Watch our June 26 Walking Tour of ‘The Scene’ with Tiffany Shaw-Collinge. #AGAlive is made possible by the EPCOR Heart + Soul Fund.Watch our June 26 Walking Tour of ‘The Scene’ with Tiffany Shaw-Collinge. #AGAlive is made possible by the EPCOR Heart + Soul Fund. …
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Manifestation of the Chinatown Lion Gates
Manifestation of the Chinatown Lion Gates
8:27
Manifestation of the Chinatown Lion Gates
8:27
Materials
Materials
18:55
Materials
18:55
Trespa Panel
Trespa Panel
18:59
Trespa Panel
18:59
Lighting
Lighting
20:56
Lighting
20:56
Community Gardens
Community Gardens
22:12
Community Gardens
22:12
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0:00
[Music]
0:09
this work here
0:10
is about my family lineage throughout
0:13
alberta so
0:14
this is my mother’s house where i’m
0:16
actually currently living she passed
0:17
away
0:18
on christmas eve so i moved into there
0:20
very brief uh very recently
0:22
and so this is her house and then in
0:25
edmonton so we live
0:26
by the western mall and then this is
0:29
the um for
0:32
this is for mcmurray where my
0:33
great-grandmother lived this is her
0:35
where she lived this is the sny where
0:37
they used to swim
0:39
all the time and so my great-grandmother
0:42
my grandmother and my mother were all
0:43
born in this place so it’s really about
0:46
recollecting places that we occupy
0:49
and her land that they all lived on
0:52
together is actually still
0:53
undeveloped and the raspberry bushes
0:56
that they
0:57
collected from on the land are still
0:59
there it was meant to be developed
1:01
as part of that large boom at fort
1:03
mcmurray about 15
1:04
20 years ago and so it’s just now still
1:06
sitting empty so it’s kind of nice to go
1:08
visit that space
1:10
and most of my practice
1:13
is an intersection between art and
1:15
architecture
1:17
the ways that this work is translated
1:21
more delves into my architectural
1:23
practice this stems a bit more from my
1:27
thesis research when i was in los
1:28
angeles where i was looking at different
1:31
ways of layering information
1:34
so this work essentially takes images
1:38
from google maps they take i make them
1:40
black and white
1:41
and i run them through a series of
1:43
processes through
1:45
photoshop through rhino which is a 3d
1:47
modeling program
1:48
illustrator then i bring them back into
1:50
rhino
1:52
i do a series of section cuts like
1:54
you’re cutting an apple
1:55
and then i place them and flatten them
1:58
and then i create different
1:59
drawings from them this is the
2:01
illustrator process and technique
2:04
then when i get the layering methods
2:05
that i see for highs and lows for high
2:08
points and low points kind of like when
2:09
you’re looking at a plan
2:11
or topography you’re seeing high points
2:12
and low points i then move it into
2:15
a process where i can mill it out of a
2:17
machine
2:18
and i developed this work at the banff
2:20
center when i was there
2:22
in an indigenous residency
2:25
the thing then that i do is i
2:28
unflatten the layers create space
2:30
between them
2:32
and then i take different pieces of wood
2:35
i laminate them and then i
2:38
mill into them so this is like a walnut
2:41
there’s a cherry
2:42
there’s a plywood um
2:46
then this is such a long process but the
2:48
reason why i’m explaining it is because
2:49
this is part of my process it’s like a
2:51
way of reducting the information
2:53
over and over again so that i barely
2:55
recognize the true
2:57
form of the google maps image so then i
3:00
take
3:00
a bit so c and c is a piece
3:04
it’s like a router a large router that
3:05
gets attached
3:07
to a machine and then it essentially
3:10
carves out the wood some people aren’t
3:11
sure what a cnc is so i’m
3:13
not to hope that you this was good
3:15
information for you
3:16
i’m not trying to mansplain something
3:19
which often happens
3:20
as a female in a wood shot and so i try
3:23
to make the bit
3:24
that drills the holes or or cuts out of
3:27
the wood larger than what
3:28
