Persimmon Blackbridge
Persimmon Blackbridge (born 1951)[1] is a Canadian writer and artist whose work focuses on feminist, lesbian, disability and mental health issues.
Persimmon Blackbridge | |
---|---|
Born | 1951 (age 69–70) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Nationality | Canadian |
Known for | writing, performance, installation art, sculpture |
Awards | Ferro-Grumley Award 1997 Lesbian Fiction VIVA Award 1991 |
Life and career
Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Blackbridge moved to British Columbia with her family as a teenager, and has worked and resided in Canada ever since.[2] Along with artists Susan Stewart and Lizard Jones, she has been a member of the Vancouver-based Kiss and Tell collective.[3]
A portrait of Blackbridge, by her Kiss and Tell colleague Susan Stewart, is held by the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives' National Portrait Collection, in honour of her role as a significant builder of LGBT culture and history in Canada.[1] She is also featured in the 2006 National Film Board of Canada documentary film Shameless: The Art of Disability.
Blackbridge's work as an artist has been in a variety of domains, including performance art, installation art, video art and sculpture.[3] In 1991 she was the recipient of the VIVA Award for her sculptural installations.[4]
Major exhibitions
Doing Time was Blackbridge's 1989 exhibition at the Surrey Art Gallery, created in collaboration with ex-prison inmates Geri Ferguson, Michelle Kanashiro-Christensen, Lyn MacDonald and Bea Walkus. Incorporating twenty-five life-sized cast-paper figures of the four women, the installation also included texts written by the participants. This marked the first exhibition where Blackbridge worked with large-scale multi-media assemblage.[5]
Still Sane was her 1984 exhibit in collaboration with Sheila Gilhooly at Women in Focus gallery. This exhibition focused on Gilhooly's experiences of being institutionalized for being a lesbian. To create this exhibition, Gilhooly and Blackbridge spent 36 months creating a sculptural and written record of Gilhooly's time incarcerated in the hospital.[6]
Both Still Sane and Doing Time were cited in the awarding of the 1991 VIVA award to Blackbridge.[7]
In 2016, her exhibition Constructed Identities was the first to open Tangled Art Gallery, a fully accessible gallery dedicated to art focused on disability issues.
Writing
Although predominantly a non-fiction writer, Blackbridge has also published two novels.[3] Her novel Sunnybrook won a Ferro-Grumley Award for Lesbian Fiction in 1997, and her novel Prozac Highway was a shortlisted nominee for the Lambda Literary Award in 1998. She was also a frequent contributor to Rites, one of the major Canadian LGBT publications of the late 1980s.
Novels
- Sunnybrook: A True Story with Lies (1996)
- Prozac Highway (1997)
Non-fiction
- Drawing the Line: Lesbian Sexual Politics on the Wall (1991, with Susan Stewart and Lizard Jones)
- Still Sane (1985, with Sheila Gilhooly)
- Her Tongue on My Theory: Images, Essays and Fantasies (1994, with Susan Stewart and Lizard Jones)
- Slow Dance: A Story of Stroke, Love and Disability (1997, with Bonnie Sherr Klein)
References
- Inductee: Persimmon Blackbridge. Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives.
- "20 Questions: Persimmon Blackbridge". Philadelphia City Paper, December 18, 1997.
- "Persimmon Blackbridge". section15.ca, May 30, 2008.
- "The Jack and Doris Shadbolt Foundation For the Visual Arts :: VIVA Award Winners". www.shadboltfoundation.org. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
- Hasselfelt, Karen, ed. (1989). Doing Time. Surrey, BC: Surrey Art Gallery.
- Diamond, Sara (Fall 1984). "Still Sane". Fuse: 30–35.
- Rosenberg, Ann (30 May 1991). "Drawing out city's finest". Vancouver Sun.