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Canadian poet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cecily Nicholson is a Canadian poet, arts administrator, independent curator, and activist. Originally from Ontario, she is now based in British Columbia.[1] As a writer and a poet, Nicholson has published collections of poetry, contributed to collected literary works, presented public lectures and readings, and collaborated with numerous community organizations. As an arts administrator, she has worked at the Surrey Art Gallery in Surrey, British Columbia, and the artist-run centre Gallery Gachet in Vancouver.[2]
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The literary themes of Nicholson's writing include historic research, documentary poetry, and social justice. Her published works have addressed issues of environmental devastation, displacement, and dispossession as impacts of capitalism, industry, and settler-colonialism. More specifically, Nicholson explores Black diaspora and Indigenous displacement by examining historical legacies of use and ownership, racial oppression, and systemic racism while examining ways that racialized and Indigenous communities have, and continue to, work through trauma by bearing witness, sharing narratives, and resilience.[2][3]
Nicholson has published three collections of poetry.
Nicholson has contributed essays and poetry to publications such as Canadian Art and The Capilano Review.[8][9]
A selection of her work includes: "Porch Light, A Window: How a neighbourhood storefront became a gathering place for Vancouver’s Black creative community," "'Before my book on New York, I was a painter'," "'They're all conjurors': A conversation with Deanna Bowen & Cecily Nicholson," as well as "summer barrels past," "the poem is a score."[10][11][12][13]
Nicholson served as part of an editorial collective that worked in collaboration with educator Matt Hern and the youth community at Vancouver's Purple Thistle Center to produce an activism handbook for youth. It includes contributions by Noam Chomsky, Dan Savage, Grace Llewellyn, Astra Taylor, among others.
Her poetry collection Harrowings was shortlisted for the 2023 Pat Lowther Award.[21]
Co-curated with Karina Irvine and Christopher Lacroix, this exhibition critically interrogated ideas around how community is formed and who it is formed with. In the midst of a global pandemic, participating artists considered how their responses to this time can prepare the ground for forms of community to come. The exhibition featured Sharona Franklin, S F Ho, Cecily Nicholson, Carmen Papalia, Jayce Salloum, and others.[25][26]
Co-curated by Christian Vistan and Jesse Birch, this exhibition explores estuary as a place of flux and process. The Nanaimo River Estuary, located on the traditional territory of the Snuneymuxw First Nation, serves as a resource and sanctuary for its inhabitants. Legacies of industrial and colonial land practices also significantly impact this environment.[27][28] Participating artists included Charlotte Zhang, Tania Willard and Steven Thomas Davies, Tau Lewis, Julia Feyrer, Elisa Ferrari and John Brennan. Nicholson's contribution to this exhibition was a poetry chapbook.
In 2012, VIVO, Vancouver’s oldest media access artist run centre, presented Anamnesia: Unforgetting: polytemporality, implacement and possession in The Crista Dahl Media Library & Archive. Anamnesia encompassed a series of screenings of videos from the 1970s and 1980s, collected through the early Satellite Video Exchange program, and was accompanied by a publication. In her curatorial contribution, titled DISPATCHES: of wrested resumption, in time and area, Nicholson restored video documents from 1973 to 1979 that addressed the legacy of the Oglala Sioux and American Indian Movement stand at Wounded Knee, and reflected on concurrent narratives on prison asylum activism, the civil rights movement, and contemporary movements involving political and cultural engagement.[29] Participating artists in Anamnesia included Sharon Bradley, Crista Dahl, Amy Kazymerchyk, Donato Mancini, and Alex Muir.[30]
Nicholson programmed a series of events in collaboration with Am Johal, Nicholas Perrin and Althea Thauberger. One installment, titled "NRAI: No Reading After the Internet," included the participation of artists Harjap Grewal, Tone Olaf Nielsen, Raymond Boisjoly, and Glen Coulthard, and considered community and aesthetic responses to imagined futures through intersections of cultural production, theory and activism.[31]
Nicholson regularly engages in poetry readings and public presentations about her poetry and social justice work. Select examples include:
From 2019-2020, Nicholson served as a member of the Ethics Research Board for Emily Carr University of Art and Design.[36] Nicholson has worked with women of the Downtown Eastside community of Vancouver since 2000 and has served as a coordinator of the Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre.
As a poet and a writer, Nicholson has worked in collaboration with the Press Release Poetry Collective, which was formed in anticipation of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. It sought to examine the event through a critical lens and respond to the media, advertising, censorship, art, nationalism, diversity of tactics, and issues of First Nations land rights impacted by it.[37]
Also in 2010, Nicholson participated in the Safe Assembly project, which included a series of readings and discussions focused on poetry and politics in the context of anti-Olympics resistance in Vancouver, 2010, and critique of the Olympic Industrial Complex more broadly. The project was hosted through VIVO Media Arts Centre by Stephen Collis, Roger Farr, and Donato Mancini.[37][38]
Nicholson works in an ongoing capacity with Joint Effort, a women in prison abolitionist group that engages in solidarity work with women prisoners in the Lower Mainland.[39][40] The organization started as a sub committee of the British Columbia Federation of Women in 1980 and continues to operate by creating contacts between women in prison and various community organizations outside the prison.[33][41] Initiatives include the Stark Raven Media Collective, the Prisoners' Justice Day Committee, and the Books 2 Prisoners program.[40]
Nicholson has made contributions to the efforts of No One Is Illegal, a grassroots anti-colonial migrant justice group based in Vancouver. This includes conducting research and reporting on issues around immigration controls, racial profiling, detention and deportation, law enforcement brutality, and exploitative working conditions of migrants.[42]
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