Alex Jacobs-Blum
Hodinöhsö:ni’/German | Gayogo̱hó꞉nǫʼ🍓Six Nations of the Grand River | Wolf Clan 🐺 | Artist/ Curator | based in Hamilton, ON

Roda Medhat’s (@reallyroda) stunning solo exhibition, Things I Can Fold, Deflate, and Break, at the Art Gallery of Burlington (@artgallburl)

Roda Medhat’s (@reallyroda) stunning solo exhibition, Things I Can Fold, Deflate, and Break, at the Art Gallery of Burlington (@artgallburl)

Roda Medhat’s (@reallyroda) stunning solo exhibition, Things I Can Fold, Deflate, and Break, at the Art Gallery of Burlington (@artgallburl)

Roda Medhat’s (@reallyroda) stunning solo exhibition, Things I Can Fold, Deflate, and Break, at the Art Gallery of Burlington (@artgallburl)
Roda Medhat’s (@reallyroda) stunning solo exhibition, Things I Can Fold, Deflate, and Break, at the Art Gallery of Burlington (@artgallburl)
Roda Medhat’s (@reallyroda) stunning solo exhibition, Things I Can Fold, Deflate, and Break, at the Art Gallery of Burlington (@artgallburl)

Roda Medhat’s (@reallyroda) stunning solo exhibition, Things I Can Fold, Deflate, and Break, at the Art Gallery of Burlington (@artgallburl)

Roda Medhat’s (@reallyroda) stunning solo exhibition, Things I Can Fold, Deflate, and Break, at the Art Gallery of Burlington (@artgallburl)

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!

More photos from Australia!
We took some time in Coolum Beach after the conference. One of my favourite days was visiting the Noosa Everglades. I loved that the tea tree leaves tint the water a beautiful red!
Then we flew to Sydney and spent a wonderful few days with Andy (@andykeoquan) and Stevie, who made us to a gorgeous dinner and showed us around town!
And forgot to thank Rosie (@rosannabstevens) and Kate for your warm hospitality in Kabi Kabi Country—we loved having a yarn with you! 🩷 hope to be back soon!
It was a beautiful welcome to the Indigenous Futures Centre conference from Uncle Lyndon and the Kabi Kabi community on the Sunshine Coast! I was incredibly honoured to co-present our curatorial exhibition, Ascending Horizons, with Kim Anderson and to meet so many Indigenous scholars, researchers, and artists from around the world!

It was a beautiful welcome to the Indigenous Futures Centre conference from Uncle Lyndon and the Kabi Kabi community on the Sunshine Coast! I was incredibly honoured to co-present our curatorial exhibition, Ascending Horizons, with Kim Anderson and to meet so many Indigenous scholars, researchers, and artists from around the world!
It was a beautiful welcome to the Indigenous Futures Centre conference from Uncle Lyndon and the Kabi Kabi community on the Sunshine Coast! I was incredibly honoured to co-present our curatorial exhibition, Ascending Horizons, with Kim Anderson and to meet so many Indigenous scholars, researchers, and artists from around the world!

It was a beautiful welcome to the Indigenous Futures Centre conference from Uncle Lyndon and the Kabi Kabi community on the Sunshine Coast! I was incredibly honoured to co-present our curatorial exhibition, Ascending Horizons, with Kim Anderson and to meet so many Indigenous scholars, researchers, and artists from around the world!

It was a beautiful welcome to the Indigenous Futures Centre conference from Uncle Lyndon and the Kabi Kabi community on the Sunshine Coast! I was incredibly honoured to co-present our curatorial exhibition, Ascending Horizons, with Kim Anderson and to meet so many Indigenous scholars, researchers, and artists from around the world!

It was a beautiful welcome to the Indigenous Futures Centre conference from Uncle Lyndon and the Kabi Kabi community on the Sunshine Coast! I was incredibly honoured to co-present our curatorial exhibition, Ascending Horizons, with Kim Anderson and to meet so many Indigenous scholars, researchers, and artists from around the world!

It was a beautiful welcome to the Indigenous Futures Centre conference from Uncle Lyndon and the Kabi Kabi community on the Sunshine Coast! I was incredibly honoured to co-present our curatorial exhibition, Ascending Horizons, with Kim Anderson and to meet so many Indigenous scholars, researchers, and artists from around the world!

It was a beautiful welcome to the Indigenous Futures Centre conference from Uncle Lyndon and the Kabi Kabi community on the Sunshine Coast! I was incredibly honoured to co-present our curatorial exhibition, Ascending Horizons, with Kim Anderson and to meet so many Indigenous scholars, researchers, and artists from around the world!

