Watch our June 3 discussion with Governor General’s Award winner Zainub Verjee about the Aga Khan Garden.
#AGAlive is made possible by the EPCOR Heart + Soul Fund.Watch our June 3 discussion with Governor General’s Award winner Zainub Verjee about the Aga Khan Garden.
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Key moments
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Awards and Honors
Awards and Honors
3:49
Awards and Honors
3:49
Afghanistan
Afghanistan
23:17
Afghanistan
23:17
The Woodland Bog
The Woodland Bog
26:51
The Woodland Bog
26:51
How Do You Think that Children Relate to the Peaceful Nature of the Islamic Garden
How Do You Think that Children Relate to the Peaceful Nature of the Islamic Garden
43:27
How Do You Think that Children Relate to the Peaceful Nature of the Islamic Garden
43:27
The Importance of Gardens
The Importance of Gardens
44:45
The Importance of Gardens
44:45
What Is the Haptic Quality
What Is the Haptic Quality
48:25
What Is the Haptic Quality
48:25
The Butterfly Gardens
The Butterfly Gardens
48:43
The Butterfly Gardens
48:43
Use CTRL+F to find key words if it is a longer transcript.
0:06
good afternoon everyone and thank you for joining us this evening my name is catherine croston and
0:11
i’m the executive director and chief curator of the art gallery of alberta i would like to begin by acknowledging
0:16
that we are hosting this event from edmonton i’m a squashy waskahikin in treaty 6
0:21
territory and region 4 of the metis nation of alberta we acknowledge this as the traditional
0:27
and ancestral home of the nahiowak cree anishinabe soto nisitapi blackfoot nakota sioux danae
0:35
and metis peoples and acknowledge the many indigenous first nations and inuit people who make alberta their home today
0:42
we know that this acknowledgement is just one small recognition of the work we need to do to address and reverse the ongoing
0:48
impacts of colonization our thoughts are with the people of the tacoma swap first nation in kamloops
0:55
for the traumas that were forced upon them in the past and that they continue to endure today
1:01
tonight’s talk by zenit verti the yoga khan garden a site of history and diplomacy
1:07
is the first in a series of discussions about gardens that we are organizing this summer in association with our
1:12
exhibition cornelia oberlander genius loci this exhibition explores the work of the
1:18
internationally renowned canadian landscape architect who from the 1950s until the present has
1:24
revealed new ways of understanding the human connection to the natural environment
1:30
i would like to extend our most sincere condolences to the family and friends of cornelia oberlander
1:35
it was with great regret that we looked for passing on may 22nd just a month before her 100th birthday
1:42
we are so very grateful that cornelia was able to play an active role in the development of our exhibition and
1:48
upcoming publication and i think we were able to realize and i’m thankful that we were able to realize both within her lifetime
1:56
it is now my honor to be able to produce zayn and fergie a thought leader facility persuasive
2:02
champion of arts and advocate for artist rights zainab vergie has over four decades built a
2:07
formidable representation reputation as an artist writer critic cultural administrator and public
2:14
intellectual in canada and internationally a firm believer that art is a public good
2:19
she has contributed to international instruments of culture such as the status of the artist and cultural diversity and building
2:26
institutions such as the british columbia arts council as an annotator she is engaged with
2:31
different stakeholders to observe critique and analyze the quotidian practices of the art and culture sector
2:38
to actively work towards engaged public debate and conversations her work as a cultural bureaucrat
2:44
cultural diplomat artist activist and writer is consistent and contiguous with what
2:50
might be termed a critical transversal aesthetic her recent commentary on museums at a
2:55
crossroads in galilee’s west magazine generated a lot of traction today’s talk
3:01
is representative of her sustained research interests in water and gardens and these
3:06
thematic inquiries are part of her forthcoming book titled the arts and international relations art
3:12
artists networks art institutions i sought after speaker in the next few
3:17
weeks zayn zaineb will be delivering a keynote address at the london asia arts world conference
3:23
hosted by the paul mellen center for studies in british art a scholarly center in london later in
3:29
the month her solo exhibition speech acts zainab vergie will be opening at center a the
3:35
vancouver international center for contemporary asian art currently her work is also part of the
3:40
exhibition engaging creativities art in the pandemic hosted by the royal
3:45
society of canada and the university of alberta among many awards and honors in 2020
