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Syrus Marcus Ware

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Canadian artist, activist and scholar (born 1977)
Syrus Marcus Ware
Ware in 2017
Born1977 (age 47–48)
EducationBA in Art History, Visual Studies; MA in Sociology and Equity Studies in Education, University of Toronto; PhD in Environmental Studies, York University
Known forVisual art
AwardsVanier Scholarship
Sylff Fellowship
Steinert & Ferraro Award
TD Diversity Award

Syrus Marcus Ware is a Canadian artist, activist and scholar. He lives and works inToronto, Ontario and is an assistant professor in the school of the arts atMcMaster University.[1] He has worked since 2014 as a faculty member and designer for theBanff Centre. Ware is the inaugural artist-in-residence for theDaniels Spectrum cultural centre in Toronto, and a founding member ofBlack Lives Matter Toronto.[2][3] For 13 years, he was the coordinator of theArt Gallery of Ontario's youth program. During that time Ware oversaw the creation of the Free After Three program and the expansion of the youth program.

He has published four books and in 2020 co-edited (with Rodney Diverlus andSandy Hudson)Until We Are Free: Reflections on Black Lives Matter in Canada, which became a bestseller.[4]

Early life and education

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Syrus Marcus Ware was born inMontreal, Quebec and is the twin brother of entomologistJessica Ware.[5][6] He attendedEtobicoke School of the Arts for high school before transferring toForest Hill Collegiate Institute. Ware studiedart history and visual studies at theUniversity of Toronto andUniversity of British Columbia, earning hishonoursbachelor's degree in 2002. He studied withJoanne Tod and David Buller. During his studies, he was the coordinator for the Centre for Women and Trans People at the University of Toronto.[7]

Ware began hisMasters of Arts insociology andequity studies in education at theOntario Institute for Studies in Education in 2006, graduating in 2010.[8] Ware began hisPhD in the faculty ofenvironmental studies atYork University in 2014 and successfullydefended his doctoral thesis in 2021.[7][9] He is a Sylfffellow and a recipient of aVanier Canada Graduate Scholarship.[10]

Career

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Ware's work exploressocial justice and Black activist culture through performance, large-scale drawing, installations, paintings and dance. He specifically focuses on issues surrounding gender, sexuality and race.[11][12]

Ware was selected to be part of the Toronto Biennial of Art's 2019 and 2022 exhibitions. At the 2019 Biennial, he createdAntarctica, a performance and interactive installation aboutwhite supremacy andclimate change[13] andAncestors, Do You Read Us: Dispatches From The Future, an 8-channel video work created with Mishann Lau and set in 2072 in a world where Black and Indigenous people have survived climate change and race wars.[14] His work has been shown at theSydney Festival, theArt Gallery of Burlington, theArt Gallery of Ontario, theArt Gallery of Windsor, theUniversity of Lethbridge Art Gallery, theGladstone Hotel, and the Art Gallery ofYork University.[citation needed]

In 2021, Ware was commissioned to write a new play,Emmett, forObsidian Theatre andCBC Gem. The play is set in a near but different future and follows the protagonist, Medgar (a reimaginedMedgar Evers), on a day when everything changes. The performance was filmed in Toronto in 2021 and features actorPrince Amponsah. Directed by Tanisha Taitt, the production was broadcast on CBC Gem on February 12, 2021.[15]

Community radio

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For 17 years, Ware was the host ofResistance on the Sound Dial, a community radio show onCIUT FM.[16] In the show he combined activist music with political interviews and conversations with activists and artists, includingOctavia E. Butler,Georgina Beyer,Ursula Rucker,Tumi and the Volume andBob Moses. He also participated in other shows on the station including Wench Radio, Radio OPIRG and By All Means.[citation needed]