it would usually be usually when you use
3:32
a cnc
3:33
you’re looking for refinement but in
3:35
this process i was looking to
3:37
further degrade the image so that i
3:39
still further reduce
3:41
what it was and in that way i’m playing
3:44
with
3:44
technology and often i work
3:47
collaboratively
3:49
i’m a part of the curatorial collective
3:52
and we work collaboratively
3:53
i’m an architect so it’s not usually my
3:56
idea but then people just think it is
3:58
because i have the big a
3:59
architect in my name and when i’m doing
4:02
my own artwork
4:03
i like there’s nowhere for me to hide so
4:06
in this way i just like
4:07
hide and say i’m working with technology
4:10
and
4:11
in this way i’m it’s kind of like
4:14
christmas where i’m surprising myself
4:15
about what the process is
4:17
and so then it doesn’t necessarily
4:18
become about the end product
4:20
it’s more about the process of
4:22
collaboration which is where
4:23
the nexus of my work exists and so
4:27
that’s why
4:28
we wanted to show both works was just to
4:30
really discuss the process
4:32
of the artwork which is how i also feel
4:34
about my architectural practice
4:36
we really work in a within
4:40
an idea of gathering people together
4:43
where we’re more of the pen
4:45
and the people’s ideas or what we try to
4:47
bring forward
4:48
and so that it’s not just like one
4:50
individual’s approach
4:52
one thing that is interesting i find
4:54
about this work is that
4:56
it can fit into the lexicon of other
4:58
indigenous works where it talks about
4:59
past present future
5:00
and a lot of my work will try to think
5:02
about those layers
5:04
intentionally and unintentionally where
5:05
i’m thinking back to my family’s past
5:08
but then i’m very insistent on using
5:10
modern techniques or contemporary
5:12
techniques to render them
5:14
often people will call me and ask me if
5:17
i
5:18
would be a part of something that they
5:20
want and i can tell that they’re asking
5:22
me
5:22
because they know that i’m indigenous
5:25
and so then i get very nervous
5:27
because the way that i exhibit work
5:29
doesn’t look the way people think it
5:31
usually looks and so i’m just very
5:35
conscious of those
5:36
methods and those layers that somehow
5:39
push my work into more of a political
5:41
space than i would have imagined
5:43
so i think that’s something that i’m
5:45
always trying to think about when i’m
5:47
creating work is
5:48
what materials am i using what materials
5:50
have we used in the past and how can i
5:52
continue them
5:56
one thing i should say is that our
5:57
family is metis and we come from the red
6:00
river
6:00
if you’re wondering and i was born in
6:04
calgary and raised in edmonton
6:06
so this is my home but i’m often
6:08
thinking about
6:10
what what makes the components of my
6:13
family
6:14
distinct from other families or
6:17
different from
6:18
other narratives and i think the places
6:21
that we occupy are part of that
6:22
so that’s why i did this work and
6:24
hopefully i can kind of scale these up i
6:26
see these
6:28
as sort of a series that i have started
6:30
and i continue to look forward to like
6:31
making these bigger and bigger i’m
6:33
always thinking about
6:34
scale the material right now in this
6:36
particular case the wood wasn’t
6:38
particularly important more the contrast
6:40
between the woods
6:41
so i just wanted to see that dark light
6:43
because cherry is not from here
6:45
but there’s something about wood that i
6:48
really
6:48
like with the grains and i think that
6:50
they almost look like a wood cut or a
6:51
wood block
6:52
in a way and i also think that the wood
6:56
is a drawing tool as well like i think
6:58
this is
6:59
just several different ways of drawing
7:02
and the wood is just to help me
7:04
exasperate that
7:06
i said that it comes from my
7:07
architectural practice because
7:09
when we would be rendering and spending
7:11
all of our nights and getting no sleep
7:13
just sort of spitting things out from
7:14
our computers you could always tell what
7:16
