logo
Artist Jason Baerg on Canada Day's reminder of stolen land and broken promises: 'Canada is a colonial project'

Artist Jason Baerg on Canada Day's reminder of stolen land and broken promises: 'Canada is a colonial project'

Yahoo06-07-2025
Artist Jason Baerg.
Artist, designer and educator Jason Baerg is clear-eyed about what Canada and its celebration mean — and doesn't mean — for many Indigenous people across the country. Baerg, who uses they/them pronouns, says it plainly: 'Canada is a colonial project."
It's a statement that cuts to the root of Canada Day's enduring controversy: For many Indigenous people, it marks not a national celebration but a reminder of stolen land and broken treaties. As a Cree-Métis artist raised in Red River, Saskatchewan and now based in Toronto, Ontario, Baerg's very life and practice are acts of resistance, continuity and reclamation.
'I'm Indigenous and German — my father came from Germany, and I was raised by my Métis mother,' Baerg explains. 'So, every day is Indigenous for me. That's how I live my life.'
Yahoo News Canada presents 'My Canada," a series spotlighting Canadians — born-and-raised to brand new — sharing their views on the Canadian dream, national identity, and the triumphs and tribulations that come with life inside and outside these borders.
Canada Day: 'Weird thing to unpack' for many
That lived experience means Canada Day doesn't bring up the same kind of pride or joy others might feel. 'It's a weird thing to unpack,' they say. 'It's funny how many people don't even understand the basics, that First Nations have their own governments, that they're independent nations.'
Advertisement
Baerg doesn't dismiss Canadian identity entirely. They acknowledge: 'I'd be a fool to think I do not participate in a greater network of people that includes settlers. When I think about what it means to participate in that kind of nationalism, which is kind of fabricated, I think about continuum, where we are, out story. It's complex.'
That sense of continuum shows up powerfully in Baerg's work. As an interdisciplinary artist working across painting, fashion and digital media, their art is deeply rooted in Indigenous epistemologies, visual languages and futurism.
'I'm interested in sustainable fashion, in the presence and visuality of Indigenous people through their contemporary art practices,' they say. 'There's real intention there of how [we] participate in culture, and build and disseminate who we are as Indigenous people.'
Artist Jason Baerg.
As a teacher, Baerg wants students to learn where they're from
Baerg also brings that philosophy into the classroom at OCAD University, where they teach and mentor the next generation of artists, many of whom — and, crucially, not all — are Indigenous.
Advertisement
'The artist has to know who they are before they can say anything to the world,' they say. 'So, I have my students research their own traditional homelands. It helps them understand their position and gives them cultural material to work with in their art. I'm grounding them in having them acknowledge that their ancestors are from a different place, and I'm also serving them the opportunity to get to know themselves even more, because I truly believe that the artist has to know who they are before they can say anything to the world.'
In other words, that sense of knowing isn't just about identity, it's also about place. Baerg believes deeply in connecting students to the land, and in challenging Canadian institutions — artistic, educational and political — to do better.
'It's not enough to have conversations anymore; art and education are just the beginning. We need action. We know communities don't have clean water, so fix that. We know curriculum is lacking, so change it.'
We know communities don't have clean water, so fix that. We know curriculum is lacking, so change it.
And for Baerg, that change has to start early. They point to models in places like Australia where Indigenous culture is embedded in early childhood education.
Advertisement
'Why not here?' they ask. 'If you're in Toronto, every child should know how to say 'hello' in Haudenosaunee or Anishinaabe. That kind of cultural fluency should be foundational. We should be bringing local Indigenous custodians into schools and daycares. Geography lessons should happen on the land with those who know it best.'
There are already some glimmers of this vision in Canada.
Artist Jason Baerg: 'The government has taken so much away'
Baerg highlights Saskatchewan's treaty education mandate from kindergarten to Grade 12 as an example. But they also express frustration at the pace of progress, particularly when funding is often the first thing to go.
'The government has taken so much away ... And I don't want to entertain that anymore. I want us to envision something better and then go build it.'
Advertisement
Despite all this, Baerg remains optimistic. Their hope doesn't come from institutions, but from community. 'I see us moving forward in good ways, with or without institutional support,' they say. 'We train our own, we respond to our own needs, and we move.'
What they want most — for Canada, for Canadians — is a shift toward meaningful collaboration. At the heart of that is a simple but powerful wish: respect.
'I'd love to see more harmony and more collaboration,' Baerg says. 'Genuine respect. If we looked at each other as kin, we'd be in a much better place.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

