T'Sou-ke Totem
PUBLIC INSTALLATION
A totem that will present as a welcome figure for T’Sou-ke Nation. For this project, Carey worked with T’Sou-ke youth as a way to actively engage the community with the artwork. The project is commissioned by T’Souke Arts Group (TAG) with support from the Canada Council for the Arts and is expected to be completed in the fall of 2023.
OTHER INSTALLATIONS
ka’yasu’/ne’nakw
A shadow is formed by the presence of a form disrupting light. Paint, cracked and faded, conveys the presence of sunlight, weather, and the passage of time. An empty pedestal suggests the absence of a statue… but was it torn down, removed for repairs, or is it yet to be installed? Do freshly plowed fields indicate the absence of crops or signal fresh crops to come? And what becomes of the forests, animals, and grasslands displaced by agriculture?
Seattle Symphony
For this project, Carey created animals to be projected against walls of the concert hall to “illustrate” Seattle Symphony’s performance of Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ Tate’s "Chief Spirit Names the Animal People.”
Dragon and Tiger Mural
A private commission that is three stories high depicting a dragon and tiger.
Convergence
A collaborative art piece created with Jordan Hill and Omid Afarinzad that resides in the Esquimalt Town Centre.
All My Relations RRU
All My Relations is a stainless steel installation in the Dogwood Auditorium at Royal Roads University. The design speaks to the concept of the Kwakwak’awakw term awi’nakola, which means to live in good relations with the land, air, water, spirit world, and everything within them.
Frankfurt Book Fair
The Witness Blanket was featured as Canada’s “Guest of Honour” at the 2021 Frankfurt Book Fair.
Hearts and Hands
Beginning in 2018, Hearts and Hands was a project with Oaklands Elementary to integrate authentic Indigenous learning into the classroom in a “hearts on, hands on” manner.
Sooke Harbour House Pole
A private commission carved to represent each member of the owner’s family.
Spirit Pole
A totem carved for the Cowichan 2008 North American Indigenous Games, with the assistance of over 10,000 people in British Columbia.
OTHER INSTALLATIONS