3:51
zainabergie received the governor general’s award in visual and media arts for outstanding contribution
3:57
and this year ocad university conferred her with an honorary doctorate
4:02
she was appointed as a mclaughlin college fellow at york university and recently chosen as a mentor with the
4:07
prestigious action canada fellowship a 10-month public policy leadership program that aims to enhance
4:14
youth leaders understanding of the country and public policy for the cohort of 2021-2022
4:21
zainab was the executive director of the western front in vancouver and has held positions at the canada council for the
4:27
arts the department of canadian heritage and the city of mississauga she is currently executive director of
4:34
galleries on ontario ontario galleries a voice of art galleries and museums in
4:39
canada before i turn things over to our distinguished guest speaker just a few notes xena will speak for
4:46
about 45 to 50 minutes following which she will answer questions and please enter all of your questions
4:52
using the chat function as well we’ll be posting a survey link in the chat
4:57
it would be really great if you could provide your feedback in the chat in that survey before you leave i would
5:03
like to take this opportunity to acknowledge the pool family foundation at the edmonton community foundation who
5:09
support the pool center of design at the aga our cornelia oberlander exhibition and
5:14
the summer garden talk series are presented as part of our pool center of design programming
5:20
i would also like to thank epcor who provide support for all aga online programming
5:25
through their heart and soul fund now please join me in welcoming zainab fergie
5:38
hi um good evening everyone and thank you catherine for your kind words and gracious
5:45
invitation to speak um at this forum um today
5:52
i’m really honored to be um part of this public programming and i
5:57
want to also thank the the team at the art gallery of alberta
6:02
i live and work on the ancestral and traditional territories of the mississaugas of the credit
6:09
the haudenosau the anishinaabeg and the wandat this territory
6:15
is part of the dish with one spoon weapon belt covenant and is also covered by the upper canada
6:21
treaties we’re all joining today from different locations and i encourage you
6:26
to acknowledge the ancestral and traditional territories of your area
6:32
with the passing of cornelia oberlander this talk and the upcoming exhibition
6:39
cornelia han oberlander genius lokai becomes even more special this
6:46
exhibition explores the work of the canadian landscape architect who from the 1950s until the
6:52
present has revealed new means of understanding the human connection to the natural
6:57
environment in the context of this exhibition i will be speaking on the agakon
7:03
garden and will explore the meaning of landscape and its semantic valency in islamic
7:10
culture further i’ll foreground the idea of gardens as the lead motif
7:16
of landscape planning its use in statecraft and diplomacy now before i begin the
7:23
talk though i would like to acknowledge a few individuals who have been very supportive in this endeavor thank you to nordyan
7:29
mabani i want to thank dr lee foote professor emeritus an
7:35
ex-director at the university of alberta botanical garden from 2011 to 2020 and he graciously
7:44
shared images and stories of the making of the alga khan garden and i really appreciated that
7:49
i also want to thank zara somani president of the ismaili council of edmonton for her continuing support of my work
7:56
i’d also like to thank narendra pagkari for stimulating intellectual insights
8:03
and finally i want to thank somani who did this artwork for this
8:08
presentation at very short notice a fine artist we work together at the
8:13
international art gallery in lisbon as part of the diamond jubilee arts festival
8:19
and this is a square kufic calligraphy and it says bismillah top to bottom
8:27
and has a mirror image which is reflecting bottom to top now i see the resonance of the
8:33
geometry of the garden in this image
8:40
on a more somber note i want to quote
8:46
we know there are lots of sites similar to kamloops that are going to come to light in the
8:52
future we need to begin to prepare ourselves for that
9:00
those that are survivors and intergenerational survivors need to understand that this information
9:06
is important for all of canada to understand the magnitude of the truth of this
9:12
experience these are the words and we must heed them of the retired senator sinclair
9:20
chair of the truth and reconciliation commission as all canadians and the world
9:27
we must be together in this healing and help survivors to
9:34
gather their stories and memories [Music]
9:42
on may 22nd cornelia han overlander passed away at the age of 99 in
9:47
vancouver an institution indeed in the field of landscape architecture
