Drama professor earns provincial arts award
June 24, 2015
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Daniel David Moses is being recognized as one of Ontario鈥檚 key figures in Aboriginal arts and as an advocate for Aboriginal culture.
The associate professor in the Department of Drama at Queen鈥檚 University recently received the for his work as a poet, playwright and essayist.
Mr. Moses, a Delaware who hails from the Six Nations of the Grand River, arrived at Queen鈥檚 in 2003 as a Queen鈥檚 National Scholar. Adding to the significance of the award, he says, is that the jury was composed of fellow Aboriginal artists from a broad spectrum of art forms.
鈥淥ften an artist spends their time in their room, working away just making things,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 necessarily know if the audience is there, but this is evidence of it.鈥
Created in 2012, the $10,000 award celebrates the work of Aboriginal artists and arts leaders who have made significant contributions to the arts in Ontario.
Mr. Moses credits his time at Queen鈥檚 for helping him get to where he is today in an arts career that has spanned more than 30 years.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been a wonderful supportive time for me,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 allowed me to clearly think about the art forms I work in and find ways of communicating the ideas I have about them 鈥 poetry, plays and essays.鈥
In selecting him, the jury noted that Mr. Moses is: 鈥渙ne of the key figures of Aboriginal theatre, both artistically and academically, and is developing an essential Indigenous archive. He is committed to telling the stories that created this country and is an advocate for Aboriginal culture.鈥
Mr. Moses is also co-editor of An Anthology of Canadian Native Literature in English, a founding text for the study of Canadian Indigenous literature, the fourth and 20thanniversary edition of which was published in 2013.
Among his 13 published plays are Coyote City, a 1991 Governor General鈥檚 Literary Award nominee, The Indian Medicine Shows, the 1996 James Buller Memorial Award winner, and Almighty Voice and His Wife, which in January and February 2012 completed a national Canadian tour. His most recent poetry collections are River Range and A Small Essay on the Largeness of Light and Other Poems.