Shakespeare & the Colonial Imagination
by Abbi Andrews
This exhibition encourages visitors to engage with familiar texts and images through a lens of Indigenous representation. The plays and travel narratives displayed here do not simply reflect colonial appetites, they participate in their creation, shaping how audiences understand empire and their place in it.
Shakespeare's Stopped Mouths
by Katharine Cognard-Black
Shakespeare's Stopped Mouths foregrounds a single phrase that recurs throughout his work, spanning genre and time. By tracing the gendered stakes of social union, nation-building, and revenge as they are refracted through the repeated phrase, "I'll stop your mouth," this exhibit invites visitors to ask: What do we silence when we stop women's mouths?