9:54
she said in a 2018 piece quote my passion is to be with nature and
10:02
introduce people to it from all levels of society i believe in the therapeutic effects of
10:10
greenery on the human soul
10:18
now the spirit of a place depends upon the special relationship things in that
10:24
place share with each other the genius loci offers a conceptual connection between
10:31
the exhibition and my talk on the argo khan garden genius lokai emerges from the work of
10:37
malcolm control who speaks about an environmental framework the genus lokai of a place
10:43
according to him possesses both general characteristics of a place
10:49
its presence and more detailed features its identity it is not dependent
10:55
only on visible elements but carries an underlying metaphysical order d
11:02
fairchild ruggles a professor of landscape history and an author of a definitive book on
11:08
islamic gardens and landscapes makes a very fundamental point
11:14
ruggles says that gardens and landscapes are elusive subjects
11:21
they’re positioned in both space and time yet belong to neither exclusively
11:26
exclusively because they are simultaneously a living presence and a memory
11:34
however the garden is thus always the product of a society that defines it
11:39
and places it within a discourse of space and they enter either consciously or
11:45
subconsciously into the shared cultural imagination thus the garden emerges as the
11:53
in-between space between the physical and imaginative
11:58
in that sense landscape and garden can become part of what malcolm control calls
12:04
an environmental framework so let’s move forward and let’s take a snapshot of
12:09
approaches to this idea of landscape
12:16
now through my art practice i’ve been engaged with the idf landscape and what you see here is a still from my
12:23
work a kootsil plur a video poem which explores time and space
12:29
allowing the viewer to experience a moment and the fullness of silence this work was
12:35
um it’s a short work of seven minutes to uh 7.34 minutes it was made in 1993
12:42
and became part of the new canadian video exhibition at moma new york and later traversing
12:50
um territory part two um which was uh road movies in a
12:55
post-colonial landscape and it was curated by judith mastai for the portland institute of contemporary
13:02
art in um 1997. and so what i’m alluding to here is that there
13:08
are multiple approaches to this idea of landscape
13:18
so this assemblage of approaches to landscape very clearly identifies that it is not
13:25
an easy task to pinpoint one element as a dominant lens you can’t
13:31
just pinpoint on one element as a dominant lens and this schema illustrates the
13:37
point and i will not uh elaborate on each but i will say this
13:42
that landscape is not simply what we see but a way of seeing we see it with our
13:50
eye but interpret it with our mind and ascribe values to landscape for
13:56
intangible spiritual reasons landscape can therefore be seen
14:02
as a cultural construct in which our sense of place and memories are embedded now similarly
14:09
a historical landscape um captures our sense of place and heritage and it’s not an isolated
14:16
experience but let’s let’s go dig a little bit further
14:22
the idea of landscape is a western construct conceptually it is rooted in the
14:28
renaissance as europe moved into the early modernity period by the 16th century
14:34
and during this early modern period the major transformative process unfurled both at an individual level and
14:42
within society as a whole at the heart of this transformation lies
14:47
the idea that one form of individual habitus or social organization becomes the
14:54
dominant expression and what i’m alluding to is the making of the urban
15:00
and rural both like landscape are very eurocentric ideas
15:08
it was during the renaissance that the focus shifted from the enclosed walled gardens of
15:14
monasteries and palaces towards the outlying landscape and distant horizons
15:20
and what this shift emphasized was the idea of the controlling view of the surrounding countryside
15:27
and this is where we notice the emergence of the scenic and visual dimensions of landscape
15:34
this spread across europe and one can see the outward gaze and grand design scale
15:41
which is best manifest in the french formal landscape and of course a good example of this is
15:47
is vasa jardin du chateau de versailles the geometrically ordered garden
15:54
layout dwarfed the palace and scale and provided a vista that stretched the
16:01
horizon during the course of this period as the wider countryside was appropriated by
16:07
the privileged few landscape became a means of expressing power and signifying control this manifested
16:15
not only in the formal ordering of the landscape but more importantly that the visual
16:20
appreciation was exclusive to the point from which the seeing occurred i.e that of the owner
