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Tapestry spans two city blocks, nine years of one artist's life and several million years of oil

Calgary artist and filmmaker Sandra Sawatzky talks about spending nine years creating an elaborately-designed tapestry that tells the history of oil.

'Wouldn't it be neat to do something like ... a film on cloth? And so that's what I did.'

Take a look at the massive tapestry that tells the global history of oil

7 years ago
Duration 0:34
When it comes to creating two-block-long pieces of art that take nine years to complete, medieval European craftsmen have nothing on Calgary artist and filmmaker Sandra Sawatzky.

When it comes to creating two-block-long pieces of art that takenine years to complete, medieval European craftsmenhave nothing on Calgary artist and filmmaker Sandra Sawatzky.

That's because Sawatzkyturned back the clock for her latest project, the Black Gold Tapestry, to around the 15th century, where she took inspiration from the BayeuxTapestry, a 67-metre (220-foot), hand-embroidered narrative of the Battle of Hastings in the 11th century.

For Sawatzky,the notion of using the format of the BayeuxTapestry to tell a Calgary story that's also a global onewas appealing even if it was going to have to chew up a sizeable chunk of her life to get done.

"I thought wouldn't it be neat to do something like a story a film on cloth? And so that's what I did," Sawatzky saidon theCalgary Eyeopeneron Monday.

Sandra Sawatzky works on Black Gold Tapestry, a two-block-long piece that explores the history of oil and gas. (Kathryn Marlow/Calgary Eyeopener)

Glenbowexhibit

The Black Gold tapestryis being installed at the Glenbow Museum, where it opens to the public Oct.7. It will be on display until May 21, 2018.

Nine years in the making, the Black Gold Tapestry tells the story of the impact of the discovery of oil and gas on humanity. (Kathryn Marlow/Calgary Eyeopener)

"This story affects everybody on earth in oneway or another," Sawatzky said."I live in Calgary ...and although I had some connection with [oil and gas] I had done training videos for the oilpatch I didn't know very much about it.

"I really wanted to capture a story that would keep my interest, andthere would be lots to look at, and it would be worth spending one sixth of my life on making it," she said.

Calgary artist Sandra Sawatzky spent nine years creating the Black Gold Tapestry, a 67-metre-long, hand-embroidered artwork that tells the story of oil and gas. (Zoltan Varadi/Glenbow Museum)

They say a journey of 10,000 miles starts with a single step.

For Sawatzky, a journey of nine years, creating a tapestry that's two city blocks long, started with a single panel.

"The first panel that I stitched, I only bought enough fabric for that panel. I had enough moneyfor that piece," she said.

Sandra Sawatzky's tapestry depicts the impact of oil and natural gas on civilization, examining how it has fueled human ingenuity, progress, warfare, disaster, prosperity and commerce across the planet for thousands of years. The exhibition opens Oct. 7 at the Glenbow Museum. (Glenbow Museum)

Things got complicated when Sawatzky went shopping for more fabric in order to continue the project.

"When it came (time) to do the other panels, I had to buy other fabric, because I couldn't find that fabric," she said.

Overcoming obstacles

Finding matching fabric was just the first obstacle she faced, too.

"Just sourcing the yarns, the colours then doing the research. It took a year of researching anddrawing," she said. "I did a cartoon first. There's a 220-foot,pen-and-ink drawing before I did the piece andstarted to stitch it. Then I had to transfer it."

Calgary artist Sandra Sawatzky spent close to a decade working on a 220-foot-long fabric tapestry that tells the history of oil. (Glenbow Museum)

Nine years later, she's installing it at the Glenbow, along with those pen-and-ink drawings and other pieces of the puzzle that she accumulated over close to a decade's worth of work.

"I'm somewhat driven," Sawatzkysaid. "I have the skills to do it and the will to do it."


With files from theCalgary Eyeopener