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Craigdarroch Castle: Finding a Voice

    

Event details

Craigdarroch Castle play: Finding a Voice: Gender, Sexuality and Music Through the work of Elinor Dunsmuir 

 Craigdarroch Castle has long been dedicated to telling the stories of the Dunsmuir family and other Castle residents over the years. Now it’s created a singular show about a particular character and taking it on the road.

Finding a Voice: Gender, Sexuality and Music Through the work of Elinor Dunsmuir offers new insight into the family and the times through the story and music of the coal baron’s talented granddaughter. It runs March 19 to April 30 at Craigdarroch Castle.

Using photographs alongside text and information panels, interspersed with three listening stations and two interactive workstations, where visitors can listen to and work within Elinor’s compositions, a picture emerges of Elinor’s attempts to break free from her easeful but rather proscribed life.

Elinor was a granddaughter of the Dunsmuir patriarch Robert and his wife, Joan. She was the sixth child (and fifth of eight surviving daughters) of Robert’s eldest son James and his wife, Laura. She grew up with everything but was a square peg in British Columbia society of the day. Despite her intelligence, there was no role for her in the family business. She studied music in Europe and became an accomplished musician and composer.

Elinor chose to march to her own drummer, cutting her hair short, wearing men’s clothes, smoking cigars and developing a taste for drink and gambling. Her circle in Europe accepted her homosexuality and she became known in the casinos as la riche canadienne.  Poor health and dwindling finances ultimately brought her back to Victoria, where she lived at Hatley Castle with her mother, Laura. Elinor died of a stroke in 1938 at 52.

“Tying into broader issues around social change and identity, the exhibition will look at Elinor’s works from a musicological perspective, as well as using Elinor’s life as a framework to explore how her experience -- as both a woman and a member of the LGBTQ2 community -- shaped her life and her experience as a composer,” says exhibition curator Danielle MacKenzie. 

After its run at Craigdarroch Castle, Finding a Voice: Gender, Sexuality and Music Through the work of Elinor Dunsmuir moves to the Courtney Museum, where it will be on display from June 29 through October 19, 2020. 

Craigdarroch Castle is grateful for Government of Canada funding through the Access to Heritage Component of the Museums Assistance Program.

For more information, visit www.thecastle.ca.

 

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