called Upstairs: Moravian Inuit Music in Labrador. Tom’s work on Moravian Inuit musical traditions makes extensive use of a range of records created in northern Labrador. We are delighted to celebrate the launch with Tom and to explore how uncommonbonds.org might be used to help organize the treasury of Moravian Inuit music.

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Talking Walls Exhibition: Moving, Dancing, Knowledge

Talking Walls Exhibition: Moving, Dancing, Knowledge

Jose Miguel Esteban, Curator
Seika Boye, Series Producer

HART house | University of Toronto
Mar 17 - Apr 14, 2023

The Moving, Dancing, Knowledge series engaged learning communities within and beyond the university to highlight dance scholarship and practice, the role of dance and movement in physical and mental well-being, and the considerations of dance as both an artistic and activist form that embodies intersecting identities. Building from “Dance Beyond Performance,” a panel hosted in 2020 by the Institute for Dance Studies and the Well Being Collective at Hart House, this exhibit shares key insights from dance scholars, artists, and activists working within the University of Toronto.

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It's About Time: Dancing Black in Canada 1900-1970

It’s about time: dancing Black In Canada 1900-1970

Curated by Seika Boye

It’s About Time: Dancing Black in Canada 1900 – 1970 illuminates the largely undocumented dance history of Canada’s Black population before 1970, with responses from contemporary performing and visual artists reflecting on how the archival resonates in this moment.

Curated by Seika Boye, PhD, this archival exhibition exposes the representation of Blackness on Canadian stages, as well as audience and media reception of Black performance in Canada during this era. It’s About Time also explores legislation of leisure culture, dance lessons and the role of social dances at mid-century. Featured are individual dance artists such as Leonard Gibson, Ola Skanks, Ethel Bruneau, Joey Hollingsworth and Kathryn Brown.

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Dance in High Park: Solo in High Park

Dance in High Park: Solo in High Park

Curated by Seika Boye & Timea Wharton-Suri


high park | Canadian Stage
Sept 26-27, 2020

Hosted by Nicole Inica Hamilton of Turn Out Radio, this program features solos by Travis Knights, Carmen Romero, Raoul Wilke, and Alyssa Martin/Rock Bottom Movement (featuring Sam Grist) in a range of dance styles: tap, flamenco, house, and contemporary. Audiences will be treated to entertaining performances by dancers who reveal the precision, depth and significance of their craft and the importance of the audience to the art they make.

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Into the Light: Eugenics and Education in Southern Ontario

Into the Light: Eugenics and Education in Southern Ontario

Seika Boye, Exhibit Co-Creator

bodies in translation
Re•Vision: The Centre for Art and Social Justice
University of Guelph

guelph Civic museum
September 14, 2019 – March 1, 2020

Into the Light: Eugenics and Education in Southern Ontario is both an award-winning exhibition and a 37-minute documentary film that brings one of Canada’s sinister secrets of eugenics, as well as stories of survival, out of the shadows and into the light.

The exhibition was co-created and co-curated by Elder Mona Stonefish, Peter Park, Dolleen Tisawii’ashii Manning, Evadne Kelly, Seika Boye and Sky Stonefish and featured at the Guelph Civic Museum from September 14, 2019 – March 1, 2020 in Guelph, Ontario.

The exhibition and the documentary are co-presented by Guelph MuseumsBodies in Translation: Activist Art, Technology and Access to LifeRe•Vision: The Centre for Art and Social Justice, and Respecting Rights, ARCH Disability Law.  

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Bringing Ballet Abroad: Pioneering Women of the RAD in Canada

Bringing Ballet Abroad: Pioneering Women of the RAD in Canada

Amy Bowring, Curator

Dance Collection Danse

Amy Bowring, Executive and Curatorial Director of Dance Collection Danse, curates an exhibition on Dorothy Cox-Scruton, Alison Sutcliffe, Bettina Byers, Gweneth Lloyd, Betty Farrally, and Mara McBirney—the first teachers of the Royal Academy of Dance (RAD).

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Configurations in Motion: Performance Curation and Communities of Colour

Configurations in Motion: Performance Curation and Communities of Colour

Thomas F. DeFrantz, Curator
Seika Boye, Curator


department of Art Education, Concordia University
May 10, 2017

Canadian and American performance curators, artists, and scholars will gather in Montreal June 1 and 2, 2017 to share work, develop resources, and build strategies for supporting performance in, for and by Black, Indigenous and communities of colour in Canada and the United States. Convened by the department of Art Education at Concordia University, in collaboration with the University of Toronto and the Institute for Dance Studies, SLIPPAGE:Performance|Culture|Technology, and Duke University, the event has been curated by Dr. Thomas F. DeFrantz, Duke University; and Dr. Seika Boye, University of Toronto, to explore topics that impact communities of colour.

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