Work of Calgary artists with disabilities to be showcased in COP26 exhibit - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 12:10 PM | Calgary | 7.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
CalgaryPhotos

Work of Calgary artists with disabilities to be showcased in COP26 exhibit

An exhibit that features the work of some Calgary artists with disabilities will be showcased in Glasgow next week as part of the United Nation's annual Climate Change Conference.

Calgary's National accessArts Centre chosen to represent Canada in collaborative global arts project

Calgary artist Rachel Harding stands with a recording device in the bushes of Calgary's St. Patrick's Island. This image was taken with a disposable camera that floated between the artists involved with Canada's contribution to Conference of the Birds, an exhibit that will be showcased at the UN's climate summit in Glasgow. (Rachel Harding, Karin Hazle, Jonathan Stel, JorDen Tyson)

An exhibit that features the work of some Calgary artists with disabilities will be showcased in Glasgow next week as part of the United Nation's annual climate change conference.

Artists from around the world will be taking part in a collaborative global arts project for COP26 called Conference of the Birds.

It is inspired by an ancient Sufi poem of the same name that depicts the birds of the world flocking together at a time of existential crisis, a press release for the project says.

  • Have questions about COP26 or climate science, policy or politics? Email us:ask@cbc.ca. Your input helps inform our coverage.

Calgary's disability arts organizationNational accessArts Centre (NaAC)was selected to represent Canada's contribution to the project, which was crafted in response to COVID-19 and the climate crisis.

The artists involved will be attending the exhibit in person, along with some of the project's organizersand they are, in a word, excited.

Artist Rachel Harding said 'it felt very, very wonderful, as well as a good change' to be able to meet the other artists collaborating on Conference of the Birds in person. This is one of the images that will be on display in Glasgow. (Rachel Harding, Karin Hazle, Jonathan Stel, JorDen Tyson)

"We've been working on this for three months now, we've been meeting over Zoom weekly," Richelle Bear Hat, a Blackfoot/Dane-Zaa Cree artist who is the special projects facilitator at NaAC, told The Homestretch on Friday.

"And so to be able to accompany the work to Glasgow, to be part of the COP26 conference it's a very unique opportunity, and something we didn't think would happen. But we're going."

Navigating change

NaAc is composed of visual artists, dancers, theatre practitioners and Indigenous elders, and is the oldest and largestdisability arts organization in Canada.

For Conference of the Birds, its contributing artists Rachel Harding, Karin Hazle, Jonathan Stel and JorDen Tyson submitted four self-portraits, as well as photos that were snapped with a disposable camera that floated between themon St. Patrick's Island in Calgary's East Village.

Artist Karin Hazle in one of the stills that will be displayed at Conference of the Birds. (Rachel Harding, Karin Hazle, Jonathan Stel, JorDen Tyson)

The poem, Bear Hat says, follows the story of a flock of birds that go through different valleys of love, for example, orwonderment.

"Just different kinds of things that we face all the time in our lives. Of how to navigate change, and how to also navigate the times that aren't that don't always feel good," Bear Hat said.

She said it sparked many outdoor gatherings anddiscussions among the artists that led to the photographs.

"We gathered and reflected on this poem, every week we went to our valley, and we were in deep discussions. And in the end, we created this series of photographs, and also a video of a time that we got to gather by the river safely."

A feeling of peace and joy

Rachel Harding is one of the artists who contributed, and says NaAChas allowed her a creative outlet.

It feels, Harding says,like a family getting together and doing art together.

"The fact that I get to be creative in a place that is very welcoming. The instructors and other artists are amazing at what they do, and it feels like a second home to me," Harding said.

Artist JorDen Tyson looks at the water at Calgary's St. Patrick's Island. (Rachel Harding, Karin Hazle, Jonathan Stel, JorDen Tyson)

Harding's favourite art form is drawing, but in one of the photographs for Conference of the Birds, she is pictured standing in the bushes with a recording device.

It represents being outdoors, and listening to the world around you, she says.

"I think something about Rachel's photograph, and contribution as a whole to this project, is just an openness," Bear Hat said.

"There's that sense of exploration. And I think that that's such an important an important skill to work and exercise, especially when navigating change or learning new things."

As for what Harding hopespeople get out of the exhibit in Glasgow, she said she hopes they feel inspired to make their own art.

"As well as feeling a sense of peace and joy," Harding said.

Conference of the Birds will be on display at The Pipe Factory in Glasgow, Scotland, from November 5until the 12.

With files from The Homestretch