16:29
now this is the central motif that informs the western understanding of landscape
16:34
that core notion of the viewpoint and hence control the related idea
16:42
of horizon uh it’s an important feature of this western understanding
16:47
that is absent within the islamic context for instance one can be at the center of
16:53
a garden and be able to look in all directions but never have one controlling view but i’m going to
17:00
come back to this later if time permits now as we move forward let’s try to
17:06
understand what a landscape is and how it is situated in the islamic context
17:12
of muslim societies
17:22
let’s explore how lang landscape becomes a language to control our reality
17:29
the western world began to orientalize the non-western world through landscape
17:35
by attributing meaning to it landscape was used to classify civilizations based on western criteria
17:43
there’s a linguistic concern regarding the absence of an equivalence to the word landscape
17:49
in arabic persian turkish urdu and other languages of the muslim worlds
17:55
jau makuzumi has noted that there is a lack of precisely
18:01
equivalent worlds words in arabic for landscape as it is used in the west
18:06
and in persian and turkish as well the most common words for landscape in arabic are
18:12
manzar [Music] which refer to a view a spectacle a
18:18
scene a perspective etc and likewise in persian
18:23
manzar refers to an object of sight another word persian associated with
18:30
landscape is fair which can refer to walking or strolling
18:35
in a place other words associated with landscape include dur nama the ottoman turkish
18:44
used the term manzara and in contemporary turkish you see the word
18:49
pejars from the french passage and the peshawar literally means the
18:55
landscape in urdu soma can indicate a scene
19:00
associated with the landscape professor m.r ganoon prefers
19:07
probing volume on translating the garden does not use the word landscape at all
19:13
in its deep reflections on the language of contemporary persian garden its experience and meaning the word
19:20
landscape landscape doesn’t appear similarly lamia natori
19:25
has retract has retraced the development of the linguistic uses of words
19:30
representing landscape in classical arabic literature from the 8th to the 11th centuries
19:36
and draws explicit connections among landscape expressions
19:41
pesarjer manzar manchad basically it’s geography and culture
19:48
now fairchild ruggles has also explored this relationship um the
19:55
relationship among sight optics and landscape in the angelusian context
20:00
and as a next step in this process ruggles has drawn on research on vision territory
20:07
and agronomic science in andalusia into dialogue with critical literature
20:13
on landscape in the western social thought having said so let’s see how the islamic
20:21
gardens evolved
20:29
islamic civilization brought dramatic changes to the landscape it inhabited with the skillful
20:36
acquisition and transportation of water the parched lands of the middle east and northern
20:42
africa flourish with man-made verdant oases that not only transformed the economy
20:48
with their agricultural products but also became a powerful form of cultural expression
20:54
the techniques employed to affect this transformation originated among ancient persians and
21:00
romans but muslim communities implemented them more broadly for a complex web of
21:07
motivation having to do with the system of land ownership and labor
21:13
inheritance laws taxation urban growth and an idolized vision of country life
21:20
it is in this context that one views this chronology of islamic gardens as we can see the islamic garden
21:28
first began to manifest itself in the european garden culture in the 17th century
21:35
enticed by the new concept of free expression of space and design the infil influence percolated down to
21:42
florence and even the royal pavilion of brighton in england
21:47
with the impetus of the 19th and 20th century modernity the islamic garden was othered and
21:54
became part of the traditional we see some examples of it in private
21:59
gardens such as the shangri-la in hawaii i think this gives us a reach rich
22:05
context to situate the agakon garden in the 21st century
22:10
and understand what does this articulation of a classic mogul garden imply
22:20
so what is a gomoco garden i want to elaborate a bit here because
22:26
it’s it’s really imperative to understand the complex history of the mogul garden the foremost
22:33
characteristic of the mogul garden is its own architecture and orderly planning which
22:39
barbour in the 16th century famously claimed to have introduced
22:44
into an unclean and disorderly hindustan says ebba koch the moguls came to india
22:51
as the tamarids founded by the turko monk turco mongol warlord
22:56
taimour or tamerlane as known in the west circa 1370 to 1405.
