Andrea Fatona


Andrea Fatona is a Canadian independent curator and scholar. She is an associate professor at OCAD University, where her areas of expertise includes black, contemporary art and curatorial studies.

Early life

In 2011, Fatona received her PhD from the University of Toronto. Titled "Where Outreach Meets Outrage: Racial Equity policy formation at the Canada Council for the Arts ", her dissertation examined policy and practice with regards to racial equity at the Canada Council for the Arts. Fatona was a member of the Canada Council Equity advisory committee for the Visual Arts section between 2003 and 2005.

Career

Fatona held curatorial positions at Artspeak in Vancouver, the Art Gallery of Ottawa, Artspace Peterborough, and Video In.
She curated a show of the work of Winsom, Belize-based Canadian and Maroon artist, at the AGO.
Her research contributed to the Hogan's Alley, Vancouver memorial project, which memorializes Black cultural history in Vancouver. CBC Arts placed Fatona at the forefront of the Black cultural movement in Canada.
In 2015, Fatona took the helm of the SSHRC-funded State of Blackness: From Production to Presentation Conference, an ongoing research project geared towards developing art education practices as a way of rectifying the invisibility of Blackness in Canadian art curriculum.

Curated Exhibitions

Co-curator, Land Marks. The Thames Art Gallery, Chatham, Ont., 2013 -2015.
Curator, Edna Paterson-Petty: African-American Quilts. The Ottawa Art Gallery, Ottawa, ON, 2011.
Co-curator, Alex Wyse- Wyse Works: Exposing the Inevitable. The Ottawa Art Gallery, Ottawa, ON, 2011.
Initiator and coordinator of Will Work for Food, a community arts project involving Sandy Hill Community Health Centre and Operation Come Home as primary community partners. The Ottawa Art Gallery, Ottawa, ON, 2010.
Curator, Avaaz. Sound installation by Dipna Horra. The Ottawa Art Gallery, Ottawa, ON, 2010.
Curator, Intersections. Paintings by artist-programmer Eric Sze-Lang. The Ottawa Art Gallery, Ottawa, ON, 2010.
Curator, Duncan de Kergommeaux: These Are the Marks I Make "a survey exhibition of painter Duncan de Kergommeaux that spans 50 years of the artist's life. The Ottawa Art Gallery, Ottawa, Ont., Museum London, 2010.
Curator, Fibred Optics, group exhibition that explores the multi-sensorial nature of visual narration and perception. Frances Dorsey, Jerome Havre, Ed Pien and Michele Provost. The Ottawa Art Gallery, Ottawa, ON, 2009 and Richmond Art Gallery, Richmond, B.C. in 2011.
Curator in collaboration with Deanna Bowen, Reading the Image: Poetics of the Black Diaspora, group, national touring exhibition "Deanna Bowen, Maud Sulter, Christopher Cozier and Michael Fernandes - that explores issues pertaining to diasporic movement and the relationship of African peoples to the project of modernity. Thames Art Gallery, Chatham, Ont. ; Robert McLaughlin Gallery, Oshawa, Ontario; Mount Saint Vincent University Art Gallery, Halifax, Nova Scotia; Yukon Art Centre, Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, 2006.
Curator, The Attack of the Sandwich Man, solo exhibition by Chris Cozier, video collaboration with Richard Fung; addresses issues related to nation- making, culture, the politics of gender and the post- colonial Caribbean. A Space Gallery, Toronto, ON, 2001.

Awards and Grants

Connections Conference Grant, Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada Culturally Diverse Curator Award, Ontario Arts Council, 2013
Research Seed Grant, OCADU 2007 Travel Grant, Canada Council for the Arts, Equity Office, 2012
School of Graduate Studies Research Travel Grant, University of Toronto, 2006
OISE/University of Toronto Academic Excellence Award, 2005-2007
Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada Doctoral Fellowship, 2005-2007
OISE/University of Toronto Academic Excellence Award, 2005-2006
OISE/University of Toronto Graduate Fellowship Award, 2003-2005
Off-the-Radar Grant, Inter-Arts, Canada Council for the Arts, 2003
OISE/University of Toronto Graduate Fellowship Award, 2002
Curator Travel Grant, Canada Council New Media Section, 2002