Chipo Chipaziwa explores the concept of home and the white gaze in Slipping Into Slipping Away
In her new performance piece, artist-in-residence at Western Front plays with power dynamics between art worker and the public, archivist and archived

Chipo Chipaziwa. Photo by The Daily Composition/Yoon Sook Cha.
Western Front presents Slipping Into Slipping Away from November 14 to 16 at 7:30 pm
THE CONCEPT OF home is something that profoundly influences local performance and visual artist Chipo Chipaziwa. Born in Malaysia, she lived there for six years then moved to Switzerland for seven years, New York for four, and did her last year high school Zimbabwe. With a father who was a diplomat, she came to Vancouver in 2015 to attend UBC, where she obtained her degree in visual arts. This past April, she became a Canadian citizen.
“I do think that I am coming to a place where I’m starting to treat my body as my home,” Chipaziwa says in a phone interview with Stir. “I’m welcoming that idea.”
Chipaziwa recently published a book called My Mother My Home, which looks at the white gaze on Black life, art, and being. It explores five years of her past performances without any photographic depictions of her body. Instead, she relies on the written word—with texts penned by herself, as well as by Denise Ferreira da Silva and Olumoroti Soji-George—and on art: paintings, drawings, and prints by Margaret Joba-Woodruff, Sophia Lapres, and David Ezra Wang.
“The book was me just giving myself the task to see if I could archive my performances without any literal depictions of my body,” Chipaziwa explains.
The book is a jumping off point for Slipping Into Slipping Away, her new performance piece as artist-in-residence with Western Front. Taking place on the ground floor of venue, Chipaziwa’s performance will play with the power dynamic between the art worker and the visiting public, and the archivist and the archived. The intimate 30-minute performance will unfold in Western Front’s reception space with a capacity of 30 audience members each night.
One of the performances that she revisits in her book is called Chipo Chipaziwa Artist Statement and in it, she reflects on her experiences as a Black student at UBC, and what those four years meant to her. It originally took the form of an embodied lecture that was performed in an actual classroom, and it was part of the 2019 grad show. “I revisit that script as present-day Chipo,” she notes.
“I have kind of a diary entry on a performance that I did called Notes on Beauty, and I really think about a Black woman’s relationship with beauty and how it’s a really complicated one,” she says. “I think about how my own personal experiences of not thinking that I’m beautiful and about how a Black woman is considered beautiful—what are the parameters around that, and one day hoping I’d be accepted into that narrow box.
“I know that I’m going to get older, and I do think that performance artists, especially women, are still continuing to perform as they get older, but the body that I have at this current moment in time can be considered desirable and I will ultimately age out of that. I will get put in a different box and that’s out of my control. This practice of me reflecting on my performances at the five-year mark I do see myself doing again. Maybe it will be the next five years or 10 years. It’s something I want to continue doing. This is the first chapter of this process of me reflecting.”
Ultimately, Slipping Into Slipping Away is about the fluidity of identity.
“I feel like everything I do will I will always think about me being Black woman,” she says. “Being Black is not a monolithic experience, and I can only speak about my experience. It’s a very personal piece for me and I’m both scared and really excited to share it.”
Gail Johnson is cofounder and associate editor of Stir. She is a Vancouver-based journalist who has earned local and national nominations and awards for her work. She is a certified Gladue Report writer via Indigenous Perspectives Society in partnership with Royal Roads University and is a member of a judging panel for top Vancouver restaurants.
Related Articles
Vancouver team that includes Ne.Sans Opera and Dance reimagines the clown in Schoenberg's Pierrot lunaire at Festival d’opéra de Québec
Early Music Vancouver Summer Festival and the Sound of Dragon Society join forces to play on Chinese-European musical exchange that is centuries old
Taiko artists Noriko Kobayashi and E. Kage reflect on punk-rock roots and gender expression
Early Music Vancouver Summer Festival’s artist-in-residence interprets Bach, Schubert, and Mozart—and hosts a panel on how to bring environmentally sound practices to performing arts
Offerings include a Christmas concert with emerging artists, a climate change–centred program, and the triennial Tapestry International Festival
Early Music Vancouver Summer Festival concert coincides with the release of a new CD
Among the other highlights are the annual Christmas With the Bach Choir, Behind the Keys, and SpringSong
Tio Chorinho and Flávia Nascimento’s vibrant Brazilian rhythms, Shpilkis’s brass-driven klezmer, Julian Taylor’s soulful voice, and more
From an indie garage-pop concert by Twin River to a plant pot–decorating workshop, here are just a few of the free offerings in store
Vancouver-based Drew Tarves takes his music out of the bedroom and across the country
Ontario-based aficionados of vintage gear and saucy slang bring Prohibition-era daring to this year’s event
Ahead of her Vancouver Folk Music Festival sets, the award-winning singer-songwriter reflects on the power of performing in her Nation’s language and representing her community
Headlining at this year’s Vancouver Folk Music Festival, the electrifying Marrakesh-born outfit plugs in traditional instruments and rocks out
Free events will take place in seven Vancouver parks from August 6 to 16
Event’s artistic director recommends under-the-radar discoveries, from Tanzanian polyphony to a smashing trad Irish trio
Performances take place Thursdays at 5 pm, featuring co-presentations with Indian Summer Festival, Vancouver Folk Music Festival, and more
The premiere of a Dorothy Chang composition and a guest appearance by harpist Rita Costanzi are among the highlights
At this year’s Indian Summer Festival, the sarod virtuoso draws on generations of musical mastery to create improvisations that reflect everything from audience response to the time of day
Bassist-vocalist will be joined by a special group of musicians to play tracks off her past albums and forthcoming project
Music director Jacques Lacombe leads the Vancouver Opera Orchestra in an evening of Italian arias and duets
Audience members will hear tracks off her latest album Odyssey, which honours her reignited love for composing
Performance of the legendary work features the Pacific Baroque Orchestra, Vancouver Cantata Singers, and four vocal soloists
Marking 400 years since the death of Ōmori Sōkun, shakuhachi master Alcvin Ryūzen Ramos leads a series of programs about an instrument making a quiet return
Headliner at Khatsahlano Street Party’s Burrard Stage takes a decidedly modern approach to getting its music out into the world
Performances by the Wild Moccasin Dancers, jazz trumpeter Feven Kidane, party band Dr. Strangelove, and plenty more artists are in store
Flowing from a rich mix of ancestries, the duo’s electronic-based sound points to forgotten but ever-present connections to the natural world
Nostalgic activities planned for the 10-block music event include a Scavenger Hunt, a Donut Chomp Challenge, and so much more
Pianist brings his expressive playing to Performance Works alongside bassist André Lachance, drummer Joe Poole, and trumpeter Brad Turner
The Pacific Baroque Orchestra led by Alexander Weimann joins the acclaimed Montreal-based Baroque dance company for a spellbinding show
Soprano Tamar Simon, baritone Geoffrey Schellenberg, and pianist Richard Epp perform an afternoon of arias, duets, and operatic drama