23:05
the taimari dynasty ruled much of iran and central asia for over a century
23:11
first from the samarkand now uzbekistan and then from herat
23:17
now afghanistan in 18th century europe the mughal dynasty was still known as the
23:24
descendants of tamerlan babur the founder of the mogul dynasty
23:30
was of course the most familiar with the thai marine culture having experienced it firsthand in both central
23:38
asia and harat nevertheless his descendants particularly jahangir and shahadjan
23:46
both in the 17th century took a renewed interest in affirming the relationship
23:52
as it lent prestige and credibility to their own marines the most visible and enduring expression
24:00
of the mogul um tamarid connection was however architecture
24:05
and from the beginning the moguls cultivated their patronage of building
24:10
as a statement of their presence in india formerly laid out gardens functioned for
24:16
the moguls as they did for the timer roads [Music] timeraids as open-air palaces
24:24
and were indispensable for the mogul lifestyle the moguls also made them the setting
24:31
for their tombs babur calls his first garden at agra
24:36
laid out in 1526 at chahar bahag
24:41
like some of his earlier gardens in present-day afghanistan barbour used the term in its widest
24:47
sense not necessarily for a garden on a strict cross axial plan but rather for large
24:54
architecturally planned gardens with intersecting raised paved walkways
25:00
platforms and pools after babur the moguls did not use the term chaharbag
25:06
very much in shah jahani sources it is employed metaphorically
25:12
for the earth or the terrestrial jaharbag of the world otherwise a garden is usually just
25:19
called the bag or the garden or bag chair for smaller versions
25:25
still we owe to the moguls the grandest and most consistently planned planned
25:31
chahar bags in the entire history of garden architecture
25:38
now here what you can see are our three different types of the char baha you can sit the top the cross
25:44
axial which is the tomb of humayun at the bottom left is the its terraced
25:50
the shalimar gardens in kashmir and on the bottom right which is um
25:56
the waterfront the lao lal mahal in in rajasthan
26:09
now with this context that i’ve given you um let’s listen to uh brad
26:16
gastinger of the nelson bird waltz landscape architecture firm about the design
26:23
imperatives of the khan garden
26:28
the inspiration for the design really began with the res with research we had the opportunity we were charged
26:35
to really look at the ways that this project could in and of itself the process of this
26:41
project could contribute to global research and understanding and knowledge about islamic garden traditions the garden is
26:48
really made up of three primary areas the woodland bog
26:53
the central bag and the bustan the woodland bog is a walk
26:59
through the woods and so this series of walkways leads one through this existing
27:06
woods and also highlights the openings in the canopy created by some of the existing wetlands
27:14
in that valley the central court or chahabak is the second main area of the garden
27:19
it’s the most constructed of the of the three it is highlighted by
27:25
a series of sunken gardens and plantings that will change color and
27:30
texture throughout the year and it is organized by a central uh fountain system that begins at an
27:38
upper terrace spills down over a series of terraces and then flows across a large flat plain
27:45
a large court towards the constructed wetlands and the and the and the calipan beyond the third main area
27:53
of the garden is called the bustan and it’s a nod to the orchard landscapes of the islamic world and this series of
28:01
plantings surrounds the kalapond and the kalapana was an existing wetland
28:06
that was formed into a pond some years ago and this project gives us an
28:12
opportunity to restore and enhance the capacity of the wetland plantings to contribute to
28:18
the local ecology and also serve as a educational aspect of the garden really the expertise and knowledge
28:25
that’s built here over many decades of experience has really been invaluable to the process
28:37
great um yeah so you know the goal
28:47
the goal of the garden um was to tell the story
28:55
of the edmonton landscape while at the same time forging a connection between
29:01
contemporary alberta and the islamic world of the 16th and 17th century
29:08
and you know from what i spoke earlier and in the previous sections we can see that it’s a very rich history
29:16
and as thomas waltz says uh who was the firm that built this
29:21
we were asked quotes we were asked to look beyond the bounds of the traditional islamic garden
29:27
and to develop ideas that would bring a new kind of relevancy in the 21st century end quote
29:36
and i think the challenge was really was not to replicate but really create something unique to this site
29:43
and and and that is exactly what was created the northernmost islamic garden with an
29:49
appeal in all four seasons of the year
29:57
so the ogre khan garden is situated in the alberta parkland region
30:04
with the broad expanses of prairie and with shallow surface depression in ancient sand
30:10
dunes that form the pothole wetlands it is situated along with two other
30:16
gardens the japanese and indigenous garden and all three share common soil and
30:22
water and and the water flows laterally the material used is very representative
30:29
the sandstones given that it’s situated in the sand dunes the green granite it came from quebec
30:37
and it has portugal limestones one can see in the columns of the talar and
30:43
interestingly the talar connects two different sand dunes
30:48
