Press Release
Winnipeg, Manitoba, February 5, 2026: The Winnipeg Art Gallery (WAG)-Qaumajuq and Urban Shaman Contemporary Art Gallery are excited to announce the unveiling of we tend to care, a touring exhibition by multidisciplinary artist Carrie Allison. The installation unfolds across both venues with a show at Urban Shaman and within WAG-Qaumajuq’s permanent collection galleries, articulating a critique of the colonial ideologies that have shaped dominant conceptions of grass, land, and cultivated green spaces. There will be an opening celebration at Urban Shaman on February 6, 2026, followed by an artist and curator discussion at WAG-Qaumajuq on February 11, 2026.
Allison’s ambitious beaded pieces parallel the absurd amount of labour and time that goes into maintaining yards, lawns, gardens, and agricultural spaces. In doing so, Allison’s work confronts these social constructs and addresses how these spaces uphold and are upheld by class, colonialism, and nationalism. She takes this critique to the absurd with her use of digital media to extrapolate what those systems will evolve into if left unchecked. Allison offers alternatives to those futures by tracing riverways in beads, replacing cold extractive botanical sketches with portrayals of kin, or looking for shared intergenerational spaces.
At WAG-Qaumajuq, we tend to care is presented as an exhibition-within-an-exhibition, interrupting the permanent collection galleries currently dedicated to European Renaissance and early settler North American art. Allison’s work deliberately disrupts the linear, chronological narratives of canonical art history.
Carrie Allison is of nêhiýaw/Métis/mixed European descent. She is a multidisciplinary visual artist based in K’jipuktuk, Mi’kma’ki (Halifax, Nova Scotia). This iteration of her travelling exhibition, we tend to care, is curated by Franchesca Hebert-Spence, in collaboration with Marie-Anne Redhead, Assistant Curator of Indigenous & Contemporary Art, WAG-Qaumajuq.
Join us for the opening of we tend to care at Urban Shaman, which takes place on February 6, 5-9pm, and a panel discussion with Carrie Allison, Marie-Anne Redhead, and Franchesca Hebert-Spence at WAG-Qaumajuq on February 11 at 7pm during WAG Wednesday Nights.
Quick Facts:
Quotes:
“By intervening in the traditional chronological framing of art, we open space for a fuller and more nuanced conversation. One where artworks speak across generations rather than sit within them. Our collaboration with Urban Shaman is essential to this work, presenting Indigenous perspectives that transform how we see, learn, and connect through art.”
— Bill Elliott, Deputy Director & CFO, WAG-Qaumajuq
“Carrie’s work highlights how intrenched colonialism is in our day-to-day and that questioning these larger systems leads us to imagining new futures.”
— Franchesca Hebert-Spence, Curator
Associated Links
Support
This exhibition originated at the Art Gallery of Grande Prairie, and is produced in partnership with IOTA Studios. This project gratefully acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts, Arts Nova Scotia, and the Province of Nova Scotia’s Department of Communities, and Culture and Heritage.
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For more information or to arrange interviews, please contact:
Katryna Barske
Public Relations Officer
Winnipeg Art Gallery
204.789.1295
kbarske@wag.ca
Justin Bear L’Arrivee
Artistic Director
Urban Shaman
artisticdirector@urbanshaman.org
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