Brendan Fernandes

Brendan Fernandes
Born1979 (age 44–45)
NationalityCanadian
Awards2010 Sobey Art Award Short List
Websitebrendanfernandes.ca

Brendan Fernandes (born 1979) is a Canadian contemporary artist who examines issues of cultural displacement, migration, labor, queer subjectivity, and collective agency through interdisciplinary performance that uses installation, video, sculpture, and dance. He currently serves as a faculty member at Northwestern University teaching art theory and practice.[1]

Operating at the intersection of dance and visual art, his projects raise questions about the blending of different media and aim to challenge the concept of a fixed, essential, or authentic identity. His multimedia projects engage with postcolonial and critical theory discourse. Over the course of the past two decades, Fernandes has conducted extensive research and presented performance interventions in both national and international museums, galleries, and cultural institutions.[2] He has also showcased his work in prominent museums in his home city of Chicago.

In his current work, Fernandes focuses on the diverse meanings of the body, seeing it as both a culturally significant object and an expressive tool for individuality and identity. He uses choreography to explore movement, particularly in queer and laboring bodies, examining their impact on gender roles and physicality. Additionally, Fernandes' art questions social and political issues, reflecting on life during and after the pandemic and events like Black Lives Matter. He draws upon incidents like the Pulse Orlando massacre and ongoing violence in queer spaces, aiming to challenge power structures and promote inclusivity and equity.[2]

  1. ^ Loos Ted,The Impresario of 'Ballet Kink" The New York Times, June 28, 2019
  2. ^ a b "Artist Statement". Brendan Fernandes. Retrieved 2023-11-27.