Phyllis Grant
Phyllis Grant is a Mi’kmaw artist from Pabineau First Nation, New Brunswick, Canada.
Her artwork was exhibited in Canada at the Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba (2007), and in the US with Honor the Earth’s “Impacted Nations” which toured New York City, Minneapolis, Santa Fe, and Chicago (2005–2008). Phyllis's artwork was also exhibited with “Irréductibles Racines“ -an exhibition partnered with Le Congrès Mondial Acadien (2009–2010). In 2018 and 2019 her art was exhibited in Rome at Angelica Gallery and Foundation Besso, Italy.
She is a Canada Council grantee for Writing and Publishing, and a multiple grant recipient of the New Brunswick Arts Board. Her memberships include the Writer's Guild of Canada, the East Coast Music Association and the Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada (SOCAN).
In 2004, Grant was nominated for an East Coast Music Award for her work with Mi'gmaq rap artist Red Suga. She is also a Mi'gmaq rap and spoken word artist. Her first solo cd titled Up Risin' was nominated for a 2009 ECMA.
In 2006, she completed her first film, Maq and the Spirit of the Woods -a children’s animation produced by the National Film Board of Canada.[1] It was selected and screened at several festivals, including the imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival in Toronto, the American Indian Film Institute’s Film Festival in San Francisco, the Chicago International Children’s Film Festival and National Geographic's All Roads Film Festival in Los Angeles and Washington DC. It was also screened at the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian in New York City.
She released her second animated film Waseteg with the NFB in 2010.[2] The film premiered at the Atlantic Film Festival in Halifax, Nova Scotia. It was nominated for a Golden Sheaf Award at the Yorkton Film Festival, 2011, and selected and screened at the Chicago International Children's Film Festival (2011).
Grant's work is also featured in Pearson Canada’s Literacy in Action textbooks, launched autumn 2007. In 2008, she was a finalist in the 4th Atlantic Ulnooweg Development Group's Aboriginal Entrepreneur Awards in the category of Woman Entrepreneur of the Year.
Grant is also one of 15 artists across Canada who designed and painted a six-foot Coca-Cola art bottle for Coca-Cola Canada’s “Aboriginal Art Bottle Program” for the 2010 Winter Olympics.
Phyllis is one of 150 Canadians selected by the Government of Canada to serve as a Canada 150 Ambassador with the title Distinguished Artist (2017).
In 2020, she founded Welneweg, a Mi'gmaq arts collective in New Brunswick, Canada, in honor of her father, Gilbert Sewell. (2021)
References[edit]
- ↑ "Our Collection: Phyllis Grant". National Film Board of Canada. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
- ↑ "Waseteg". Atlantic Film Festival. Archived from the original on September 13, 2010. Retrieved January 15, 2011. Unknown parameter
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- Golden Sheaf Awards Nominees
- Aboriginal Coke Bottle Art
- https://www2.gnb.ca/content/gnb/en/news/news_release.2008.09.1371.html
- https://www.fapoesie.ca/fr/phyllis-grant
- https://www.villacharities.com/press-release/villa-charities-presents-international-watercolour-exhibition-italy-canada/ Associazione Romana Acquerellisti (ARA)/Roman Watercolour Association
- https://www.pinterest.ca/pin/541206080222124326/?nic_v2=1a51Kjwde
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- 1972 births
- 21st-century First Nations people
- Artists from New Brunswick
- Canadian animated film directors
- Canadian animated film producers
- Canadian animators
- Canadian women artists
- Canadian women film directors
- Canadian women film producers
- Film directors from New Brunswick
- First Nations artists
- First Nations filmmakers
- Mi'kmaq people
- People from Bathurst, New Brunswick
- Canadian women animators
- Canadian women rappers