um one of the botanical connectors that dr foote mentioned when we were speaking
30:55
was the rat root also called sweet flag and or muskrat root plant
31:02
and this is a plant which actually connect which is um a connection across the indigenous
31:08
american and muslim cultures it grows in india
31:14
central asia south russia and also in north america in brief
31:21
what we see is that gardens are secular endeavors stemming from the practical need to
31:27
organize the surrounding space tame nature enhance the earth’s yield
31:33
and create a legible map on which to distribute natural resources the removal of the
31:40
garden from the broader context of landscape agriculture and water supply results in
31:46
a limited and superficial view giving extraordinary emphasis to religion and dynastic politics while
31:53
ignore while ignoring other factors that contributed equally to garden form and meaning
32:01
and the auger khan garden draws us to this very core of what a garden is in the 21st
32:08
century um i’m going to ask helen again to play
32:13
a video just so we can get a virtual tour of the garden
32:29
[Music]
32:40
bye [Music]
32:54
oh [Music]
33:08
oh [Music]
33:39
[Music]
33:47
[Applause] [Music]
34:22
[Music]
34:44
[Applause]
34:53
[Music]
35:00
so [Music]
35:08
[Applause] [Music]
35:26
[Applause] so
35:34
[Music]
35:42
so [Music]
35:56
so
36:04
[Music] that although gardens are typically
36:10
appreciated as peaceful spaces of apolitical serenity um here i wanted to highlight how
36:17
gardens can provide new sites and sensibilities that complicate our understanding of
36:22
diplomacy war and peace and while gardens are a popular location
36:28
for diplomatic performances i mean for example the treaty of versailles the global politics of gardens still
36:35
remains under-researched in international relations and i think it’s imperative to take
36:41
cognizance of gardens as objects of diplomacy to examine gardens as contingent social
36:48
constructions of social ordering and world ordering which both shape and
36:53
participate in global politics in this forthcoming book of mine i try
36:58
to engage with the role of gardens in diplomacy and in matters of peacekeeping and
37:04
gardens here are a site an institution an enactment and an encounter in addition
37:11
to analyzing gardens as sites of symbolic power my book will also look at
37:16
um looks at them as mater as a material modality where diplomacy war and peace
37:22
are represented performed and experienced through more embodied effective and everyday
37:30
encounters um
37:36
now on a more philosophical note um i’d like to invoke this beautiful
37:41
couplet panned by allama iqbal baha’is in simpler terms
37:48
it invokes that there’s still so much work to be done before one can return to paradise
37:56
and this resonates well with what philosopher richard harrison writes in in gardens an essay on the human
38:04
condition and i’ll quote we inhabit relatively permanent worlds that precede
38:11
our birth and outlast our death binding the generations together
38:16
in a historical continuum work builds the world that makes us historical the historical
38:23
world in turn serves as the stage for human action the deeds and speech from which humans
38:31
be it from which human beings realize their potential for freedom and affirm their dignity in the radiance
38:38
of the public square
38:44
in this respect the agakon garden foregrounds its social impetus
38:50
and invites all of us to engage in a cultural dialogue that brings together desperate
38:57
populations towards a better tomorrow sharing the beautiful and bountiful nature and offering a
39:05
graceful stewardship of these lands this poignant quote captures the very raison d’etre of
39:12
gardens robert harrison offers an exploration of our need to garden in the midst of
39:20
plague poverty war and our everyday lives as a counterforce to histories
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deleterious drives it is no surprise that thomas wall walls the principal of
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the firm was reading harrison when he was touring the islamic and mogul gardens
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on the on the insistence of his highness the ogre khan a garden is a site of peace and
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reconciliation in the face of tragedy amidst dust
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it is in this context that the four point eight hector got again garden
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um in alberta was gifted by his highness thiago khan and i think becomes more valuable
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thank you
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thank you very much dana for your presentation and i want to thank all of the people
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who attended could people who are interested in posting questions for uh zainab please enter them into the
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chat and then i can uh convey them to her
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so there are many people who are expressing thanks to you for your presentation some people
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have suggested that we might want to redo it again in the future um and perhaps do so without some of the
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technical um technical difficulties that we’ve experienced this evening um
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and um so that’s an opportunity we could do so oh and here’s
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some questions a question about how do children relate