11 best Lululemon We Made Too Much finds worth your attention — score crazy good prices on backpacks, totes and more, starting at $29
11 best Lululemon We Made Too Much finds worth your attention — score crazy good prices on backpacks, totes and more, starting at $29

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

11 best Lululemon We Made Too Much finds worth your attention — score crazy good prices on backpacks, totes and more, starting at $29

Grab your favourites before they're gone for good. There's just something about a Lululemon bag — between the practicality, the trendiness and the versatility, they're unmatched. Each one I own has become a staple in my daily rotation. And with the retailer dropping new styles and colours every week, that's very bad news for my wallet. Since I'm always on the lookout for a new bag to add to my collection, it's best for me to stick to their We Made Too Much section. While browsing these special prices, I came across a few that are too good to pass up. If you're interested, I've rounded up my favourite styles this week, so you can have in on the fun. Keep scrolling to check 'em out. Prefer to shop by category? Dive in below: Shop the best Lululemon WMTM bags Shop the best Lululemon WMTM accessories Shop the best Lululemon WMTM leggings Shop the best Lululemon WMTM hoodies & sweatshirts Shop the best Lululemon WMTM shoes Shop the best Lululemon WMTM brasLululemon just dropped a brand new bag we predict will sell out — plus 11 other really good new arrivals to shop this week Best We Made Too Much bags to shop at Lululemon

'Weapons' tops North American box office for 2nd week
'Weapons' tops North American box office for 2nd week

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

'Weapons' tops North American box office for 2nd week

Buzzy horror film "Weapons" won the North American box office for a second week running with $25 million in ticket sales, industry estimates showed Sunday. The Warner Bros. movie starring Julia Garner ("Ozark") and Josh Brolin ("Avengers: Infinity War") tells the story of the mysterious disappearance of a group of children from the same school class. Analyst David A. Gross of Franchise Entertainment Research called it a "strong" week-two performance, especially in a quiet summer weekend at the movies in the United States and Canada. Holding in second place was Disney's "Freakier Friday" starring Lindsay Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis, the much-anticipated sequel to the 2003 body-swapping family film, at $14.5 million, Exhibitor Relations said. Debuting in third place was Universal action sequel "Nobody 2," starring Bob Odenkirk of "Better Call Saul" fame, at $9.3 million. "Critics like this story about a workaholic assassin trying to take a vacation with his family while getting caught up in trouble. Reviews and audience scores are both very good," Gross said. "The Fantastic Four: First Steps," Disney's reboot of the Marvel Comics franchise, dropped to fourth place at $8.8 million. Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn and Emmy winner Ebon Moss-Bachrach star as the titular team of superheroes, who must save a retro-futuristic world from the evil Galactus. Universal's family-friendly animation sequel "The Bad Guys 2," about a squad of goofy animal criminals actually doing good in their rebranded lives, dropped to fifth, earning $7.5 million. Rounding out the top 10 were: "Superman" ($5.3 million) "The Naked Gun" ($4.8 million) "Jurassic World: Rebirth" ($2.9 million) "F1: The Movie" ($2.7 million) "Coolie" ($2.4 million) bur-sst/aha Solve the daily Crossword

Khloé Kardashian Reacts to Justin Bieber's New Photo With Kendall Jenner
Khloé Kardashian Reacts to Justin Bieber's New Photo With Kendall Jenner

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Khloé Kardashian Reacts to Justin Bieber's New Photo With Kendall Jenner