program people were using
7:18
they’re like oh that’s from a maya
7:19
program that’s from an autocad program
7:21
that’s from rhino that’s from revit you
7:23
could tell right away
7:24
and so i began to ask myself are we
7:27
actually designing or is the
7:28
program designing for us and i’m sure
7:30
you asked that yourself when you’re in
7:32
certain
7:33
programs you’re like is this my
7:35
authentic voice or is this the program
7:37
helping me derive to that like language
7:39
gets chosen in google in gmail for
7:41
example
7:42
so like is that being crafted for me and
7:45
so
7:46
i’ve always been since that time i
7:47
started to realize that
7:49
we might sort of be pawns in that that
7:51
dichotomy
7:52
i’ve started to always make sure that my
7:54
language is distinctly mine
7:57
or something that i have felt like i
7:59
created so that’s why i
8:00
take a google map image and then just
8:02
further degrade it so many different
8:03
ways that you cannot tell how this was
8:05
actually created
8:07
so thank you for joining me on this walk
8:09
here i think this piece went
8:12
that i proposed for it was in 2007 or
8:14
2018.
8:16
um the public art committee actually
8:20
did not choose my work for this they
8:23
chose someone else’s work
8:24
it’s a really beautiful piece in those
8:25
two boxes they haven’t been opened yet
8:28
they’re the manifestation of the
8:30
chinatown
8:31
lion gates and there was a whole
8:33
community approach to
8:35
put items into the new lions
8:38
as a way to manifest the memory of what
8:40
they were
8:42
which i think i think was really well
8:45
received because it was a really
8:46
upsetting motion when the gates were
8:48
removed and relocated
8:50
and those were just down that boulevard
8:52
over there
8:55
but they they called me
8:58
maybe a month or two afterwards and
8:59
asked me to be involved with the design
9:02
team
9:03
because when i was in the
9:06
interview i have this uh funny way of
9:08
like interviewing people back
9:10
to make sure that the job works for me
9:12
rather than
9:13
it me working for them which is usually
9:16
how i get hired
9:17
for jobs actually um
9:21
because i was really interested in what
9:23
the details were to make this look good
9:25
the canopy in itself and the
9:28
architecture team i think was interested
9:30
in having a relationship
9:32
to make sure that if they did choose
9:34
this work it could be integrated
9:35
together from a design standpoint
9:37
when you’re hired as a public art artist
9:40
you’re much
9:40
separated from the design and you come
9:44
afterwards every after everything’s
9:45
built and
9:47
i think they understood that it was
9:48
integral if this piece was to
9:50
be created that we worked together so i
9:52
was so thrilled to go to the meetings
9:54
and be very vocal even though
9:58
most of the comments i really had no
9:59
place in making
10:04
this is actually built by dialogue and
10:06
um
10:07
they also partner with isl i work for
10:10
reimagine in my architecture practice
10:11
but it was nice that i got to work with
10:12
another office
10:14
and so that was a really positive
10:16
experience
10:17
when i applied for the work i said that
10:20
this should be
10:21
um the original render showed a piece of
10:24
the panel coming down to the ground
10:27
and i felt that this flower pattern that
10:30
i work with a lot in my artwork
10:32
should touch the ground and then when
10:34
they told me that
10:35
like from design costs they probably
10:37
can’t do it like it was always like a
10:38
scaling back of cost that it probably
10:39
wouldn’t do it so then i
10:40
was like well i don’t know if my work
10:42
should be here because i really think it
10:43
should touch the ground
10:45
and so it was nice to be a part of a
10:46
design team that was receptive to those
10:48
design cues so that’s why it’s been a
10:49
really positive working relationship
10:51
and we actually got it to do that you
10:54
have to really think about a lot of
10:55
things like scepted so
10:58
really making sure that people don’t
11:00