It was a beautiful welcome to the Indigenous Futures Centre conference from Uncle Lyndon and the Kabi Kabi community on the Sunshine Coast! I was incredibly honoured to co-present our curatorial exhibition, Ascending Horizons, with Kim Anderson and to meet so many Indigenous scholars, researchers, and artists from around the world!

It was a beautiful welcome to the Indigenous Futures Centre conference from Uncle Lyndon and the Kabi Kabi community on the Sunshine Coast! I was incredibly honoured to co-present our curatorial exhibition, Ascending Horizons, with Kim Anderson and to meet so many Indigenous scholars, researchers, and artists from around the world!

It was a beautiful welcome to the Indigenous Futures Centre conference from Uncle Lyndon and the Kabi Kabi community on the Sunshine Coast! I was incredibly honoured to co-present our curatorial exhibition, Ascending Horizons, with Kim Anderson and to meet so many Indigenous scholars, researchers, and artists from around the world!

It was a beautiful welcome to the Indigenous Futures Centre conference from Uncle Lyndon and the Kabi Kabi community on the Sunshine Coast! I was incredibly honoured to co-present our curatorial exhibition, Ascending Horizons, with Kim Anderson and to meet so many Indigenous scholars, researchers, and artists from around the world!

Late to posting, but had a quick stop in Vancouver before heading to Queensland, Australia! And had the best time catching up with Charlene Vickers in her studio and over dinner before traveling to present our Ascending Horizons exhibition and catalogue at the Indigenous Futures Centre conference ✨

Late to posting, but had a quick stop in Vancouver before heading to Queensland, Australia! And had the best time catching up with Charlene Vickers in her studio and over dinner before traveling to present our Ascending Horizons exhibition and catalogue at the Indigenous Futures Centre conference ✨

Late to posting, but had a quick stop in Vancouver before heading to Queensland, Australia! And had the best time catching up with Charlene Vickers in her studio and over dinner before traveling to present our Ascending Horizons exhibition and catalogue at the Indigenous Futures Centre conference ✨

Late to posting, but had a quick stop in Vancouver before heading to Queensland, Australia! And had the best time catching up with Charlene Vickers in her studio and over dinner before traveling to present our Ascending Horizons exhibition and catalogue at the Indigenous Futures Centre conference ✨

Late to posting, but had a quick stop in Vancouver before heading to Queensland, Australia! And had the best time catching up with Charlene Vickers in her studio and over dinner before traveling to present our Ascending Horizons exhibition and catalogue at the Indigenous Futures Centre conference ✨

Late to posting, but had a quick stop in Vancouver before heading to Queensland, Australia! And had the best time catching up with Charlene Vickers in her studio and over dinner before traveling to present our Ascending Horizons exhibition and catalogue at the Indigenous Futures Centre conference ✨

Late to posting, but had a quick stop in Vancouver before heading to Queensland, Australia! And had the best time catching up with Charlene Vickers in her studio and over dinner before traveling to present our Ascending Horizons exhibition and catalogue at the Indigenous Futures Centre conference ✨

Late to posting, but had a quick stop in Vancouver before heading to Queensland, Australia! And had the best time catching up with Charlene Vickers in her studio and over dinner before traveling to present our Ascending Horizons exhibition and catalogue at the Indigenous Futures Centre conference ✨
Find the full show 🔗 in bio! Our Aunties Emergent series amplifying powerful young Indigenous voices returns! 🎙In this episode, @alexjacobsblum (Cayuga) visits with Jaime Montour, of the Delaware, Turtle Clan, and Lenape Nations who lives in the Six Nations of the Grand River Territory.
Jaime brings a lifetime of experience connecting law, wellness, and spirit and shares powerful reflections on restorative justice, trauma-informed advocacy, and spirit-led reconciliation. ATTENTION: This episode includes stories of addiction and healing. Nyá:wen @indigenousscreen for your continued support! #indigenousart #indigenousmedia #indigenouspodcast #indigenouswomen #listentoyouraunties