Khloé Kardashian Reacts to Justin Bieber's New Photo With Kendall Jenner originally appeared on Parade. Justin and Hailey Bieber's son, Jack Blues, turns one this week. And in the days leading up to his big milestone, the couple has been sprinkling Instagram with sweet glimpses of their little one—including a shot of him in a bubblegum-pink outfit and tiny hat, and another of him rocking a lemon-lime ribbed set while lounging barefoot in the grass. But while fans were busy melting over Jack content, it was the 31-year-old Canadian singer's latest post with Kendall Jenner that ended up hijacking the spotlight. And who popped up in the comments? None other than Jenner's sister, Khloé Kardashian. 🎬 SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox 🎬 On Saturday, August 16, Justin uploaded a moody snap from a night out. In the shot, Jenner, 29, appears to be mid-story, hands flailing like she's explaining quantum physics. The 'Peaches' hitmaker is beside her in a ribbed tank and cargos, staring ahead with zero context. In the comments section, Kardashian, 41, dropped a string of red hearts—an unofficial Kardashian stamp of approval—while Hailey, 28, slid in with: 'It's always Kendall telling a story with her hands.' Fans, naturally, had thoughts. 'Justin trying to lock in to what Kendall is saying is SENDING me,' one person joked. ''So anyways last week I had this bussin sandwich. It was like this big,'' another imagined her monologue. 'She's probably telling him how to cut a cucumber and he's just trying to picture it in his head but can't cause it just sounds wrong,' someone else added, a direct hit at Jenner's now-iconic cucumber-cutting struggle on The Kardashians. Not all of the comments were lighthearted, though. 'This man posted up with everybody but his wife,' one user noted. 'Kendall is always too close to somebody's man,' someone else added. 'There's more chemistry than with the wife,' another wrote. 🌹 SIGN UP for our The Bachelor newsletter to stay up to date on the latest Bachelor Nation news, exclusive interviews, episode recaps & more 🌹 Meanwhile, others defended the trio's friendship. 'What's funny is Hailey probably took this picture and everyone is writing think pieces — Justin is the only person that can't take a photo with a friend and have it just be a photo with a friend,' one person pointed out. 'It's her best friend and they are all lifetime friends. Y'all act like posting anything with another female is diabolical,' another argued. 'Women can also have faithful friends, we just have to know how to choose them 🤍 leave your traumas,' someone else added. 💪 SIGN UP for tips to stay healthy & fit with the top moves, clean eats, health trends & more delivered right to your inbox twice a week 💪 For anyone trying to untangle the dynamics: Justin and Hailey first met back in 2009 when her dad, Stephen Baldwin, introduced them backstage at the Today show. Hailey later met Jenner in 2012 at The Hunger Games premiere, and the two quickly became close—Jenner even told Vogue during a Met Gala red carpet chat that they're basically 'sisters.' Meanwhile, Justin and Jenner started orbiting the same friend group in the early 2010s, but when romance rumors peaked around 2014–2015 after a few dinners and vacation snapshots, Jenner shut them down, calling him a 'longtime friend.' Justin doubled down on that narrative in a Billboard cover story, noting his relationship with Jenner was never serious. As for Kardashian, 41, her reaction makes perfect sense—she's been Team Kendall and Team Hailey for years. In September 2023, she cheered Justin and Hailey's fifth wedding anniversary on Instagram, writing, 'This makes my heart happy 😍😍 I love you twoooooo ❤️.' By August 2024, when the couple announced the arrival of baby Jack with a close-up of his foot, Kardashian was right back in the comments—this time writing, 'Jack Blues!!!!!! Congratulations!!!!! I love this tiny foot so so much.' The Good American co-founder is just as vocal when it comes to her sisters, once calling it 'insulting' when people refer to Kendall and Kylie Jenner as her half-sisters—a stance she made crystal clear on her Khloé in Wonderland podcast in March, proving she does not play about her girls. Khloé Kardashian Reacts to Justin Bieber's New Photo With Kendall Jenner first appeared on Parade on Aug 17, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Aug 17, 2025, where it first appeared. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store