Visually impaired artist with passion for painting spreads message of hope, acceptance - Action News
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New Brunswick

Visually impaired artist with passion for painting spreads message of hope, acceptance

Born visually impaired in Grand-Barachois, a small eastern New Brunswick community on the Northumberland Strait,YsabelleVautourconnects with herself and with others through art.

Ysabelle Vautour of Fredericton started the New Brunswick Disability Art Collective

A woman sitting beside a framed drawing.
Visual artist Ysabelle Vautour says she also uses recycled materials to make arts. (Sophia Etuhube/CBC)

Born visually impaired in Grand-Barachois, a small eastern New Brunswick community on the Northumberland Strait, Ysabelle Vautour connects with herself and with others through art.

Now living in Fredericton, Vautour'sdisabilitynot only inspired her to pursue a career in visual arts, but it also prompted her to create a safe space for otherdisabled artists in New Brunswick.

Her visual impairmentsincludecolour-blindness, photosensitivityand 20/200 vision.

"So most people they have 20/20 vision and mine's like 20/200," she said. "So whatever you see at 200 feet, I have to like go to 20 feet to see the same thing that you're seeing.

"I never thought that the way I see is bad," she said. "For me it's fine. I was always a very creative person in school."

Woman leans down painting face on sketchpad as another woman sits across the table from her.
Ysabelle Vautour loves painting faces. 'The face is kind of like a complete thing and it's the most interesting part, sometimes if I'm feeling an emotion it almost talks back to you,' she says. (Pat Richard/CBC)

Vautour saidshe hopes to use her art to educate people and change their perceptions.

"People ask me questions about the visual impairment because I do visual art ... I could have hidden that fact, but I thought it was important because it affects the artwork," says Vautour.

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By focusing on how the process makes her feel rather than the outcome, artist Ysabelle Vautour connects with herself and others through art.

She first started painting for personal reasons to make herself feel goodand autonomous when she felt her job was no longerproviding that. But she soon became more passionate about painting, and challenged herself to further develop her skills.

Although she didn't attend art school, Vautour said she watchedYouTube videos and attendedas many art events as she could.

"I'm just really surprised about the amount of opportunities that it's given me. Like last year I was able to travel all across New Brunswick from festival to festival." she said.

A woman sits beside two framed paintings.
'People ask me questions about the visual impairment because I do visual art ... I could have hidden that fact, but I thought it was important because it affects the artwork,' says Vautour. (Sophia Etuhube/CBC)

'It almost talks back to you'

Vautour's art is mainly inspired by her love for people and their faces.

"I really like people. The fact that I don't see very well, I tend to take a lot of pictures, so that I can zoom in and it's very easy to zoom in on the face," she said.

"And the face is kind of like a complete thing and it's the most interesting part, sometimes if I'm feeling an emotion it almost talks back to you."

Vautour chooses to paint with plain colours inboldly-labelled containersand is more focused on how the painting process makes her feel than its outcome.Other times sheasks people to help her identify coloursor to give feedbackon her initial drawings.

Community building

In 2021 Vautourstarted the New Brunswick DisabilityArt Collective.The groupnow has more than 50 members from across the province who advocateand celebratedisability culture through the arts.

She said the group is made up of photographers, painters, musicians, poets, writers, graphic designers, comedians, writers, textile artists and more.

Painter and group member Cass Maz saidmeeting Vautourand joining the group is "nice because when you get there you get more purposeful ideas."

A woman in a wheelchair beside a table filled with artworks.
Painter Cass Maz says joining the New Brunswick Disability Art Collective proved to her that she could be good at something despite her disabilities, and she says she finds painting therapeutic. (submitted by Cass Mz)

Maz, who uses a wheelchair, said she had a stroke in 2013 thatresulted in a number ofchronic health conditions includinginvoluntary muscle movement, twitching eyes, high blood pressure, motor speech disorders andnumbness on her left side.

She started painting after meeting theinstructor ofher 26th birthday sip-and-paint party.

"The artist that came showed us some different techniques to make a picture and I was surprised," she said.

"So I went on the internet like YouTube and was looking for different techniques I could use for painting and I found a bunch and I just kept painting."

A woman standing in front of a wall.
Vautour says becoming a visual artist has given her a way to connect with herself and a voice to express herself. (submitted by Ramneets Singh Karla)

Vautour has now had her art showcased in several Canada cities andhad her first solo show at the Charlotte Street Arts Centre in Fredericton.

For her,becoming a visual artist has helped her reconnect with herself. She hopes her art becomes more accessible to everyone and their perception of disability art becomes more accepting.

"It's kind of like writing in a diary ... it feels good," she said.