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To: Land Shark who wrote (1231680)5/21/2020 3:25:34 PM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

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  Respond to of 1578288
 
Artist Kent Monkman's painting of partially nude Trudeau with laughing women creates uproar online

WARNING: This story contains details some readers may find disturbing

Austin Grabish · CBC News · Posted: May 20, 2020 8:57 PM CT



Artist Kent Monkman is under fire for creating the above painting which shows Monkman's alter ego, Miss Chief Eagle Testickle, standing behind Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who is partially nude, on all fours, preparing for what Monkman called 'a consensual act' while Indigenous women surrounding him laugh. CBC News has cropped the original painting into separate images to avoid showing the nudity. (Kent Monkman)

Renowned Cree artist Kent Monkman has come under fire for his new painting that shows Prime Minister Justin Trudeau partially nude, on all fours, preparing for what Monkman called "a consensual act" while Indigenous women surrounding him laugh.

The painting, titled Hanky Panky, has been condemned by many who believe it portrays sexual violence and disrespects First Nations traditions. But it is also being praised by some, including Ojibway Senator Murray Sinclair.

Monkman posted the work on Facebook on Saturday and said the piece was meant to highlight problems with "the Canadian (in)justice system" and the victimization of Indigenous women, who experience violence and sexual assault at rates higher than other women in Canada. But it provoked a backlash.

"It just really made me feel sick, and the way that the likeliness of Trudeau was being held down and forced into it," said Jaye Simpson, an Oji-Cree Saulteaux queer artist and writer in Vancouver. "It reminded me of some of my own situations and it just made me sick."

Simpson took a closer look at the image and said it appeared sexual violence was being depicted as restitution. In a post on social media, Monkman described the circle of women in his piece as traditional law keepers, the okihcitâwiskwêwak in Cree.

Simpson sees it as Cree women's protocols, or traditional roles, being disrespected.

The painting also shows a Mountie lying on the ground with his pants down and former prime ministers in the crowd, watching. CBC News has cropped the original painting into separate images to avoid showing the nudity.

Monkman is known for creating highly sexualized, provocative work that's been displayed around the world, including at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art.
The Cree artist, who is from the Fisher River Cree Nation in Manitoba and now lives in Toronto, depicts colonization, sexuality and loss through his gender-fluid alter ego Miss Chief Eagle Testickle.



Artist Kent Monkman, pictured in Winnipeg in this file photo, wasn't made available for an interview. The artist has said on Facebook he regrets any harm caused. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Simpson noted the prominent central imaging of the red hand, which to many in the Indigenous community is a symbol meant to honour missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls (MMIWG).

While Simpson believes the hand is a sex toy that has appeared in Monkman's previous work, others see it as an insult to MMIWG.

'He's taken the symbol and degraded it'"He's taken the symbol and he's degraded it," said Danielle Ewenin, an Indigenous activist from Kawacatoose First Nation in Saskatchewan whose sister Eleanor was found dead, frozen, outside Calgary in 1982 at age 23. The case remains unsolved, and Ewenin, who believes police mishandled it, continues to fight to keep it alive.

Ewenin has written a letter with her concerns about the piece to about 20 family members who have a missing or murdered Indigenous relative.

Sinclair, an Independent Manitoba senator, praised the work in a Facebook post, saying Monkman has produced "another monumental testament to the treatment of Indigenous women and the public's lack of caring. How? By reversing the roles of victim and victimizer."



The painting shows former prime ministers including John A. Macdonald, Pierre Elliott Trudeau, Jean Chrétien and Stephen Harper watching while Indigenous women laugh. (Kent Monkman)

"He has managed to get people worked up over the obscenity of the content, in startling contrast to the intellectual calmness with which people look upon how Indigenous women were treated. I wish people were as shocked and angered at that visual as they are at Monkman's portrayal of it. He's talented. He's brilliant. He cares. Do you?"

Artist says he deeply regrets any harm causedMonkman addressed the criticism in another Facebook post Monday.

"I have been listening and learning from your feedback. I deeply regret any harm that was caused by the work. I acknowledge that the elements I had included to indicate consent are not prominent enough, and I see now how the painting could appear," he said.