Activism

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Ware is a long-timeabolitionist. He was a core team member of Black Lives Matter Toronto. He is a co-founder of Black Lives Matter Canada and the Wildseed Centre for Art and Activism. Ware collaborated with Blackness Yes! for 19 years in order to create events like the trans and Black stage atPride Toronto called Blockorama.[17] Ware is also one of the founding members of both the Toronto-based Prison Justice Action Committee and the Gay/Bi Trans Men's HIV Prevention Working Group, which created "Primed: the Back Pocket Guide for Trans Guys and the Guys who Dig em", the first eversexual health resource fortrans men who have sex with men in the world. He also helped to create Trans-Fathers 2B, the first course for trans men considering parenting in North America, based inThe 519.[18] He sits on the board of theTegan and Sara Foundation.[19]

Ware has stated that his intent is to dismantlewhite supremacy within the arts and diversify themuseum field.[20]

Awards and honors

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NOW Magazine awarded Ware the Best Queer Activist award in 2005.[21] He received the TD Diversity Award in 2017.[22] He was awarded the Min Sook Lee Labour Arts Award from the Mayworks Festival in 2017.[23] Ware is aVanier Scholar and a Sylff Fellow.[24]

In 2012, he received the Steinert & Ferreiro Award for LGBTQ activism.[25]

Bibliography

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As editor

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As author

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  • Abolition is Love (2023,Seven Stories Press, illustrated by Alannah Fricker)[32]
  • Love is in the Hair (2015, Flamingo Rampant Press, also as illustrator)[33][34]

As illustrator

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Articles

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  • "Activating Diversity and Inclusion: A Blueprint for Museum Educators as Allies and Change Makers." With Wendy Ng and Alyssa Greenberg.Journal of Museum Education, vol. 42, no. 2 (2017), pp. 142–154.[37]
  • "Foraging the Future: Forest Baths, Engaged Pedagogy, and Planting Ourselves Into the Future."Qualitative Inquiry, vol. 28, no. 2 (2022), pp. 236–243.[38]
  • "We want abolition in our lifetime."THIS (2020).[39]

