Indigenous artist showcases traditional plants in new public garden in Montreal - Action News
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Indigenous artist showcases traditional plants in new public garden in Montreal

T'uy't'tanat-Cease Wyss was invited by a local arts organizations to create a custom installation outside the Bibliothque et Archives nationales du Qubec.

T'uy't'tanat-Cease Wyss was invited by arts organization to create a custom installation

T'uy't'tanat-Cease Wyss is an Indigenous artist and garden cultivator from Vancouver. She was invited to create a special installation as part of an upcoming arts festival in Montreal. (CBC)

A new garden located outside theBibliothque et Archives nationales du Qubec in Montreal is shining a light on traditional plants that hold cultural significance for Indigenous communities.

T'uy't'tanat-Cease Wyss, an Indigenous artist from Vancouver, was invited to create the garden byMOMENTA Biennale de l'image, a Montreal art organization.

Every two years, MOMENTA puts on contemporary art events, partnering with museums, galleries and public institutions centred around a particular theme.

Maude Johnson, anexecutive and curatorial assistant at MOMENTA, told CBC that this year's theme is "sensing nature" and that the team decided to reach out toWyss to commission a custom creation.

"We came across herpractice and we were really impressed by that and really interested in that because it made a lot of sense with the theme," said Johnson.

Maude Johnson is a executive and curatorial assistant at MOMENTA Biennale de l'image, a Montreal art organization. (Rowan Kennedy/CBC)

"It's really important for us to actually give space to the people that are the land owners, that are the people that lived here first," she added.

Preserving nature, culture

Wysshas been working as an artist and cultivating gardens for more than 30 years.

She developed an interest in traditional plants and their healing properties when shewasa teenager and sought wisdom from elders in hercommunity.

WATCH |T'uy't'tanat-Cease Wyssgives a tour of herurban gardenin Montreal:

After being approached tocreatea garden in Montreal, Wyssdesigned one that would highlight local plants that are significant to the Indigenous community.

Shecalled it Teionhenkwen, a Mohawk word that means "Our Sustenance" and designed the layout of the garden boxes in the shape of a wampum, a traditional symbol.

"[The garden]represents everything that we all need to survive: food and medicine and the oxygen from the plants," she said.

To create the garden, Wyss worked with Joce Two Crows Tremblay, an earth worker with the Indigenous Land Stewardship Circle in Toronto.

Tremblaysaid that connecting with land is extremely important for the preservation of Indigenous culture.

Joce Two Crows Tremblay is an earth worker with the Indigenous Land Stewardship Circle in Toronto. (Rowan Kennedy/CBC)

"Our languages are derived from the land, so we need to have relationships with the land to keep our languages. Our ceremonies and our customs are inseparably tied to the land, so we need to be on the land to keep those customs alive," said Tremblay.

"For urban Indigenous people to have access to the land is essential."

"This is but a little garden but it opens hopefully a lot of opportunitiesto be in relationship, to have nation-to-nation relationship, to be in conversation about what it means to be stewards of the land," Tremblay said.


The MOMENTA Biennale de l'image takes place from Sept.8 to Oct.24. It includesexhibitions, performances and installations.

With files from Rowan Kennedy