Discover Alex Jacobs-Blum’s captivating work in 𝘌𝘢𝘳𝘵𝘩𝘸𝘰𝘳𝘬 through an Artist Tour.
📆 Wednesday, October 22
🕧 6pm–7:30pm
📍 University of Toronto Art Centre, 15 King's College Circle
@alexjacobsblum invites audiences into a thoughtful conversation about her lived experiences as a Gayogo̱hó nǫʼ (Cayuga) and German visual artist and independent curator, and her practice’s deep connection to the land and natural world.
🎟️ Free and open to the public! Registration is recommended but not required.
🔗 Link in bio for more info.
—
About the Artist:
Alex Jacobs-Blum (she/her) is a Gayogo̱hó nǫʼ (Cayuga) and German visual artist and independent curator living in Hamilton, ON. Her research focuses on Indigenous futurities and accessing embodied ancestral Hodinöhsö:ni’ knowledge. The core of her practice and methodology is a strong foundation in community building, fostering relationships, empowering youth, and Indigenizing institutional spaces. Her creative process is rooted in storytelling and challenging hierarchical power structures. Alex seeks to facilitate transformative change infused with love and care.
Alex received a Bachelor of Photography at Sheridan College in 2015, where she was awarded the Canon Award of Excellence for Narrative Photography. Her artistic work has been exhibited at the Art Gallery of Hamilton, University of Ottawa, Woodland Cultural Centre and the Robert McLaughlin Gallery. Alex’s curatorial projects include Ascending Horizons (2025) at the McMaster Museum of Art, In the Shadow of the Eclipse (2024) at the Art Gallery of Hamilton, Treaty Girl (2024) at Longhouse Labs, University of Waterloo, and Born Celestial (2022) at Hamilton Artists Inc.
—
📸 Images:
1–Alex Jacobs-Blum, O.ih.wa‘ (detail), 2019. Digital photograph, inkjet print on Hanemühle Photo Rag Bright White, 16” x 20”. Courtesy of the artist.
2–Alex Jacobs-Blum, portrait by Marc LeSage.

Discover Alex Jacobs-Blum’s captivating work in 𝘌𝘢𝘳𝘵𝘩𝘸𝘰𝘳𝘬 through an Artist Tour.
📆 Wednesday, October 22
🕧 6pm–7:30pm
📍 University of Toronto Art Centre, 15 King's College Circle
@alexjacobsblum invites audiences into a thoughtful conversation about her lived experiences as a Gayogo̱hó nǫʼ (Cayuga) and German visual artist and independent curator, and her practice’s deep connection to the land and natural world.
🎟️ Free and open to the public! Registration is recommended but not required.
🔗 Link in bio for more info.
—
About the Artist:
Alex Jacobs-Blum (she/her) is a Gayogo̱hó nǫʼ (Cayuga) and German visual artist and independent curator living in Hamilton, ON. Her research focuses on Indigenous futurities and accessing embodied ancestral Hodinöhsö:ni’ knowledge. The core of her practice and methodology is a strong foundation in community building, fostering relationships, empowering youth, and Indigenizing institutional spaces. Her creative process is rooted in storytelling and challenging hierarchical power structures. Alex seeks to facilitate transformative change infused with love and care.
Alex received a Bachelor of Photography at Sheridan College in 2015, where she was awarded the Canon Award of Excellence for Narrative Photography. Her artistic work has been exhibited at the Art Gallery of Hamilton, University of Ottawa, Woodland Cultural Centre and the Robert McLaughlin Gallery. Alex’s curatorial projects include Ascending Horizons (2025) at the McMaster Museum of Art, In the Shadow of the Eclipse (2024) at the Art Gallery of Hamilton, Treaty Girl (2024) at Longhouse Labs, University of Waterloo, and Born Celestial (2022) at Hamilton Artists Inc.
—
📸 Images:
1–Alex Jacobs-Blum, O.ih.wa‘ (detail), 2019. Digital photograph, inkjet print on Hanemühle Photo Rag Bright White, 16” x 20”. Courtesy of the artist.
2–Alex Jacobs-Blum, portrait by Marc LeSage.

Only a few more days left to see the Indigenous Art Exhibition at Woodland Cultural Centre, open until September 30 🧡
Curating the 50th Anniversary Indigenous Art Juried Exhibition has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career! Since its beginning in 1975, the Indigenous Art exhibitions at WCC have been part of an ongoing movement that shares how Indigenous artists have always been at the forefront, reshaping conversations in the arts.
It has been a great honour to work with so many powerful voices, from emerging to lifelong artists. Many of them have inspired my practice as an image maker. I learned so much from the artists, the jurors, and the wonderful team at Woodland Cultural Centre.
In celebrating 50 years, we also carve pathways for the future. Legacy is something we inherit and continue forward. Like the seeds referenced in the title of the companion exhibition, “Tending to the Seeds”, featuring Patricia Deadman and Thomas V. Hill, this legacy grows when nurtured with love. They have made significant contributions to the arts as curators at Woodland and as practicing artists, carving pathways for many to follow (like me!)
Nyá:węh gowa to all the artists for sharing your work, and to the community for continuing to support Indigenous arts. Here’s to what the next 50 years will bring! ✨
Thank you to the Ontario Arts Council @ontarioartscouncil and The Brown Homestead @thebrownhomesteadca for supporting this project.
Exhibition documentation by @lfdocumentation

