At Home in the Grange: The Family Compact’s Protectionist Values

Authors

  • Luis Jacob University of Toronto
  • Amy Fung Concordia University

Abstract

Postdoctoral Fellow Amy Fung (Concordia University) and Luis Jacob discuss the Art Gallery of Ontario’s origins and development within Canadian colonial power structures.

Author Biographies

Luis Jacob, University of Toronto

Luis Jacob was born in Lima, Peru, in 1971.  He is a Toronto-based artist whose work destabilizes viewing conventions and invites collisions of meaning.  Since participating in documenta12 in 2007, he has achieved an international reputation — with exhibitions at Museum der Moderne Salzburg (2025): Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, and Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Kingston (both 2022); the Toronto Biennial of Art (2019); La Biennale de Montréal (2016); Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York (2015); Taipei Biennial (2012); Generali Foundation, Vienna (2011); Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York (2010); Hamburg Kunstverein and the Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery (both 2008).  

Amy Fung, Concordia University

Dr. Amy Fung is a SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow at Concordia University co-hosted by the Department of History and the School of Community and Public Affairs (2024 - 2026). Her PhD dissertation, The Long Memory of Mourning, was a multidisciplinary study on the processes, refusals, and limitations of political recognition via official apologies and commemorations for past injustices and community grievances in a settler state. She is a recipient of the Bora Laskin National Fellowship in Human Rights Research. Her first book, Before I was a critic I was a human being was the recipient of one of the 200 exceptional projects funded through the $35M Canada Council for the Arts’ New Chapter program.

Downloads

Published

2026-05-31