Place des festivals has been transformed by a setting created by Michel Marsolais. He has permeated it with the cosmic vision of the First Peoples and drawn upon the inspiration of contemporary Indigenous artists who convey the rich spiritual and artistic heritage of the land in their own style.
Anishnabe artist Caroline Monnet ( carolinemonnet.ca ) of the ITWÉ collective designed the striking and luminous visual identity for the site; Athanore assisted her in her multimedia creation.
The great central teepee evokes the vertical axis uniting the sky, the earth and the underwater world. At the apex, a goose in flight recalls the birds that carried Atahensic, the Skywoman, on the first day of the world. At ground level, the turtle represents the sea world and her shell the earth’s crust, which she carries on her back.
The longhouse is architecture in the Iroquois tradition, thus very typical of Montreal.
The teepees (Amerindian nations) and the tupik (Inuit) are forms of textile architecture evoking the prairies, the taiga and the tundra.
The cervids in the fountains are references to the animal kingdom and the nourishing forest; the water sprays represent the soul that instils life into creation.
From Thursday August 4th to Sunday August 7th.
A luminous visual setting has been specially designed for our 2014 edition by the Anishinable artist Caroline Monnet from the AM collective. Her geometric frames and vivid colours are drawn straight from the visual heritage of Amerindian imagination. From 9pm to 11p.m., alternating, every day.
A sequence created by Michel Poulin (Athanor) is an homage to Mother Earth as Amerindians see her. The video refers to the birth of the world, the first spark of life, Missinak the turtle’s crossing, up to our world. A performance bridging the gap between tradition and modernity, from the roots (tradition, memory) to the tree (the human community) and treetop branches reaching to the future. From 9 p.m. to 11 p.m, alternating, every day.
In French
D’Odanak, artisanat, contes et chants pour rappeler le lien immémorial qui unit l’humanité au frêne, arbre emblématique de la culture abénakise.
Le tambour des Buffalo Hat Singers, les danses traditionnelles (avec Barbara Diabo, Ivanie Aubin Malo et les Ray Deer Family Mohawk Dancers) et le feu où grille le gibier, expriment notre attachement à la Terre Mère et notre appartenance à l’unité du vivant. À l’ombre du grand tipi, qu’ils soient Naskapis, Inuit, Atikemekw ou Innus, les artistes reprennent le fil qui nous unit aux ancêtres dont l’esprit continue de vivre dans la création contemporaine.
Jeudi, vendredi, samedi et dimanche en après-midi