LAUREN CRAZYBULL
memory, atrophy

June 4 – July 23, 2026
Opening Thursday, June 4th, 4-7pm
Macaulay + Co
3712 W 10th Ave
Vancouver

Image: Lauren Crazybull, for a moment, 2025, 12 x 9 in, Oil on canvas

 

Macaulay + Co is thrilled to present our second exhibition of new paintings by artist Lauren Crazybull. Lauren (b. 1994) is a Niitsítapi (Member of Kainai First Nation), Dené artist currently living in Vancouver, BC. In her work, Lauren considers Indigenous presence and multiplicity through paintings, creating worlds where honest portrayals trespass onto romantic representations of Indigeneity.

 

There are no windows in my studio so time passes differently. I’m trying to hold on to a moment of joy and keep it there. I want to turn a second into one hundred years.

 

A painting is more like a memory in the way that it isn’t always true.

 

Some days, I want to live forever. I don’t want to waste away, but I don’t always try my hardest not to. So I’m creating an archive of vanishing things. Forgetting is a passive disappearance. When I take a photo, I’m really asking: can I bring it all with me?

 

~Lauren Crazybull, May 2026

 

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DANA CLAXTON
memory, atrophy

June 4 – July 23, 2026
Opening Thursday, June 4th, 4-7pm
Macaulay + Co
3712 W 10th Ave
Toronto

Image: Lauren Crazybull, for a moment, 2025, 12 x 9 in, Oil on canvas

 

Macaulay + Co is thrilled to present our second exhibition of new paintings by artist Lauren Crazybull. Lauren (b. 1994) is a Niitsítapi (Member of Kainai First Nation), Dené artist currently living in Vancouver, BC. In her work, Lauren considers Indigenous presence and multiplicity through paintings, creating worlds where honest portrayals trespass onto romantic representations of Indigeneity.

 

There are no windows in my studio so time passes differently. I’m trying to hold on to a moment of joy and keep it there. I want to turn a second into one hundred years.

 

A painting is more like a memory in the way that it isn’t always true.

 

Some days, I want to live forever. I don’t want to waste away, but I don’t always try my hardest not to. So I’m creating an archive of vanishing things. Forgetting is a passive disappearance. When I take a photo, I’m really asking: can I bring it all with me?

 

~Lauren Crazybull, May 2026

 

INQUIRE