Dr. Reilley Bishop-Stall is a settler Canadian art historian whose research is centered on Indigenous and settler representational histories, contemporary art and visual culture with a specific focus lens-based media, archival practice and ethics, anticolonial and activist art. Dr. Bishop-Stall received her PhD from 缅北强奸 and was awarded the university鈥檚 Arts Insights Dissertation Award for the year鈥檚 most outstanding dissertation in the Humanities. Her work has been published in a number of books and peer-reviewed journals including Photography & Culture, Art Journal Open, and The Journal of Art Theory and Practice. Before joining the faculty at 缅北强奸, Dr. Bishop-Stall held a Horizon Postdoctoral fellowship with the Inuit Futures in Arts Leadership: The Pilimmaksarniq/Pijariuqsarniq Project, and a Limited Term Appointment in the Histories of Photography at Concordia University.
Selected publications:
[Forthcoming] 鈥淧ast Projections: Revenants, Resilience and Archival Intervention in Meryl McMaster鈥檚 Ancestral.鈥 鈥The Women, They Hold the Ground鈥: Indigenous Women鈥檚 Digital Media in North America. Eds. Kaarmen Crey and Joanna Hearne. University of Minnesota Press. 2025.
鈥淪mile; Social Issues; Swing:鈥 Bias and Contradiction in Evolving Archival Descriptions of Indigenous Subjects.鈥 Facing Black Star. Eds. Thierry Gervais and Vincent Lavoie. Toronto: MIT Press/Ryerson Image Centre. Fall, 2023.
鈥淎n Inuit Approach to Archival Work.鈥 Co-authored with Heather Campbell. The Routledge Companion of Indigenous Art Histories in Canada and the United States. Eds. Heather Igloliorte and Carla Taunton. Routledge. Fall, 2023.