HAVE YOU SEEN MY SISTER?


PROJECT ARCHIVES

 
 

PERFORMANCES to date & Project information

•Mar 4, 2022 St. Mark’s Church, Scarborough
•Mar 6, 2023 Helliconian Club, Toronto
•Mar 8, 2024 Women From Space Festival, Toronto
•Dec 5, 2019. On the eve of the 30th anniversary of the Montreal Massacre, a performance of the song cycle by Alluvial Plain at the Burdock Music Hall in Toronto.
• June 9, 2018. a 30 minute outdoor performance for four voices & drums at the Open Tuning Festival, Toronto, Saturday June 9/18.
• May 30, 2018. A 30 minute indoor performance for four voices & drums at the May 29-31 Gathering of Canadian Pluralism in the Arts Movement Ontario, held at Ontario College of Art and Design Ontario.
• May 30, 2018. An art talk about the song cycle by the composer at Gathering of Canadian Pluralism in the Arts Movement Ontario, held at Ontario College of Art and Design Ontario.
• Dec 6, 2017. A 30-minute indoor performance to commemorate Canada's National Day of Remembrance and Action on violence against women, Hosted at the Centre for Social Innovation, Annex in Toronto.
• Sept 30-Oct 1, 2017 (DEBUT). A 12-hour installation for Nuit Blanche Toronto as part of the official program of Independent Projects. Performance was dusk to dawn on Grosvenor Street behind Women's College Hospital.  

This recording here below is a DEMO of the first song of the four-song suite, Have You Seen My Sister, with a coda based on the third song, Corridors of Privilege. Performers: Alluvial Plain members: Alejandra Ballon, Aruna Antonella Handa, Caitlin Holland, Raphael Roter. Recorded in Aruna’s home studio, mixed by her.

PLEASE SIGN

Please sign this letter petitioning the government of Canada to continue the basic income guarantee, initiated in March at the outset of the pandemic’s grip here in Canada. The letter details statistics that reveal the importance of the CERB benefit as a matter of urgency for everyone and especially for those women in Canada, whose jobs are among the most precarious and whose incomes have dropped precipitously. Since the pandemic began urgent calls by women experiencing violence in the country have increased by 20-40%, and the UN reports that this ‘shadow pandemic’ is an international problem.
PLEASE READ AND SIGN THIS LETTER

december 6/18 word + Music commemoration. all welcome.

 
Commemorating the 25th anniversary of École Polytechnique massacre in Montreal, the 14 beams of light on Mount Royal represent 14 women murdered for daring to study engineering. Image Rémi St-Onge, Moment Factory; names added by Artists of the Auror…

Commemorating the 25th anniversary of École Polytechnique massacre in Montreal, the 14 beams of light on Mount Royal represent 14 women murdered for daring to study engineering. Image Rémi St-Onge, Moment Factory; names added by Artists of the Aurora. “Commémoration de la tuerie de l'École polytechnique de Montréal”.

Join ARTISTS OF THE AURORA members Aruna Antonella Handa and Surkhab Peerzada as they commemorate Dec 6 1989 at the Ecole Polytechnique in Montreal where fourteen women were murdered for daring to study engineering. Centre for Social Innovation - Annex, 720 Bathurst St., Ground floor lounge 12 noon. All welcome. Free.
Words & music. Debut of new short piece, “Red, Red” to be sung by composer Aruna as Surkhab reads the names of the murdered women

 

ARTISTS OF THE AURORA
have you seen my sister

 
Image by Artists of the Aurora, Victor Klassen, Shelina Knight and Noah Handa-Kipphoff.

Image by Artists of the Aurora, Victor Klassen, Shelina Knight and Noah Handa-Kipphoff.

 

Have You Seen My Sister? is an aural installation for unaccompanied voice. Divided into 15 minute quadrants, each of which is divided into four songs, the piece builds a human voice memorial to the women who have experienced violence, who have been “disappeared” and who have been murdered in Ontario.

The debut performance for Nuit Blanche Toronto, lasted 12 hours with 48 quadrants of 15 minutes each. Eighty professional, amateur and emerging singers and actors took part throughout the night. “Hey, Have You Seen My Sister?”, the first song of the cycle contrasts the hopeful voice at the beginning of a search with the doleful one as the search wears on. In the second movement, soloists sing the names of the disappeared as if calling out for them in a search.