scale or climate or that people feel
11:02
safe
11:02
in these places so we tried to work
11:05
through a lot of different ways to make
11:06
sure that it worked within the september
11:08
rules that you typically use when you’re
11:11
designing
11:12
so this flower artwork is actually my
11:14
great grandmother’s moccasin making
11:16
beating pattern
11:18
there was the fort mcmurray fire that
11:20
happened and we came
11:21
we came to clean up my great uncle’s
11:23
house who just passed away just before
11:25
the fire about a week after the town
11:26
opened
11:28
and when so just to give you a bit of
11:30
time
11:31
when i was there i was there with like a
11:33
six month old thinking i was going to
11:34
help people
11:35
clean their house which did not happen
11:38
but i did bring my nieces and nephews
11:39
and they helped
11:40
but what happened was when i was there i
11:42
was able to take some of my belongings
11:44
with me
11:45
and like they lived next to the sny as
11:46
well so when you saw that map they lived
11:48
in that area as well
11:51
part of the packages that i brought home
11:53
some china some blankets
11:55
and there was a bunch of
11:58
patterns rolled up and i brought home a
12:00
bunch of hide
12:01
because my family has a trap line there
12:05
and we found these patterns and whenever
12:07
i was
12:09
and i’m not sure if you’ve been to
12:11
workshops but whenever i go to moccasin
12:12
making workshops
12:14
i’d always be struggling about which
12:15
pattern to use and so i’d like look up
12:18
metis beating patterns cree beading
12:19
patterns online and then i’d like trace
12:21
them but they never really felt like
12:22
they were mine to use
12:24
it kind of felt like plagiarism in a way
12:27
but when i found these patterns these
12:29
these
12:30
drawings on both sides of the hide
12:33
because you don’t waste anything
12:35
it really felt like i had something that
12:37
was mine that i could continue to move
12:39
on within my family
12:41
so i use this pattern quite a lot i use
12:43
it at the indigenous art park
12:46
at a smaller scale of course this is the
12:47
largest i’ve been able to do it so far
12:50
i have it at the floovog store if you
12:53
like their shoes
12:54
and i i’ve done it in other capacities
12:57
but i like we’ll laser cut it i’ll
12:59
waterjet cut it um
13:02
and i’ll print it so there’s lots of
13:04
different ways to look at this but
13:06
the reason why i wanted it here i’ve
13:07
worked in this area for a long time
13:10
as a student as a student intern
13:15
when i was in between the summers of
13:17
school i came to work for atb
13:19
architecture which they’ve been absorbed
13:20
by stantec
13:22
but we worked at the community hall here
13:24
so they
13:25
took it down and then i helped work on
13:27
the design for that and then i helped
13:28
work on the
13:29
ymca housing and then they also had the
13:31
seniors metis housing so i just kind of
13:33
photographed this area quite a lot from
13:35
a younger age
13:37
and so i’ve done several things in this
13:40
area so that’s why i wanted to apply for
13:42
this artwork because
13:43
i knew the demographic that was here
13:45
where i wanted it to have
13:47
a safe place for everyone to belong
13:50
i also felt like the there’s this
13:54
thing in indigenous culture where you
13:57
can tell where people are from based on
13:58
the embroidery or the or the craft work
14:01
or the beading
14:02
and so people will recognize this as
14:04
like a cremating northern pattern
14:06
so i wanted people to feel welcome here
14:09
i knew that there are a lot of
14:12
indigenous people that recognize this
14:14
pattern that it will be in this area so
14:15
i wanted them to feel safe
14:17
and i often always think about ways to
14:21
make a space
14:22
feel greater than yourself
14:26
so that’s what i sort of visualized here
14:28
and that’s why
14:29
i really saw this pattern sort of coming
14:31
in and out
14:32
they had described the canopy like a
14:34
thread that was their design
14:35
intervention where it kind of weaves in
