Postponed: Community Opening: Rosy Simas
Event Details
Tickets & Info
Please note: This Community Opening has been rescheduled for April 30. Tickets will transfer automatically.
Join artist Rosy Simas (Seneca Nation of Indians, Heron clan) and Reuben Roqueñi, Executive Director of the Portland Institute for Contemporary Art, in conversation to celebrate the opening of the exhibition Rosy Simas: A:gajë:gwah dësa’nigöëwë:nye:’ (i hope it will stir your mind). The two will discuss Simas’s transdisciplinary practice, from her long history in choreography to her recent work in sound and video installation.
Following the artist talk, enjoy conversation and small bites with a reception in the Cargill Lounge beginning at 7 pm.
This event requires a free ticket; registration is available online. Seating is available on a first-come, first-served basis. Overflow seating will be available in the Walker Cinema.
Gallery admission is free on Thursday nights, 5 to 9 pm. Admission tickets are available at the Main Lobby desk.
This program will have ASL interpretation and live open captioning. Assistive Listening devices are available for checkout from the box office.
ASL, captioning, and assistive listening will also be available in the Walker Cinema.
For more information about accessibility at the Walker, visit our Access page.
For questions about accessibility or to request additional accommodations, call 612-375-7564 or email access@walkerart.org.
Rosy Simas (Seneca Nation of Indians, Heron clan) is a multidisciplinary artist whose work weaves personal and collective identity with themes of family, sovereignty, equality, and healing. Simas’s knowledge of her Hodinöšyö:nih family and lineage is the underpinning of her relationship to culture and history—stored in her body and expressed through her work for both stage and gallery. Simas creates with a team of Native and BIPOC artists. Her work is driven by deep listening. Simas’s works for the stage include she who lives on the road to war, Weave, Skin(s), and We Wait in the Darkness. Her installations have been exhibited at the Onöhsagwë:de’ Cultural Center, All My Relations Arts, SOO Visual Arts, and the Weisman Art Museum. Simas is a Doris Duke Artist, Native Arts and Cultures Foundation Fellow, Forge Project Fellow, Guggenheim Fellow, McKnight Foundation Fellow, Dance/USA Fellow, United States Artists Fellow, First People’s Fund Performing Arts Fellow, and a Joyce Awardee. Her accolades also include a Native Arts and Cultures Foundation SHIFT award and multiple awards from the New England Foundation for the Arts National Dance Project, the MAP Fund, and the National Performance Network. Simas is a 2024–2026 Walker Art Center artist in residence.
Reuben Roqueñi is a nationally respected arts administrator with more than 20 years in progressive program development, management, artist-centric support systems, grant-making, and presenting experience. He is currently Executive Director at Portland Institute for Contemporary in Portland, Oregon, presenting some of the most innovative, risk-taking, and compelling artists from around the world. Previously, he was Director of Transformative Change Programs at Native Arts and Cultures Foundation, serving Native American, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian artists, organizations, and programs across the US. Formerly, Roqueñi was Program Officer in the Performing Arts Program at the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation in the San Francisco Bay Area, one the largest arts and culture funders in the US; and he served as Grants Program Director at the Arts Foundation for Tucson and Southern Arizona. Roqueñi is of mixed Yaqui, Mayo, and Mexican American ancestry, and his family is rooted in the Sonoran desert of southeast Arizona and northern Mexico.
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