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Rooting for Reclamation is Legacy's latest fall 2024 exhibition on display in the inner gallery. Featuring local artists Aya Behr, Kemi Craig, Nathan Smith, and Tajah Olson. Learn about the inspiration behind the exhibition and more in our interview with emerging guest curator, Madison Bridal.

Currently on display at Legacy Downtown, Masked Identity: Artworks by Robert Burke is an exhibit which transports visitors into the vibrant world of eighty-year-old artist Robert Burke.

Fire Season featured in PREVIEW Art Magazine

Our current exhibition Fire Season is featured in the June-August 2024 issue of PREVIEW Art Magazine.

Wildfire art exhibitions help make sense of Canada鈥檚 new climate reality

Last summer, as wildfires ravaged Northern Ontario, many on the eastern side of Canada experienced the visuals of wildfire for the first time. But the haze was all too familiar for Vancouver painter Liz Toohey-Wiese, who was attending an art residency on Toronto Island last year when smoke blanketed the city.

The 番茄社区 Legacy Art Gallery is seeking two Black artists for a new exhibition focusing on Victoria-based contemporary Black artists.

On June 17th, 2023, Kwakwaka鈥檞akw artist Francis Dick led the Atla鈥檊imma (Spirits of The Forest) dance at Wawadit鈥櫯俛 (Mungo Martin House). The gathering marked the first time that the Atla鈥檊imma, the cultural property of Francis Dick鈥檚 father Chief Kwaxsistalla wath-thla (Adam Dick), was danced since his passing.

Alumna Francis Dick transforms darkness into light in new exhibition

Francis Dick invites you to walk through her fires. The multimedia artist鈥檚 new solo exhibition at Legacy Art Gallery is an autobiography told through art, each image and object testament to her life鈥檚 journey, her culture, her fearlessness, and her ability to transform joy and pain into art.

Dr. Devi Mucina鈥檚 academic work and his familial connections to the communities and traditions of the Chewa peoples are central to Gule Wamkulu: Dancing Indigenous Governance. The exhibition features spirited photography and film by Kl. Peruzzo de Andrade, hand-crafted masks, Adinkra textiles, and an interactive bwalo, filled with brick-red sand. The heart of the exhibition is Gule Wamkulu, or 鈥渢he great dance of life,鈥 a unifying practice for Chewa communities. But what does it mean to bring Gule Wamkulu to Victoria?

Gule Wamkulu exhibition celebrates great dance of life

When Devi Mucina left Africa as a young man, he had no intention of returning to the ways of his people. But years later he found himself learning from the struggles and resistance of Indigenous Peoples in Canada. After watching the masked dances of the Coast Salish peoples, Mucina, director of the 番茄社区鈥檚 School of Indigenous Governance, felt inspired to reconnect with his past and his family.