Roewan Crowe creates work through the use of performance, installation, video, text, and theory, and her recent work creates intimate landscapes, making space for feelings, connection, and queer encounters. Noted work includes: stop-motion animation Queer Grit – how can you be queer on the prairies when your dad is John Wayne – which has traveled to video and film festivals nationally and internationally; digShift, a decolonizing and environmental reclamation project using site specific performance and multichannel installation to explore the shifting layers of an abandoned gas station; Lifting Stone, a queer femme performance/installation creating intimate poetic encounters; and My Monument, a multimedia exhibition with artists cam bush, Steven Leyden Cochrane, Roewan Crowe, and Paul Robles that uses Crowe's book Quivering Land to explore vanished feminist/queer/alternative cultural sites. Her longstanding community practice is concerned with creating space for and building engaged feminist/queer/artistic communities. In collaboration with Mentoring Artists for Women's Art she organized and curated Art Building Community, a project that saw the launch of ten new works and a weekend symposium.
Writing
Crowe is the author of the book: Quivering Land; scholarly articles; and several chapbooks. She has also written essays about art in various publications.
''Quivering Land''
Quivering Land is a rather queer Western, engaging with poetics and politics to reckon with the legacies of violence and colonization in the West. Reviews of Quivering Land include: Herizons: Women's News and Feminist Views, and CWILA, Canadian Women in Literary Arts, an inclusive national literary organization.
Selected Scholarly Articles
Roewan Crowe's scholarly work seeks to open meaningful encounters with art through feminist engagement. She is particularly interested in exploring and writing about artistic practitioner knowledges and artistic processes. Recently, with collaborator Michelle Meagher, she published the article, "Letting Something Else Happen: A Collaborative Encounter with the Work of Sharon Rosenberg." Other scholarly writing includes: "So You Want our Ghetto Stories: Oral History at Ndinawe Youth Resource Centre" with Robin Jarvis Brownlie. Remembering Mass Violence: Oral History, New Media and Performance, S. High, E. Little, Thi Ry Duong. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2014, pp 203–217. "Slow Art in a Time of Flash Floods: What's a Queer Feminist Settler To Do?"] Multimedia essay, Studio XX Electronic Review,.dpi, Issue No. 25, "Inevitable Transitions," 2013. "digShift: a Queer Reclamation of the Imagined West," Multimedia essay, No More Potlucks: Online Journal of Contemporary Arts, "Wound," Issue 7, Jan. 2010. "Feminist Encounters with the Hollywood Western." T. M. Chen, D. S. Churchill. London and New York: Routledge Press, 2007, pp 113–130. "Crafting Tales of Trauma: Will this Winged Monster Fly?" Provoked by Art: Theorizing Arts-informed Inquiry, L. Neilsen, J. G. Knowles, & A. L. Cole. Halifax: Backalong Books, 2004, pp 123–132. "Angelic Artful Encounters." Journal of Curriculum Theorizing Special Issue: Performances in Arts-Based Inquiry, Mullen, C. A. & Diamond, P., Spring 2001, pp 81–94. "She Offers Fragments." The Art of Writing Inquiry, L. Neilsen, J. G. Knowles, & A. L Cole, editors, Backalong Books, 2001, pp 125–131.