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A person dressed in flowing white clothing and a headwrap walks along a grassy cliffside overlooking the ocean. They hold a wooden staff and a stone, with dramatic red rock formations and waves crashing below under a cloudy sky. The scene feels serene and powerful, blending natural beauty with a sense of ritual or reflection

Slavery North invites you to the final talk of our series of three Fellow Talks in Fall 2025. Artist and scholar Camille Turner introduces her Afronautic methodology of archival interpretation.

Speaker: Camille Turner, Artist-in-Residence, Fall 2025

Moderator: Dr. Martha McNamara, Associate Professor of Public History & Associate Director Slavery North

Lecture: Afronautic Research: an embodied approach to the archive

Lecture abstract:
Camille Turner shares her Afronautic methodology and embodied approach to seeking not just what is in the archives but what the land and waters remember.

Bio:
Camille Turner is an artist/scholar whose work combines Afrofuturism and historical research. Camille is a graduate of OCAD and has completed a PhD at York University’s Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change and most recently, a Provost’s postdoctoral fellowship at University of Toronto’s Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design. Turner is the recipient of the 2022 Artist Prize from the Toronto Biennial of Art and she is a participant in the 36th Bienal de São Paulo, Brazil. Her artworks are held in museums and public and private collections including: the National Gallery of Canada, the Art Museum at University of Toronto, the Art Gallery of Hamilton, the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Canada Council Art Bank, Royal Bank of Canada, Museum London, The Wedge Collection, The Rooms, and the McMichael Canadian Art Collection.

In person and On campus event posted in Arts