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Renay Egami // Unsolved Mysteries


  • Alternator Centre for Contemporary Art 421 Cawston Avenue (unit 103) Kelowna, BC, V1Y 6Z1 Canada (map)

Unsolved Mysteries engages the genre of momento mori or vanitas through artworks designed for meditation on the tentative, ephemeral, and the presence of absence. Comprised of a memorial ‘garden’ and video work, Renay Egami pursues the question of death prompted by the passing of her father by giving form to materials as stand-ins for the body unbound. 

In Trace, the perfection of the manicured domestic lawn, a public image of private life, has gone awry and symbolically transformed into a site of remembrance.  Housed in a mausoleum-like structure with a gazing window reminiscent of Japanese gardens, the viewer is positioned to gaze through this portal and reflect upon their own mortality and perhaps question what lies beyond. 

Witness, a video work filmed in time-lapse mode, depicts a life-size ice pillow with a depression of where a head once lain melting and then re-forming itself back to its frozen state in a continuous loop. Filmed at five-minute intervals over several hours, the pillow melts demarcating time – a recording of an event and the aftermath.  Egami  confronts the daily tension between life and death; the body in transition, one that is unbound, permeable, shifts, and dissolves.  This work offers the viewer a glimpse into mortality that is metaphorically depicted through the flowing mediums of water and time. 

Originally from Vancouver, Renay Egami is a visual artist currently based in Lake Country, B.C. on the traditional and unceded territory of the Syilx (Okanagan) People. She completed her undergraduate studies at the Emily Carr University of Art & Design and received her Master of Fine Arts degree in Fiber and Material Studies from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She is also an alumna of the Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture in Maine. Renay is an Associate Professor at UBC Okanagan where she teaches in the Faculty of Creative & Critical Studies.

Renay’s art practice is diverse, conceptually grounded, and employs a wide variety of processes and materials ranging from the impermanent to the enduring and in various combinations of sculpture, immersive installations, ceramics, and textiles. Her research engages diaspora studies including the immigrant experience and labor, language, memorialization, and traditions relevant to her Japanese Canadian identity and history.  Renay has exhibited her work across Canada, in the US, and in Japan. She is the recipient of several grants and scholarships including the Canada Council for the Arts, BC Arts Council, FCAR: Fonds pour la Formation de Chercheurs et l’Aide à la Recherche – Masters Research Scholarship, Conseil Des Arts et Des Lettres du Québec-Artistic Practice Grant, the Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture Full Fellowship – New York, The Pollock-Krasner Foundation NY, and the Organization of American States Academic Studies Program Fellowship, Washington DC.

The artist acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts & BC Arts Council.