Curator and writer Jordan Wilson is a PhD candidate in anthropology at New York University. He is a member of the Musqueam Indian Band and holds an MA in Anthropology and a BA in Indigenous Studies from the University of British Columbia. Wilson’s current research examines the politics of Indigenous language revitalization, the legacies of anthropological collecting, the practices of collecting institutions, and questions concerning Indigenous sovereignty and settler colonialism. His curatorial practice often involves considering the forms of relationships contemporary Indigenous peoples maintain with their ancestral art, material culture, and immaterial heritage currently held by colonial institutions, and the potential of Indigenous art in the public realm. Wilson was a co-curator of the exhibitions c̓əsnaʔəm, the city before the city (2015) and the ongoing In a Different Light: Reflecting on Northwest Coast Art (2017–) at the UBC Museum of Anthropology and co-author of Where the Power Is: Indigenous Perspectives on Northwest Coast Art (Figure 1, 2021).