Michèle Pearson Clarke
Michèle Pearson Clarke (born February 16, 1973) is a Trinidadian filmmaker and photographer based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.[1][2]
Michèle Pearson Clarke | |
---|---|
Born | |
Education | Queen's University University of Toronto Ryerson University |
Occupation | Filmmaker Photographer |
Years active | 2005-present |
Website | MichelePearsonClarke.com |
Early life
Clarke was born in Port of Spain, Trinidad, and was educated at Queen's University and the University of Toronto. She received her MFA from Ryerson University in 2015.
Career
Her first film, Surrounded by Water, was completed through the Liaison of Independent Filmmakers of Toronto. Her second film, Black Men and Me, was featured in the 2007 Inside Out Film and Video Festival and explores Clarke's perceptions of black masculinity from a black lesbian's perspective.[3] The film has since been featured at the 2007 Reel World Film Festival (Toronto), the 2007 Miami Gay and Lesbian Film Festival and the 2007 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival. Clarke is also an author and has been published in Bent on Writing: An Anthology of Queer Tales.
In 2013, she started a portrait series "It’s Good To Be Needed," in which she photographed ex-partners who remained friends holding hands.[4]
In 2016, she was commissioned by The Robert McLaughlin Gallery in Oshawa, Ontario to create a two-channel video installation called "I’m Thinking of Ending Things." The project commemorates the 150 years or Oshawa's manufacturing history through personal stories of job loss.[5]
Clarke's video work, "Suck Teeth Compositions (After Rashaad Newsome)" was included in Here We Are Here: Black Canadian Contemporary Art, an exhibition at the Royal Ontario Museum in 2018.[6][7][8] That same year her work was included at the LagosPhoto Festival.[9]
Clarke's 2018 exhibition in Toronto, "A Welcome Weight on My Body," explored film in photographic form, focusing on creating analog still images of Caribbean Canadian friends and family, who she found missing or exploited in the genre historically. The scrapbook-like installation of photographs hung in composition of groups on shelves, floor, in wood or metal frames complicated the presentation, in an attempt to pull them away from a minimalist, colder conceptual tradition.[1] In this exhibition Clarke explores the cultural weight of Blackness and presents the photographs in a way that is meant to feel approachable and part of a practice as opposed masterful print and modern presentation.[10]
In 2018 Clarke exhibited her video titled, “All That Is Left Unsaid,” in Los Angeles. In the video Clarke edited together all of the moments without speech from an Audre Lorde documentary.[2]
References
- Vaughan, RM (September 2018). "Michèle Pearson Clarke at Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography". www.artforum.com. Retrieved 2019-03-23.
- Mizota, Sharon. "Sweat lodge, Audre Lorde, magical holograms: Three stellar art shows that pull you to another place". latimes.com. Retrieved 2019-03-23.
- Aisha Fairclough (March 14, 2008). "Black Women's Film Festival Brings Sex, Violence, History and Identity to the Forefront". Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved February 16, 2009.
- S. Bear Bergman (February 22, 2017). "From exes to friends: The lasting bonds of many LGBTQ relationships". Retrieved March 11, 2017.
- Ian McMillan (October 24, 2016). "Robert McLaughlin Gallery exhibit to delve into stories of grief, loss due to GM layoffs in Oshawa". Retrieved March 11, 2017.
- "'Here We Are Here: Black Canadian Contemporary Art' at MMFA | BLOUIN ARTINFO". www.blouinartinfo.com. Retrieved 2019-03-23.
- Whyte, Murray. "New show returns ROM to African-Canadian issues — and scores a provocative success| The Star". thestar.com. Retrieved 2019-03-23.
- Ritchie, Kevin (2017-11-20). "An exhibit devoted to Black Canadian contemporary art is opening at the ROM next year". NOW Magazine. Retrieved 2019-03-23.
- "LagosPhoto Festival 2018". Vogue Italia (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-03-23.
- Cho, Lily (2018). Making Heavy Weights Light. Toronto: Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography. pp. 2–3.