In the third song, singers ask to be reminded to

 

wonder who is missing from the corridors of privilege because it is these women who are found in disproportionate numbers on the lists of victims of violence against women; in Canada, Indigenous women, black women, women of colour, women living in poverty, women with disabilities, and transgender women. In the final song, the names of the murdered women and girls are recited, while the company sings “gone, gone”, like funeral bells tolling.
Have You Seen My Sister? was composed Dr. Aruna Antonella Handa, a musician in Toronto. She creates performance pieces, theatre, salons and songs, which she sings with her band,
Alluvial Plain. Artists Pat Vandesompele and Steve McKeown created two visual monuments to the women who have gone “away” and the women who are “gone”. These monuments were installed at Nuit Blanche Toronto 2017 to accompany the aural installation.

 

 

Original installation: Nuit Blanche Toronto 2017
Independent project 89
September 30, 2017 to October 1, 2017
12 hour Installation
51 Grosvenor street, Toronto

"Everywoman" Painting by Victor Klassen


The image for Have You Seen My Sister? started with a painting by Artists of the Aurora collective member Victor Klassen. Design members Pat Vandesompele, Noah Handa-Kipphoff, and Shelina Knight added text to create an image that evokes missing posters. The missing in this poster is Everywoman. The image underlines the fact that gender-based violence is a global phenomenon. The original painting is in Toronto, and available for sale, with the artist donating proceeds to the project. If you would like to enquire, please contact aruna@aruna.ca.

The Gone Monument by
by pat vandesompele & steve mckeown

Two on site visual memorials were part of the Nuit Blanche Installation. The Gone monument was a tribute to the murdered women of Ontario. Designed by Pat Vandesompele, the monument was constructed with ribbons of fabric from women’s clothing, and bore a list of the murdered women of Ontario and their ages when they were killed. The list was difficult to construct in that there are no official authoritative lists and so the worry of missing names remains.



The Away Monument
by pat vandesompele & steve mckeown

Two on site visual memorials were part of the Nuit Blanche Installation. Designed by Pat Vandesompele and Steve McKeown, the Away memorial was a metal tree of yellow ribbons. The installation invited guests to take ribbons to serve as a reminder of missing women and to prompt us to examine corridors of power and privilege and ask: “Who is missing?”, provoking us to draw connections between these absences and the phenomena of women and girls, who have gone missing or who have been murdered. 

HOW DID YOU CONSTRUCT THE LISTS?

For this project, we drew on the lists generated by Maryanne Pearce and her Appendix F for her thesis An Awkward Silence. You can read Maryanne's thesis here. We also drew on the lists generated by the NL Feminists and Allies, and on the work published by the Ontario Association of Interval and Transition Houses (OAITH). We also scoured the internet for updates on the missing and murdered and on the list of Jane Does, and unidentified remains. The police were not able to help as they said that the information was considered proprietary. They recommended we look online. Some policewomen made a point of contacting us and to praise the project, to tell us how important it was to compile the lists, and they thanked us for doing this work, even though they could not officially help us.
Update: Dec. 4/17:
Link to the
OAITH list of femicides for 2019-20
Link to the
OAITH list of femicides for 2018-19
Link to the
OAITH list of femicides for 2017-18
Link to the
OAITH list of femicides for 2016-17

composer's notes

The following two lists are almost certainly inaccurate and incomplete. There is no authoritative list. Accordingly, we have had to create lists, compiling the works of others and adding to it from media reports and other information available online.  In our Gone lists, we include women and girls who were killed violently by people, whom they knew and also by strangers, when they were killed because they were women. In the Away list, we include women and girls who have gone missing mysteriously. If you have updates for this list or omissions, please contact us at aruna@aruna.ca

Our Gone lists drew on existing lists and then cross-checked them against information we could find online. Missing women lists were constructed entirely from online missing reports, press clippings and even signs that people saw. We’d cross check these lists repeatedly as with missing women, sometimes their names had to be moved to the Gone lists and sometimes they survived.

Away list - women who went missing in ontario dec 5/16 to MAY 30/18

GONE LIST - WOMEN WHO WERE MURDERED IN ONTARIO DEC 5/16 TO MAY 30/18

 

PRESS RELEASE JUNE 5, 2018 (PLEASE CLICK ME)

 

 
 

Artists IN THE FIRST PHASE OF THE PROJECT

 

Artists of the Aurora was an international collective of musicians, artists and researchers
who collaborated on Have You Seen My Sister? Phase 1

If you'd like more information about us, to schedule an interview or to join us, please email us or telephone us 416.606.0799.