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to the peaceful how do children relate to the peaceful
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nature of the garden i’m going to extrapolate from that
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is that a question to me how do you oh here’s a question from uh from lindy she would like to
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hear more about the concept of viewpoint in islamic gardens
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okay um yes so so what i’ve understood in in my
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in my reading and in my um sort of study of this is that um
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the the viewpoint is not is really coming more from a western
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context this idea of of having you know um this sort of panoramic view uh and it’s
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really coming out of a very western idea of landscape in in um as part of a control mechanism
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right whilst in the islamic uh it’s it’s not really uh there uh it that’s not the
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the primary um the thing and so um i i i think that
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you know this idea of landscape is really ordered um and and by the west and it’s
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classified in in particular ways and it basically there’s four things um in order for landscape to classify
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civilizations there’s criteria these are the criteria defined by western culture there’s four things
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there needs to be one or several words for landscape there needs to be a literature oral or
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written describing landscapes or extolling their beauty there needs to
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be pictorial representations of landscapes and they need to be pleasure gardens but
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there’s always this idea of the this having this panoramic viewpoint
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with it um and so you know very different um sort of
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idea about what landscape is from the different cultures
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thank you and to go back to the question from christine your question was yes how do you think
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that children relate to the peaceful nature of the islamic garden
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that’s such a great question um you know i i i’m not sure i can say definitively
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how they do but um children are always amazing in that uh and they feel things very really and
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state them and i expect that any garden that is that
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serene and peaceful or reflective spaces um must have some effect as they do on
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us so i can’t say that i can per se really answer that i i
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you know i mean i’d say um it can have the effect of being very
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therapeutic but i would say that for everyone right it can put all of us in that very meditative
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reflective space and we can feel the silence you know um
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as well in those spaces but um i i don’t know i can’t say you know
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exactly what that means maybe it helps us de-accelerate from the instant world that we live in
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i wonder you know in your closing remarks about the importance of gardens
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you know culturally and as sites of uh meditation and reflection if you
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think now the world in which we live which is so complicated by um obviously in the last 18 months the
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pandemic but also by kind of acts of violence and and the repercussions of histories of of trauma
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do you see that gardens now fully become more important for us or something
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uh that we will begin to create more spaces that provide that for people
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you know i i’d find it hard not to think that you’re that that would be we will rediscover
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them in different ways perhaps we’ll rediscover them in different ways perhaps they’ve always been with us but
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maybe we’ll build a new relationship as we build them i mean i’m just thinking of even all the crises around
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climate change and you know how what is the stewardship of the land how do we
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understand it how do we work with it and what can the indigenous peoples teach us what can we learn respectfully from them
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and i i think that even just the idea of like you know urban farming urban gardens um