Only a few more days left to see the Indigenous Art Exhibition at Woodland Cultural Centre, open until September 30 🧡
Curating the 50th Anniversary Indigenous Art Juried Exhibition has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career! Since its beginning in 1975, the Indigenous Art exhibitions at WCC have been part of an ongoing movement that shares how Indigenous artists have always been at the forefront, reshaping conversations in the arts.
It has been a great honour to work with so many powerful voices, from emerging to lifelong artists. Many of them have inspired my practice as an image maker. I learned so much from the artists, the jurors, and the wonderful team at Woodland Cultural Centre.
In celebrating 50 years, we also carve pathways for the future. Legacy is something we inherit and continue forward. Like the seeds referenced in the title of the companion exhibition, “Tending to the Seeds”, featuring Patricia Deadman and Thomas V. Hill, this legacy grows when nurtured with love. They have made significant contributions to the arts as curators at Woodland and as practicing artists, carving pathways for many to follow (like me!)
Nyá:węh gowa to all the artists for sharing your work, and to the community for continuing to support Indigenous arts. Here’s to what the next 50 years will bring! ✨
Thank you to the Ontario Arts Council @ontarioartscouncil and The Brown Homestead @thebrownhomesteadca for supporting this project.
Exhibition documentation by @lfdocumentation

Only a few more days left to see the Indigenous Art Exhibition at Woodland Cultural Centre, open until September 30 🧡
Curating the 50th Anniversary Indigenous Art Juried Exhibition has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career! Since its beginning in 1975, the Indigenous Art exhibitions at WCC have been part of an ongoing movement that shares how Indigenous artists have always been at the forefront, reshaping conversations in the arts.
It has been a great honour to work with so many powerful voices, from emerging to lifelong artists. Many of them have inspired my practice as an image maker. I learned so much from the artists, the jurors, and the wonderful team at Woodland Cultural Centre.
In celebrating 50 years, we also carve pathways for the future. Legacy is something we inherit and continue forward. Like the seeds referenced in the title of the companion exhibition, “Tending to the Seeds”, featuring Patricia Deadman and Thomas V. Hill, this legacy grows when nurtured with love. They have made significant contributions to the arts as curators at Woodland and as practicing artists, carving pathways for many to follow (like me!)
Nyá:węh gowa to all the artists for sharing your work, and to the community for continuing to support Indigenous arts. Here’s to what the next 50 years will bring! ✨
Thank you to the Ontario Arts Council @ontarioartscouncil and The Brown Homestead @thebrownhomesteadca for supporting this project.
Exhibition documentation by @lfdocumentation

Only a few more days left to see the Indigenous Art Exhibition at Woodland Cultural Centre, open until September 30 🧡
Curating the 50th Anniversary Indigenous Art Juried Exhibition has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career! Since its beginning in 1975, the Indigenous Art exhibitions at WCC have been part of an ongoing movement that shares how Indigenous artists have always been at the forefront, reshaping conversations in the arts.
It has been a great honour to work with so many powerful voices, from emerging to lifelong artists. Many of them have inspired my practice as an image maker. I learned so much from the artists, the jurors, and the wonderful team at Woodland Cultural Centre.
In celebrating 50 years, we also carve pathways for the future. Legacy is something we inherit and continue forward. Like the seeds referenced in the title of the companion exhibition, “Tending to the Seeds”, featuring Patricia Deadman and Thomas V. Hill, this legacy grows when nurtured with love. They have made significant contributions to the arts as curators at Woodland and as practicing artists, carving pathways for many to follow (like me!)
Nyá:węh gowa to all the artists for sharing your work, and to the community for continuing to support Indigenous arts. Here’s to what the next 50 years will bring! ✨
Thank you to the Ontario Arts Council @ontarioartscouncil and The Brown Homestead @thebrownhomesteadca for supporting this project.
Exhibition documentation by @lfdocumentation

