Justine A. Chambers
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Justine A. Chambers is a dancer, choreographer and artist currently living and working in
Vancouver Vancouver is a major city in Western Canada, located in the Lower Mainland region of British Columbia. As the List of cities in British Columbia, most populous city in the province, the 2021 Canadian census recorded 662,248 people in the cit ...
,
British Columbia British Columbia is the westernmost Provinces and territories of Canada, province of Canada. Situated in the Pacific Northwest between the Pacific Ocean and the Rocky Mountains, the province has a diverse geography, with rugged landscapes that ...
. Interested in social choreographies of the everyday, she engages dance in site-specific, experimental and collaborative creation. Chambers has performed in public spaces, contemporary art galleries, performance festivals and on stage. She has produced, choreographed and performed internationally at venues such as; the Push Off Festival, Artspeak's Sensing Salon, Studio 303 in Montreal, The Lexicon:
Canada Dance Festival The Canadian Dance Festival is an annual Ottawa, Ontario event founded in 1987. Held in June, it sets the stage for Canada's most contemporary, innovative and leading edge dance choreographers and dance companies. The festival includes events at ...
,
Vancouver Art Gallery The Vancouver Art Gallery (VAG) is an art museum in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The museum occupies a adjacent to Robson Square in downtown Vancouver, making it the largest art museum in Western Canada by building size. Designed by Fr ...
,
Hong Kong Arts Festival The Hong Kong Arts Festival (HKAF), launched in 1973, is an international arts festival held in Hong Kong. It covers all genres of the performing arts as well as a diverse range of educational events in February and March each year. Histor ...
, Art Museum at U of T and Belkin Art Gallery at
UBC The University of British Columbia (UBC) is a Public university, public research university with campuses near University of British Columbia Vancouver, Vancouver and University of British Columbia Okanagan, Kelowna, in British Columbia, Canada ...
. Chambers has collaborated with many contemporary artists, including; Marilou Lemmens & Richard Ibghy at
Trinity Square Video Trinity Square Video (TSV) is an artist-run centre in Toronto, Canada. It is a space to re-imagine media art and is known for supporting the production and exhibition of video-based work at the intersection of art and technology. It was founded ...
in Toronto,
Evann Siebens Evann Siebens is a Canadian multi-disciplinary artist based in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada while her lens-based practice negotiates the human body as an archival site and the politics of the female gaze. Her practice cross-references fil ...
at Wil Aballe Art Projects, Brendan Fernandes at
Stedelijk Museum The Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam (; Municipal Museum Amsterdam), colloquially known as the Stedelijk, is a museum for modern art, contemporary art, and design located in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
in Amsterdam, Jen Weih at Pitt Gallery, Elisa Ferrari a
Western Front
Margaret Dragu at Audain Gallery SFU, and a long-time collaboration with artist Josh Hite. She is the mother of Max Tyler-Hite.


Selected works


''One Hundred More''

Chambers investigated gesture, rhythm, time and musicality in her work with Laurie Young ''One Hundred More'', in order to connect with embodied, physical movements that reveal recognizable expressions of resistance. This emphasizes her use of gesture as a site of cumulative embodied archives. Known for her pointed observations, and precise dissections she uses conventions of everyday acts to comment on larger social, political and social structures. As a result, her work denies passive spectatorship as her work activates engagement and empathy.


''Family Dinner''

Utilizing relational theatre, Chambers's close readings of dinner time antics dissect the physical responses of guests at a dinner table in ''Family Dinner''. She developed a movement vocabulary from social cues and gestures of the dinner conversation such as napkin wiping, drinking, eating gestures among others. She then choreographed the gestures into a theatrical performance, bringing a conceptual negotiation to an overlooked occurrence of our everyday lives. One critic has said about the work; "Chambers's observations so pointed, that in future it's going to be hard for this viewer to regard dining as anything other than a performance, unconsciously choreographed by the participants."


''It could have been like this''

"Beginning with the Seventies: Radical Change" at the
Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery The Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery is a contemporary art gallery in Vancouver, British Columbia, on the campus of the University of British Columbia. The gallery is housed in a building designed by architect Peter Cardew which opened in 1995 ...
curated by Lorna Brown, Chambers investigates the time-specificity of performance archives. Using Helen Goodwin's Intermedia performances, Chambers and Siebens revisited her gestures in a multimodal installation and performance work that "posited the moving body-as-archive as only ever relative to -and performative of- the fluidity and contingency of time."


''Waking Hours''

Inspired by the stay-at-home orders of the 2020
COVID Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a contagious disease caused by the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2. In January 2020, the disease spread worldwide, resulting in the COVID-19 pandemic. The symptoms of COVID‑19 can vary but often include fever ...
pandemic, Chambers re-directed the embodied recognition of domestic spaces as the new conditions for bodies placement, and closer attention to the rhythms of daily experience. Participants listed materials such as an electric kettle, cat litter, synthetic bristle broom and sewing machine to develop recorded sounds they would contribute to the project available as a sound piece through the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery online. In ''Waking Hours'', Chambers choreographed and edited contributed sounds from artists into a new order.


Residencies and awards

Justine was the Dance Centre (Vancouver) Artist-in-Residence in 2015 where she choreographed dance walks in public spaces, and more recently the National Arts Centre, Visiting Dance Artist Program in Ottawa. She also received the Chrystal Dance Prize in 2016 and the Lola McLaughlin Award.


Writing

Chambers has contributed to the dialogue and discourse surrounding choreographic, artistic, and expanded definitions of dance production. Alongside Alana Gerecke, Chambers wrote ''Moving Together, 22 Ways'' in
Canadian Theatre Review The ''Canadian Theatre Review'' is a quarterly magazine publishing critical analysis and coverage of current theatre developments, expanding the practice of criticism in Canadian theatre. It is published by the University of Toronto Press and is a ...
which invited readers to take up "22 choreographies of the everyday" through disseminated "speculative choreographies" by activating relations between bodies and the built environment they populate.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Chambers, Justine Canadian choreographers Contemporary dance choreographers Canadian women choreographers Year of birth missing (living people) Living people