Further reading

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References

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  1. ^Laux, Sara (2020-08-18)."Making the revolution irresistible".Daily News. McMaster University.
  2. ^Ware, Syrus Marcus (2018-09-05)."Black Lives Matter Toronto founding member talks about his complex identity".British Council. Retrieved2020-08-18.
  3. ^"Super Queeroes: Syrus Marcus Ware".CBC.
  4. ^"The bestselling Canadian books for the week of July 5-11, 2020".CBC. 2019-03-06.
  5. ^Wee, Natalie (2025-01-31)."Watering Seeds from Our Ancestors: An Interview with Syrus Marcus Ware (from ROOM 45.1 Ancestors)".ROOM Magazine. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  6. ^"Dr. Syrus Marcus Ware Artist Bio".Toronto Biennial of Art. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  7. ^abWare, Syrus Marcus (2021-05-20)."Non-traditional theses becoming new tradition for faculty of Graduate Studies".YFile. York University.
  8. ^Ware, Syrus Marcus (2011-01-01).'No One Like Me Seemed to Have Ever Existed': A Trans of Colour Critique of Trans Scholarship and Policy Development in Post-Secondary Schools (Master's thesis). University of Toronto.hdl:1807/25681.
  9. ^Ware, Syrus (May 2021).Irresistible Revolution: Black, Trans, and Disabled World-Making through Activist Portraiture (Thesis). Toronto, Ont., Canada: York University (Canada).hdl:10315/39041. Retrieved2024-02-19.
  10. ^"Syrus Marcus Ware and Susan Irons-Ware".Fogo Island Arts. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  11. ^"Activists Love Letters | March 6, 2014 | Main Gallery | Centre for the Arts | W600".University of Lethbridge Art Gallery. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  12. ^"Featured artist: Syrus Marcus Ware".Women & Environments International Magazine. No. 78/79. 2009. pp. 30–31.ISSN 1499-1993.ProQuest 211606623. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  13. ^"Syrus Marcus Ware at 259 Lake Shore Blvd E".Toronto Biennial of Art. Retrieved2022-01-22.
  14. ^"Syrus Marcus Ware: Ancestors, Can You Read Us? (Dispatches From The Future)".The Image Centre. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  15. ^"5 books that 21 Black Futures playwright and poet Syrus Marcus Ware loved reading".CBC. 2021-02-19. Retrieved2021-03-25.
  16. ^"Syrus Marcus Ware".FADO Performance Art Centre. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  17. ^Piepzna-Samarasinha, Leah Lakshmi (2015)."Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha speaks with Syrus Marcus Ware".Broken Pencil.69 (8).ProQuest 1728291183.
  18. ^"Grants & Awards".Community One. Retrieved2017-03-17.
  19. ^"ABOUT".Tegan and Sara Foundation. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  20. ^Ware, Syrus Marcus (2020-06-24)."Give Us Permanence—Ending Anti-Black Racism in Canada's Art Institutions".Canadian Art. Retrieved2020-08-18.
  21. ^"In Movement: Training Sessions for Freedom Fighters".Art Gallery of Hamilton. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  22. ^"Syrus Marcus Ware named 2017 TD Arts Diversity Award Recipient".Toronto Arts Foundation. 2017-09-20. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  23. ^"Mayworks Celebrates Labour Arts in Toronto and Launches the 32nd Annual Mayworks Festival".Mayworks Festival. GlobeNewswire News Room. 2017-03-29. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  24. ^"Vanier Scholars 2016".Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships. 2015-08-31. Archived fromthe original on 2020-05-24.
  25. ^"Grants and Awards".Community One Foundation. Retrieved2020-10-16.
  26. ^Sellers, Iain (2019-01-21)."Book launch spotlights LGBTQ+ advocacy, history".The Fulcrum. Retrieved2020-08-18.
  27. ^"Speaker's Book Award 2020 Shortlist".Legislative Assembly of Ontario. Archived fromthe original on 2021-05-07. Retrieved2020-08-18.
  28. ^Agbayani, Shaina (2018-08-29)."Marvellous Grounds".Briarpatch. Retrieved2020-08-18.
  29. ^Pierre, Terese Mason (2020-01-30)."Until We Are Free: Reflections on Black Lives Matter in Canada".Quill and Quire. Retrieved2020-08-18.
  30. ^Kennedy, Helen (2020-07-19)."Trauma and damage placed alongside hope and resistance".People's Voice. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  31. ^Grant, Kyrell (2020-06-05)."Books to Read for Black Lives Matter: 5 Books on Being Black in Canada".Flare. Archived fromthe original on 2020-08-13.
  32. ^"Abolition is Love".Seven Stories Press. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  33. ^LaRiviere, Serafin (2015-08-21)."Six LGBTQ2 children's books every parent should own".Xtra Magazine. Retrieved2020-08-18.
  34. ^"Abundant Beginnings' Social Justice Books for Kiddos List"(PDF).Association for Library Service to Children.
  35. ^"Bridge of Flowers by Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, illustrated by Syrus Marcus Ware".Flamingo Rampant. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  36. ^"Catherine Hernandez's I Promise cited as one of best Canadian picture books of 2019".Canadian Filipino Net. 2020-01-16. Retrieved2025-03-13.
  37. ^Ng, Wendy; Ware, Syrus Marcus; Greenberg, Alyssa (2017-04-03)."Activating Diversity and Inclusion: A Blueprint for Museum Educators as Allies and Change Makers".Journal of Museum Education.42 (2):142–154.doi:10.1080/10598650.2017.1306664.ISSN 1059-8650.
  38. ^Ware, Syrus Marcus (2022)."Foraging the Future: Forest Baths, Engaged Pedagogy, and Planting Ourselves Into the Future".Qualitative Inquiry.28 (2):236–243.doi:10.1177/10778004211046601.ISSN 1077-8004.
  39. ^Ware, Syrus Marcus (2020-11-05)."We want abolition in our lifetime".This Magazine. Retrieved2025-03-13.

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