Only a few more days left to see the Indigenous Art Exhibition at Woodland Cultural Centre, open until September 30 🧡
Curating the 50th Anniversary Indigenous Art Juried Exhibition has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career! Since its beginning in 1975, the Indigenous Art exhibitions at WCC have been part of an ongoing movement that shares how Indigenous artists have always been at the forefront, reshaping conversations in the arts.
It has been a great honour to work with so many powerful voices, from emerging to lifelong artists. Many of them have inspired my practice as an image maker. I learned so much from the artists, the jurors, and the wonderful team at Woodland Cultural Centre.
In celebrating 50 years, we also carve pathways for the future. Legacy is something we inherit and continue forward. Like the seeds referenced in the title of the companion exhibition, “Tending to the Seeds”, featuring Patricia Deadman and Thomas V. Hill, this legacy grows when nurtured with love. They have made significant contributions to the arts as curators at Woodland and as practicing artists, carving pathways for many to follow (like me!)
Nyá:węh gowa to all the artists for sharing your work, and to the community for continuing to support Indigenous arts. Here’s to what the next 50 years will bring! ✨
Thank you to the Ontario Arts Council @ontarioartscouncil and The Brown Homestead @thebrownhomesteadca for supporting this project.
Exhibition documentation by @lfdocumentation

Only a few more days left to see the Indigenous Art Exhibition at Woodland Cultural Centre, open until September 30 🧡
Curating the 50th Anniversary Indigenous Art Juried Exhibition has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career! Since its beginning in 1975, the Indigenous Art exhibitions at WCC have been part of an ongoing movement that shares how Indigenous artists have always been at the forefront, reshaping conversations in the arts.
It has been a great honour to work with so many powerful voices, from emerging to lifelong artists. Many of them have inspired my practice as an image maker. I learned so much from the artists, the jurors, and the wonderful team at Woodland Cultural Centre.
In celebrating 50 years, we also carve pathways for the future. Legacy is something we inherit and continue forward. Like the seeds referenced in the title of the companion exhibition, “Tending to the Seeds”, featuring Patricia Deadman and Thomas V. Hill, this legacy grows when nurtured with love. They have made significant contributions to the arts as curators at Woodland and as practicing artists, carving pathways for many to follow (like me!)
Nyá:węh gowa to all the artists for sharing your work, and to the community for continuing to support Indigenous arts. Here’s to what the next 50 years will bring! ✨
Thank you to the Ontario Arts Council @ontarioartscouncil and The Brown Homestead @thebrownhomesteadca for supporting this project.
Exhibition documentation by @lfdocumentation

Only a few more days left to see the Indigenous Art Exhibition at Woodland Cultural Centre, open until September 30 🧡
Curating the 50th Anniversary Indigenous Art Juried Exhibition has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career! Since its beginning in 1975, the Indigenous Art exhibitions at WCC have been part of an ongoing movement that shares how Indigenous artists have always been at the forefront, reshaping conversations in the arts.
It has been a great honour to work with so many powerful voices, from emerging to lifelong artists. Many of them have inspired my practice as an image maker. I learned so much from the artists, the jurors, and the wonderful team at Woodland Cultural Centre.
In celebrating 50 years, we also carve pathways for the future. Legacy is something we inherit and continue forward. Like the seeds referenced in the title of the companion exhibition, “Tending to the Seeds”, featuring Patricia Deadman and Thomas V. Hill, this legacy grows when nurtured with love. They have made significant contributions to the arts as curators at Woodland and as practicing artists, carving pathways for many to follow (like me!)
Nyá:węh gowa to all the artists for sharing your work, and to the community for continuing to support Indigenous arts. Here’s to what the next 50 years will bring! ✨
Thank you to the Ontario Arts Council @ontarioartscouncil and The Brown Homestead @thebrownhomesteadca for supporting this project.
Exhibition documentation by @lfdocumentation

Only a few more days left to see the Indigenous Art Exhibition at Woodland Cultural Centre, open until September 30 🧡
Curating the 50th Anniversary Indigenous Art Juried Exhibition has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career! Since its beginning in 1975, the Indigenous Art exhibitions at WCC have been part of an ongoing movement that shares how Indigenous artists have always been at the forefront, reshaping conversations in the arts.
It has been a great honour to work with so many powerful voices, from emerging to lifelong artists. Many of them have inspired my practice as an image maker. I learned so much from the artists, the jurors, and the wonderful team at Woodland Cultural Centre.
In celebrating 50 years, we also carve pathways for the future. Legacy is something we inherit and continue forward. Like the seeds referenced in the title of the companion exhibition, “Tending to the Seeds”, featuring Patricia Deadman and Thomas V. Hill, this legacy grows when nurtured with love. They have made significant contributions to the arts as curators at Woodland and as practicing artists, carving pathways for many to follow (like me!)
Nyá:węh gowa to all the artists for sharing your work, and to the community for continuing to support Indigenous arts. Here’s to what the next 50 years will bring! ✨
Thank you to the Ontario Arts Council @ontarioartscouncil and The Brown Homestead @thebrownhomesteadca for supporting this project.
Exhibition documentation by @lfdocumentation

