Fusion of Traditions

Date/Time
Date(s) - October 16, 2025 - October 29, 2025
All Day

Location
Lookout Gallery, Regent College

Categories No Categories


You’re invited to visit the Dal Schindell Gallery between September 17 and October 29, 2025, to view Fusion of Traditions, a visual art exhibition by Speplól Tanya Zilinski. There will also be an opening reception on Wednesday, September 17, 4–7 pm.

Artist Statement

Exploration of cultural identity. This is how my voyage with loom beading tapestries emerged. Colour, materials, and textures are guided by spirit; my hands flow with direction of that which cannot be seen but is there in celestial essence and in my reality.

I use traditional loom beadwork for the purpose of passing on cultural knowledge, language, and oral stories; for a spiritual connection to my Ancestors; and as a daily tincture to cure the body and mind. I have developed my own methods and techniques through experimentation for creating large loom beaded tapestries that unite two cultures, complimenting one another, for the next seven generations and beyond of community and family while honouring the previous seven generations. I am at oneness while I am creating, and this process has gifted me a new perspective on life. It is with great gratitude I acknowledge this canoe journey has guided me to a good place and the Ancestors will continue paddling alongside me to help me navigate through the waters.

About the Artist

Tanya is a person, who is a visual artist, Halq’eméylem teacher, and matriarch of their family. They are a member of The Red River Nation maternally, with ancestral ties to Anishinaabe, Cree, Dakota, and Huron-Wendat Nations throughout Turtle Island’s Plains and Great Lakes Regions, and Ukrainian paternally. Their maternal family names are Chartrand (double), Lagimodière (double), and Cadotte. One of their traditional names is Speplól, which means Little Crow, and was a name given to them at the age of 14.

They were born on and grew up on the stolen lands of the Chowethel People, Ts’qó:ls, which is the Halq’eméylem name for what is known to settlers today as “Hope, BC.” Their medium is traditional Indigenous loom beadwork and the retelling of oral stories and teachings through patterns laid out on beadwork tapestries. They were taught to loom bead at 15 years old by a Stó:lō Elder in their community at Chawathil First Nation. Speplól has developed methods and techniques through experimentation for creating large loom beaded tapestries made from tiny glass seed beads. They currently teach Halq’eméylem for Fraser Cascade School District and are a certified teacher of the BC Teachers Federation.

Learn More

https://www.regent-college.edu/about-us/events/event-details?event_id=1383

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