Dylan Robinson

Dylan Robinson

Associate Professor

PhD

Languages, Literatures and Cultures

Arts and Science

People Directory Affiliation Category

Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Arts

Research interests: The politics of Indigenous inclusion and recognition in the arts; The use of Indigenous Languages in Public Art; Canada鈥檚 Truth and Reconciliation Commission; Indigenous and Settler Affect

Education

Ph. D. in Music, University of Sussex
M. A. in Music and Visual Arts, University of Victoria
B. A. in Art and Cultural Studies, Simon Fraser University

成人大片

Professor Robinson is a St贸:l艒 scholar who holds the Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Arts at Queen鈥檚 University, located on the traditional lands of the Haudenosaunee and Anishinaabe peoples. His research has been supported by national and international fellowships at the Faculty of Music at the University of Toronto, in the Canadian Studies Program at the University of California Berkeley, the Indigeneity in the Contemporary World project at Royal Holloway University of London, and a Banting Postdoctoral fellowship in the First Nations Studies Program at the University of British Columbia.

From 2010-2013 Dylan led the SSHRC-funded 鈥淎esthetics of Reconciliation鈥 project with Dr. Keavy Martin that examined the role that the arts and Indigenous cultural practices played in the Truth and Reconciliation Commission on the Indian Residential Schools. This research led to a second collaborative project, 鈥淐reative Conciliation鈥, supported by a SSHRC Insight grant, to explore new artistic models that move beyond what many Indigenous scholars have identified as reconciliation鈥檚 political limitations.

Dr. Robinson鈥檚 current research project documents the history of contemporary Indigenous public art across North America, and questions how Indigenous rights and settler colonialism are embodied and spatialized in public space. Funded by the Canada Research Chair program, this project involves working with Indigenous artists and scholars to collaboratively imagine new forms of public engagement and create new public works that speak to Indigenous experience. Dr. Robinson is also an avid Halq'em茅ylem language learner. Y煤:wqwlha kws t'铆:lemtel te sqw谩:ltset!