Only a few more days left to see the Indigenous Art Exhibition at Woodland Cultural Centre, open until September 30 🧡
Curating the 50th Anniversary Indigenous Art Juried Exhibition has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career! Since its beginning in 1975, the Indigenous Art exhibitions at WCC have been part of an ongoing movement that shares how Indigenous artists have always been at the forefront, reshaping conversations in the arts.
It has been a great honour to work with so many powerful voices, from emerging to lifelong artists. Many of them have inspired my practice as an image maker. I learned so much from the artists, the jurors, and the wonderful team at Woodland Cultural Centre.
In celebrating 50 years, we also carve pathways for the future. Legacy is something we inherit and continue forward. Like the seeds referenced in the title of the companion exhibition, “Tending to the Seeds”, featuring Patricia Deadman and Thomas V. Hill, this legacy grows when nurtured with love. They have made significant contributions to the arts as curators at Woodland and as practicing artists, carving pathways for many to follow (like me!)
Nyá:węh gowa to all the artists for sharing your work, and to the community for continuing to support Indigenous arts. Here’s to what the next 50 years will bring! ✨
Thank you to the Ontario Arts Council @ontarioartscouncil and The Brown Homestead @thebrownhomesteadca for supporting this project.
Exhibition documentation by @lfdocumentation

Only a few more days left to see the Indigenous Art Exhibition at Woodland Cultural Centre, open until September 30 🧡
Curating the 50th Anniversary Indigenous Art Juried Exhibition has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career! Since its beginning in 1975, the Indigenous Art exhibitions at WCC have been part of an ongoing movement that shares how Indigenous artists have always been at the forefront, reshaping conversations in the arts.
It has been a great honour to work with so many powerful voices, from emerging to lifelong artists. Many of them have inspired my practice as an image maker. I learned so much from the artists, the jurors, and the wonderful team at Woodland Cultural Centre.
In celebrating 50 years, we also carve pathways for the future. Legacy is something we inherit and continue forward. Like the seeds referenced in the title of the companion exhibition, “Tending to the Seeds”, featuring Patricia Deadman and Thomas V. Hill, this legacy grows when nurtured with love. They have made significant contributions to the arts as curators at Woodland and as practicing artists, carving pathways for many to follow (like me!)
Nyá:węh gowa to all the artists for sharing your work, and to the community for continuing to support Indigenous arts. Here’s to what the next 50 years will bring! ✨
Thank you to the Ontario Arts Council @ontarioartscouncil and The Brown Homestead @thebrownhomesteadca for supporting this project.
Exhibition documentation by @lfdocumentation

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)

I can’t believe there’s just one week left of Ascending Horizons! This is co-curated exhibition I had the deep joy of shaping alongside the brilliant Kim Anderson, my dear friend, collaborator and chosen family. This project has been a dream, grounded in Indigenous women’s knowledge, inherent relationships to land, and the futures we continue to build.
It has been one of the greatest privileges to work and learn from these seven extraordinary Indigenous women artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison, Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Elizabeth Doxtater, Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), and Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio). I have admired all of your practices for many years, and throughout this journey I have come to know you as friends, kin, and mentors. Nyá:węh gowa for your generosity, trust, and care. It has meant the world to me ✨
The opening reception is a memory I’ll hold close forever. Even the snowstorm couldn’t dim the joy of visiting together and celebrating the show. Singing women’s songs in a van full of laughter on the way back from a snowy Six Nations shopping trip was heart medicine 🍓
Last pic is of the crew (minus Marie and Betts, who were missed!) Kicking a$$ and taking names!! 👊🏼💥
As Ascending Horizons closes on June 20, my heart is full that this exhibition has resonated with so many. It was created with so much care, and I believe it will continue to move through the world as it was meant to, as an offering of Indigenous women’s brilliance, sparking dreams and visions for futures on the horizon.
This show has been life-changing and a way for me to honour my late mama. I will carry this forever 🩷💐
Catalogue coming soon!!
✨⭐️🌟💫🪐🌌🌕🌙🪨🌿🍃🌻🌾🌽⚡️🌊🌬️🪽🌅
Stunning exhibition documentation by Laura Findlay (@lauracfindlay)
🌿 Our Aunties Emergent apprentice program is back! This month, guest host @alexjacobsblum (Gayogo̱hó꞉nǫʼ, Wolf Clan) visits with beloved Grandmother Renée Thomas-Hill (Kanyen’kehá:ka, Turtle Clan) 💫 Both are from Six Nations of the Grand River.
👵🏽 Grandmother Renée, founder of @grandmothersvoice shares Onkwehón:we teachings on peace, power & the medicine of the natural world: 🦋
🎨 Alex is a visionary artist and curator whose work uplifts Indigenous futures, youth, and love-fueled change.
🎧 Check above for their full convo - also on Apple, Spotify.. any of your favourite podcasting platforms 💜
Wa'tkwanonweráton to @indigenousscreen for their support of TAD and this Aunties Emergent program.
#listentoyouraunties #auntiesemergent #indigenouspodcast #haudenosaunee #grandmothersvoice #alexjacobsblum #renéethomashill #sixnations #indigenousfutures #gayogohó꞉nǫʼ #mohawk #cayuga
✨ Ascending Horizons ✨
January 8 - June 20, 2025
McMaster Museum of Art
Artists: KC Adams (@adams_kc), Carrie Allison (@carrieallisonart), Judy Anderson (@mizjoodz), Hannah Claus (@cloudmakr), Elizabeth Doxtater, Charlene Vickers (@vickers.charlene), Marie Watt (@marie_watt_studio)
This exhibition weaves together ancient and contemporary materialities, creating a space of storytelling and movement across horizons: water, land, sky, and cosmos. It invites audiences to dream, reflect, and imagine new possibilities. Ascending Horizons is where hope is nurtured, futures are envisioned, and meaningful connections are made between the past, present, and what is yet to come.
Nyá:węh gowa for shaping this exhibition with us. I can’t wait to celebrate at the opening reception on Thursday! 💫
Opening Reception:
Thursday January 30th, 5-8pm
Charlene Vickers “Ancestor Sound” Performance:
Friday January 31st, 11am - 12pm
The events are free and everyone is welcome! Hope to see you there 💜
Thank you to the Canada Council for the Arts for generously supporting the exhibition.
📹 Produced, filmed, and edited by Vuk Dragojevic (@vukdragojevic)

