Call For Indigenous Artists: The 2026 Response Program

Calling all Indigenous filmmakers and visual storytellers! The Response Program is an opportunity to create a short video work through exploratory workshops devised by Indigenous artists and mentors. Inspired by diverse approaches to film and media across contemporary Indigenous art, Response: Cover with Care encourages participants to consider how intentionally veiling subjects can act as a form of protection and resistance. What do we choose to share and what do we keep for ourselves? How does asserting sovereignty over access change the power that is given to our stories?

Workshops will take place online during Summer 2026 followed by self-directed work in the Fall, helping participants to create an original film-based work on this year’s theme of concealment. Participants will have the opportunity to have their work included in the Response exhibition at The Polygon Gallery, North Vancouver in early 2027.

This program is open to artists of all ages and skill levels, though a basic understanding of technology is an asset. If you’re a beginner, let us know!

The program is free, and participants will receive $715 honorarium upon its successful completion.

Eligibility

– Be of Indigenous ancestry (First Nations, Metis, or Inuit).
– Reside in British Columbia.
– Have an interest or practice in visual/media arts.
– Have a device that shoots video (cell phone cameras are welcome).
– Commit to attending a minimum of four out of six workshops. Sessions take place on Saturday mornings in July and August.
– Priority is reserved for emerging artists.

We thank all who express interest in this opportunity.

To apply, please fill out the online submission form here.

If you have questions, please contact response@thepolygon.ca.

Applications close Sunday, June 7, 2026.

Selected participants will be notified by Wednesday, June 17, 2026.

Photo: Alison Boulier

About The Response Program
In 2014, Response—an outreach program that lifts the voice of Indigenous Youth— was successfully piloted. Relaunched in 2020, Response is now an annual film program involving a series of workshops led primarily by and for Indigenous people, culminating in an exhibition of participants’ work at The Polygon Gallery. The program invites ways of responding artistically to historical and contemporary images of Indigenous cultures.

The Polygon’s Indigenous Liaison Joelle Johnston and Response’s Curator Serena Steel. Photo: Alison Boulier

About Response’s Curator
Serena Steel is a Secwépemc interdisciplinary artist and curator whose practice takes the form of beadwork, sculpture, and writing. She considers themes of belonging and memory through the materiality and labour of her work. Steel currently works on the unceded territories of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations. She holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Critical and Cultural Practice from Emily Carr University of Art + Design with a minor in Social Practice and Community Engagement.

Photo: Akeem Nermo

About The Polygon Gallery
Grounded in photography, The Polygon Gallery creates space to challenge how we see the world.  A West Coast architectural marvel, since opening its doors in 2017 it has presented the work of thousands of artists, from international stars to the country’s most exciting emerging talent.

The Polygon Gallery is open Wednesday through Sunday, 10 am to 5 pm, and late on Thursdays to 9 pm. Admission to The Polygon is always by donation, courtesy of BMO Financial Group.

Banner image: Photo by Alison Boulier