Haruko Okano
Haruko Okano is a process-based, collaborative, multidisciplinary, mixed-media artist, poet, community organizer, and activist based in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Life
Haruko Okano was born in Toronto, Ontario. She is a 'Sansei' Japanese Canadian. Her Japanese grandfather came to live in Haney, British Columbia, in 1918.Okano was born at a tumultuous time in her parents’ relationship. Okano’s parents argued over her custody and she was intermittently placed in foster care. Her mother died when she was nine years old. After her mother’s death, Okano became a permanent ward of the Children’s Aid Society and she lived in a series of foster homes, where she experienced psychological and sexual abuse and was removed from all contact with her Japanese cultural heritage. Okano locates the origin of her alienation from her identity as a Japanese Canadian during this period of displacement. Her career as an artist, writer, and community activist has often focused on the recovery and expression of her cultural identity.
Okano studied art at Central Technical School in Toronto, where she graduated with honours in 1972. She went on to study print production at Vancouver Community College in 1980.
Since 1993, Okano has lived in the China Creek Housing Co-op in the Mount Pleasant neighbourhood of Vancouver. In 2013, she spoke out in the media against plans to shut down the Federal Co-operative Housing Program, which subsidizes a portion of rent for thousands of co-op residents in British Columbia like her.
Artistic practice
An artist, writer, and activist, Okano works in various media, including painting, sculpture, site-specific installation, performance, mixed media, and text. She often incorporates found materials and natural detritus in her work, such as stones, living spores and fungus, leaves, and branches. She explores environmental and ecological themes, as well as race, sexuality, and gender.A recurrent theme for Okano is that of cultural and linguistic hybridity. Literary critic Eva Darias-Beautell has observed that “Okano’s disconcerting writing and artwork have invariably revolved around the unresolved condition of cultural hybridity, often betraying the traps as well as the possibilities of the search for modes of expression that fall outside normativity. Her production thematizes and speaks to the theoretical debates that surround the condition of the diasporic subject in Canada.”
Okano is known for her collaborative, community-based practice, in which her role is that of an artistic facilitator for projects realized in the public realm and with stakeholders and participants outside of the typical confines of the art world.
Okano collaborated with Derya Akay and Vivienne Bessette on the project Looking at the Garden Fence, which took place at numerous community gardens at Sahalli Park Community Garden, Elisabeth Rogers Community Garden, and Harmony Garden X̱wemelch’stn pen̓em̓áy.
In 2021, alongside artist Azul Duque, Okano participated in a four-month residency as part of the Gabriola Arts Council's Kasahara Gabriola Trust Artist Residency program, which takes place on Gabriola Island.
Select works
''Mount Pleasant Community Fence'', 1994
In 1994, Okano and fellow artists Merle Addison and Pat Beaton from the artist-run grunt gallery initiated a project on East 8th Avenue and Fraser Street in Vancouver’s Mount Pleasant area, in which members from the community designed and hand-carved four hundred red-cedar pickets to be used for a local fence.John Steil and Aileen Stalker note that through community involvement, the “fence in this case is not a barrier, but the demarcation of the garden, the result of many people from culturally different backgrounds working together to beautify and green their neighbourhood, contribute to a sustainable community and lessen the stress of city life.”