Danielle Ewenin said Monkman has taken an Indigenous symbol meant to honour missing and murdered Indigenous women and degraded it. (Ntawnis Piapot/CBC)

"I also regret referring to the okihcitâwiskwêwak in a context that could be interpreted in a disrespectful way. I will remove any further reference to them in writing for the painting."

Eugene Fernandes, a recent graduate of UBC Okanagan, going into marketing, said while he was initially intrigued and then disturbed by the painting, he didn't think Monkman should have to apologize for it.

"I think there's a rush to push people to apologize for something that they've said which may be offensive or derogatory or harmful — which, there is a place for that," Fernandes said. "But if you are not able to express what you think even in the form of experimentation or an art then you're not able to really figure out what the problems are and how we should be facing them as a society."

Monkman was not made available for an interview Wednesday. The Prime Minister's Office said it had no comment on Monkman's painting.



To: Land Shark who wrote (1231680)5/22/2020 11:59:25 AM
From: Maple MAGA   Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578288
 
Police, crisis teams assessed accused killer hours before 7-year-old girl was stabbed to death

Constables and mental health professional chose not to hospitalize David Moss

Janice Johnston · CBC News · Posted: May 22, 2020 6:00 AM MT | Last Updated: 4 hours ago



David Michael Moss, 34, has been charged with second-degree murder. (Instagram/David Moss )

A man accused of stabbing a seven-year-old girl to death was visited in his home hours before the killing to be assessed by a police and mental health crisis team.

On Monday, the Edmonton Police Service "was made aware" that David Moss was experiencing "mental concerns," a police spokesperson said.

Police spokesperson Patrycja Mokrzan told CBC News that two constables and a mental health professional went to Moss's residence in north Edmonton. It is not clear whether the mental health professional was a social worker, registered nurse or registered psychiatric nurse.

"Mr. Moss was assessed by PACT (Police and Crisis Team) and agreed to attend a doctor's appointment later in the day," Mokrzan wrote in an email. "When PACT left the residence, there was another friend present with Mr. Moss providing support."
Hours after that assessment, Bella Rose Desrosiers was stabbed to death in her bed. Moss was taken into custody at the scene.

He has been charged with second-degree murder and is scheduled to make a court appearance on Friday morning.

Victim's mother encouraged him to get helpThe girl's mother, Melissa Desrosiers, was friends with Moss, and told CBC News on Tuesday that he had been suffering a mental breakdown the day before and that she had convinced him to get help.

She wanted him to be admitted to hospital, and said he had agreed.



Melissa Desrosiers spoke to the media on Wednesday evening in the wake of her daughter's death. (Travis McEwan/CBC)

She had someone come to her house to watch her two young daughters, aged four and seven, while she went to Moss's home.

Desrosiers told CBC she wouldn't have intervened had PACT taken Moss to hospital. She ended up taking him back to her house in south Edmonton, and said once he got there he rested and took a nap.

That evening, Desrosiers said, she was tucking her daughters into bed when Moss lunged into the bedroom armed with scissors.

She told CBC News that in hindsight she shouldn't have had Moss in her home.

Individual behaviour can be 'unpredictable'An annual policing plan released by Edmonton police in 2017 stated that the goal of PACT was to find a community-based solution rather than hospitalization in 90 per cent of its assessments.

An Alberta Health Services spokesperson said PACT members use their experience and expertise to assess risk.

"They always err on the side of caution and use the tools at their disposal to keep individuals and the public safe," the AHS spokesperson wrote in an email.

"Unfortunately, individual behaviours leading to tragic outcomes can be highly unpredictable."

The AHS spokesperson declined to provide specifics about Moss, citing patient confidentiality and the ongoing police investigation.

Mokrzan said AHS told police later on Monday that Moss had not followed through with his doctor's appointment.



A recent photo of Lily, Bella and Melissa Desrosiers.(Melissa Desrosiers/Facebook)

Moss is a tattoo artist. Xavier Doucet, who had been working with him as an apprentice since January, said Moss told him he had suffered a brain injury after being hit over the head with a rock when he was younger.