Time isn’t real. Well, it is, and it isn’t. The sun and moon rise and fall, and stuff happens in between. At the Art Gallery of Burlington (AGB), that stuff in between has been happening for fifty years! Opening Thursday January 16 at 6:30 pm, the exhibition Time Isn’t Real pushes beyond celebratory timestamping and makes space for open discussions on the futurity of art and clay 🔮💫🪐 The gallery is using this half-century celebration of artistic production, cultural festivities, connections, and storytelling as an opportunity to bring multiple generations of 🤩💥 Canadian clay artists together including Alex Jacobs-Blum @alexjacobsblum , Roy Caussy x Glenn Lewis, Gabi Dao @postdao Hannah Faas @hannah.faas Thomas Haskell @tshaskell , Manuel Mathieu @manuelmathieu , Julie Moon @juliemoonceramics , Lindsay Montgomery @lindsay_s_montgomery , Anahita Norouzi @anahita_norouzi ORXSTRA @orxstra_ , Linda Sormin @lindasormin , and Shanie Tomassini @shanietom . It is not a survey or biennale of contemporary ceramics, but a blending (or bending) of time, so that what one might call the past, or understand as the future, can be seen as imagining the now—the now as the future. It works against prescribing us into a unidirectional time trap because the gallery, like clay, is active and our histories are complex and many. Because srsly what is time in the context of one of the oldest artforms in existence, one comprised of a material that embodies the passing of time itself? At its core, clay embodies a timeless connection to the Earth, a tangible link between human and non-human worlds via its communion with all the elements—earth, water, air, and fire.
The exhibition’s title is taken from the words and guidance of Kim Wheatly, Ojibwe Anishinaabe Grandmother from Shawanaga First Nation Reserve, who reminds everyone that indoctrinated time is not the only reading or measure of time, and that the natural cycles of the earth and cosmos inform our ways of being.
Image credit: ORXSTRA, Convergence, 2023. Single channel video, 00:09:06. Courtesy of the artists.

