With frequent updates, the website acts as a living document, presenting prisons as places where people’s lives are happening simultaneously to life on the outside—as opposed to a distant margin beyond which beyond which incarcerated people in Ontario simply disappear from view. Li says of the impetus for the project, sited at Evergreen Brick Works, “I want to foreground the presence of people who, locked away in the name of public safety, cannot physically access public spaces like the Don River Valley.” Li’s work ultimately challenges the spatial logic of the carceral system, which maintains social order by removing certain people from common environments and from the public eye.
Prison Dispatches is part of Evergreen’s call for public art projects addressing issues of equity in public space.
Kriss Li is a multimedia artist who creates films, installations, and collaborations that explore structures of power. Kriss’s work has been shown at over 100 global festivals including DOC NYC, Oberhausen, Images Festival, and Vancouver International Film Festival. They have been selected for international residencies including Amant New York (USA), Recess (USA), Villa Sträuli (Switzerland), and Struts Gallery (Canada). Kriss is the recipient of multiple awards from Canada Council for the Arts and Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec. They were a 2023 finalist to the United Association for Labor Education New Generation Award for Emerging Labor Educators.