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um you know there’s so many different things that that we could be doing and and i
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think that you know um in some of the things that i said right is is like in fact
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you know the garden actually makes us you know we we’re part of that making of the garden and it also brings
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meaning for us um in in in and you just think of like heirloom
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seeds you know and preserving those and and sort of fighting you know um
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the kind of um you know um uh taking over
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of our heritage that’s occurred and how food production has changed you know so drastically even in the last 30 years
46:44
let’s say so i i do think that the pandemic has given us a moment to think about
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many things um but i would definitely say that you know among the crisis is the climate change
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and and how do we actually think of garden within that context
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and and what can we do um to preserve and respectfully toward the
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land there is a question from brittany about how you would include more haptic
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qualities in a garden
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yeah um so we understand haptic to do with our with our senses um
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um and and i i guess i always think of the garden that way
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anyways because i think it does i’m not sure if i’ve understood the question but um
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from my perspective i think that the visual it it employs all your senses and it can
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do i mean you know i’m just thinking of the the beautiful um garden even that at banff catherine that
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you you know of mike mcdonald’s the butterfly garden right where all the local
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um species plant species were built into the garden and those plants
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specifically drew butterflies to that space right so there’s many ways i think that we can
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think of of light of the connectors of things that enlighten um are literally
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our senses bring them to life right uh there’s someone who is asking what is
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the haptic quality oh qualities that you can touch and feel that brittany answered in the
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chat um it’s interesting you mentioned mike mcdonald’s gardens because one of the other talks that we are doing in part of
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this series is a conversation about mike mcdonald’s butterfly gardens um and the butterfly gardens uh in
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alberta being of course one of the damp center but also uh the old arcale of alberta under the name of the
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edmonton art gallery uh created a butterfly garden uh back in the early 2000s so
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that conversation is coming up on july 22nd and it’s also um interested that
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occ-1 uh the indigenous uh curatorial collective and exhibition space here in edmonton is
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rebuilding a garden inspired by mike mcdonald’s butterfly gardens this summer so
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yeah very exciting well thank you so much zane it’s been a pleasure having you join us
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this evening i’ve always enjoyed our conversations and um you know now that we’re entering into a time
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where alberta is beautiful and warm and the restrictions are being lifted that i think that many people should
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take at any opportunity they have to go to see the ago khan garden uh if they haven’t been there before and
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so you know the u of a gardens are a magical place with um you know so much for people to
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experience so thank you for giving us this kind of uh glimpse into those gardens and the
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history and um how important they are for us as a as culture and society so thank you so much
49:58
great and thank you very much for for inviting me and um i yet have to come to alberta to
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see the gardens myself and meet you and everybody else but yes
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thank you so much and um um we you know i i’ll i’ll be i’m really
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sorry about all the technical difficulties as well but hopefully people got most of it i’m sure
50:21
they did yes thank you so much and i hope you have a wonderful evening and i do hope to see you in person soon
50:28
thanks so much thanks everyone thank you good night everybody
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