Time isn’t real. Well, it is, and it isn’t. The sun and moon rise and fall, and stuff happens in between. At the Art Gallery of Burlington (AGB), that stuff in between has been happening for fifty years! Opening Thursday January 16 at 6:30 pm, the exhibition Time Isn’t Real pushes beyond celebratory timestamping and makes space for open discussions on the futurity of art and clay 🔮💫🪐 The gallery is using this half-century celebration of artistic production, cultural festivities, connections, and storytelling as an opportunity to bring multiple generations of 🤩💥 Canadian clay artists together including Alex Jacobs-Blum @alexjacobsblum , Roy Caussy x Glenn Lewis, Gabi Dao @postdao Hannah Faas @hannah.faas Thomas Haskell @tshaskell , Manuel Mathieu @manuelmathieu , Julie Moon @juliemoonceramics , Lindsay Montgomery @lindsay_s_montgomery , Anahita Norouzi @anahita_norouzi ORXSTRA @orxstra_ , Linda Sormin @lindasormin , and Shanie Tomassini @shanietom . It is not a survey or biennale of contemporary ceramics, but a blending (or bending) of time, so that what one might call the past, or understand as the future, can be seen as imagining the now—the now as the future. It works against prescribing us into a unidirectional time trap because the gallery, like clay, is active and our histories are complex and many. Because srsly what is time in the context of one of the oldest artforms in existence, one comprised of a material that embodies the passing of time itself? At its core, clay embodies a timeless connection to the Earth, a tangible link between human and non-human worlds via its communion with all the elements—earth, water, air, and fire.
The exhibition’s title is taken from the words and guidance of Kim Wheatly, Ojibwe Anishinaabe Grandmother from Shawanaga First Nation Reserve, who reminds everyone that indoctrinated time is not the only reading or measure of time, and that the natural cycles of the earth and cosmos inform our ways of being.
Image credit: ORXSTRA, Convergence, 2023. Single channel video, 00:09:06. Courtesy of the artists.
Il Visualizzatore Storie Instagram è uno strumento facile da usare che ti permette di guardare e salvare le storie, video, foto o IGTV di Instagram in modo segreto. Con questo servizio puoi scaricare contenuti e goderteli offline ogni volta che vuoi. Se trovi qualcosa di interessante su Instagram che vorresti rivedere più tardi o vuoi vedere le storie restando anonimo, il nostro Visualizzatore è perfetto per te. Anonstories offre una soluzione eccellente per mantenere la tua identità nascosta. Instagram ha lanciato per la prima volta la funzionalità Storie nell'agosto 2023, che è stata rapidamente adottata da altre piattaforme per il suo formato coinvolgente e tempestivo. Le storie permettono agli utenti di condividere aggiornamenti rapidi, che siano foto, video o selfie, arricchiti con testo, emoji o filtri, e sono visibili per solo 24 ore. Questo limite di tempo crea un forte coinvolgimento rispetto ai post normali. Oggi, le storie sono uno dei modi più popolari per connettersi e comunicare sui social media. Tuttavia, quando guardi una storia, il creatore può vedere il tuo nome nella loro lista di visualizzatori, il che potrebbe essere un problema per la privacy. E se desiderassi navigare tra le storie senza essere notato? Ecco dove Anonstories diventa utile. Ti consente di guardare contenuti pubblici su Instagram senza rivelare la tua identità. Basta inserire il nome utente del profilo che ti interessa e lo strumento mostrerà le sue ultime storie. Funzionalità del Visualizzatore Anonstories: - Navigazione Anonima: Guarda le storie senza apparire nella lista di visualizzazione. - Nessun Account Necessario: Visualizza contenuti pubblici senza registrarti su Instagram. - Download dei Contenuti: Salva qualsiasi contenuto delle storie direttamente sul tuo dispositivo per un uso offline. - Guarda i Punti Salienti: Accedi ai punti salienti di Instagram, anche oltre la finestra di 24 ore. - Monitoraggio dei Repost: Tieni traccia dei repost o dei livelli di interazione nelle storie per i profili personali. Limitazioni: - Questo strumento funziona solo con account pubblici; gli account privati restano inaccessibili. Vantaggi: - Privacy: Guarda qualsiasi contenuto su Instagram senza essere notato. - Semplice e Facile: Nessuna installazione di app o registrazione richiesta. - Strumenti Esclusivi: Scarica e gestisci contenuti in modi che Instagram non offre.
Segui gli aggiornamenti di Instagram discretamente proteggendo la tua privacy e restando anonimo.
Guarda profili e foto in modo anonimo facilmente usando il Visualizzatore di profili privati.
Questo strumento gratuito ti permette di visualizzare le storie di Instagram in modo anonimo, garantendo che la tua attività rimanga nascosta dall'utente che carica la storia.
Anonstories consente agli utenti di guardare le storie di Instagram senza avvisare il creatore.
Funziona senza problemi su iOS, Android, Windows, macOS e browser moderni come Chrome e Safari.
Garantisce una navigazione sicura e anonima senza richiedere credenziali di accesso.
Gli utenti possono visualizzare storie pubbliche semplicemente inserendo un nome utente—nessun account richiesto.
Scarica foto (JPEG) e video (MP4) facilmente.
Il servizio è gratuito.
Il contenuto degli account privati è accessibile solo ai follower.
I file sono destinati solo a uso personale o educativo e devono rispettare le normative sul copyright.
Inserisci un nome utente pubblico per visualizzare o scaricare storie. Il servizio genera link diretti per salvare i contenuti localmente.