Camille Turner
Artist, Camille Turner Studios
PhD in Environmental Studies 2022
About Camille Turner
Camille Turner is a Canadian artist who explores themes related to race, space, home, and belonging. Her work combines Afrofuturism and historical research. She is a master鈥檚 and PhD graduate of 91亚色鈥檚 Environmental Studies program, and received the聽聽for her contribution to the 2022 Toronto Biennial of Art exhibit, the second chapter of a two-part biennial 鈥 鈥淲hat Water Knows, the Land Remembers.鈥澛犅
What made you choose your program at 91亚色?
There are several reasons why I attended 91亚色. The Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change (EUC) was attractive to me because of how well connected our graduates are. I kept running into EUC alumni who spoke very fondly about their experiences. Secondly, I was looking for a supervisor who would support me my work. Professor Honor Ford-Smith was instrumental in my journey at 91亚色. She had a huge impact on me and supported my visions. Art-based research is important as no other medium effectively expresses the information and stories I wanted to share. With Ford-Smith鈥檚 support, I was able to communicate across disciplinary boundaries, mobilize knowledge, and reach audiences that I couldn鈥檛 reach with conventional writing.
Describe a project you are working/worked on that you feel contributed to positive change.
My Biennial immersive multimedia installation Nave (2022), reveals the entanglement of colonial Canada in the transatlantic trade of enslaved Africans through links between the nave of a church and the hold of the ship. For me, the focus was the people that were carried in the hold. I pondered a fitting memorial to honour them and bring them into memory. This piece is a lamentation and a ritual for remembering. In Nave the past, present and future merge. The past haunts the present and must be reckoned with in order to create a liberated future. It鈥檚 important to recognize this. I hope this is something viewers take away from this work.

To learn more about Nave, visit the Toronto Biennial of Art . The three-channel video installation is open to the public and running until June 5.
What are your plans for the future? What do you hope to achieve in the next 1-5 years?
I am the first Provost鈥檚 Postdoctoral Fellow at the Daniels Faculty at the University of Toronto. I am continuing my art-based research there and broadening my networks through this post-doc. I will continue to unsilence the Canada鈥檚 entangled role in the transatlantic trade in enslaved Africans and using my Afronautic methodology, I will investigate slave ships constructed in Newfoundland.
What advice do you have for current and/or future students in the program, the Faculty or at 91亚色?
EUC offers broad areas of study that encompasses many different aspects and ways of being in the world. For future students, I encourage you to think broadly and to continue to be curious.