14:37
and out of the surface
14:39
they called it canister which means we
14:41
three in cree
14:44
and i think they wanted to honor some of
14:46
the naming that happened in this area
14:47
prior
14:49
and they chose this red i think as a way
14:51
to acknowledge the chinese community
14:52
because there’s a long history
14:54
of well this was the original chinatown
14:56
location a long time ago
14:59
so i think that they saw um
15:02
i mean i i think that i’ve heard them
15:04
say that they saw
15:05
my pattern with the red color sort of a
15:07
way of combining all the strong cultures
15:10
in this area
15:12
but i think when i saw that they were
15:15
talking about it like a thread that
15:16
really resonated to me
15:17
because the pattern for me right now
15:19
works as a discussion around erasure
15:21
where the pattern comes in and
15:23
out at the indigenous art park i water
15:26
jet cut this pattern
15:27
along corten steel and um
15:31
i did that similarly like it was about
15:33
erasure but the resiliency of my family
15:36
continuing to thrive
15:38
and so that’s what this is trying to do
15:41
this is just phase one we’re actually in
15:42
phase two currently
15:44
and that will be over there it’s gonna
15:46
have a spray water component
15:48
it’s gonna have some swings and we
15:51
talked about
15:52
instead of putting the pattern up on the
15:53
canopy we’re going to put it on the
15:55
ground instead
15:56
and i think we’re able as a design team
15:59
to confirm that it will be granite but
16:00
we’ll see
16:02
i don’t know how the costs are coming in
16:04
but i think i’m really excited to put
16:05
the pattern out on the ground
16:08
to kind of continue the thread we talked
16:10
a lot about
16:11
this pattern touching the ground and
16:12
then being embroidered
16:14
on the surface level of the decks but it
16:17
seemed like kind of a complicated thing
16:18
so we didn’t do it there so that’s why
16:20
i’m glad that we get to do it on the
16:21
ground
16:22
over there and there was
16:25
three deaths here about two weeks ago
16:29
there was overdoses here at the park and
16:31
i think that it really just continues to
16:33
speak to the
16:34
neighborhood and the difficulties that
16:35
continue to thrive and persist
16:38
so i was really grateful to be a part of
16:40
this space
16:41
where i can endeavor to continue
16:42
creating beautiful spaces for people to
16:44
occupy
16:45
rather than ignoring the problem of what
16:48
exists
16:49
so i think when they put things like
16:50
swings in the canopy i’m excited because
16:53
it helps people understand that they can
16:54
be a part of
16:55
these places that is not for this visual
16:58
interest
16:58
solely so that’s why i think i’m really
17:02
proud to be a part of this
17:03
another thing that i think about is i
17:06
tried to make the pattern really big
17:07
because i think about super graphics
17:09
um i really started to fall in love with
17:11
this idea i was working on an exhibition
17:14
where deborah sussman was being featured
17:16
in los angeles
17:18
she was the she and her partner were
17:21
part of the
17:23
uh 79 olympics or 78 olympics the
17:26
olympics in the 70s i can’t believe i
17:28
forgot the
17:29
when they were part of the olympics in
17:30
the 70s but they had created large
17:32
graphics on sonotubes
17:34
and it was a very large bold graphics
17:37
that they had sort of painted all over
17:39
the cities for the olympics
17:40
and i’m sort of in love with that idea
17:43
of super graphics
17:44
they also do it on like ships like
17:45
razzle dazzle where they painted them
17:47
different colors to make you think that
17:48
they were going away
17:49
and they’re going forward it didn’t work
17:51
at all but i just always love that
17:53
theory so the pattern is actually
17:55
sheared off
17:55
on the sides like it’s made really big
17:57
it doesn’t like conclude nicely on the
18:00
long the edge it’s like it’s been cut
18:01
off and you can see it as well with the
18:04
pattern on the right hand side when it
18:05
touches the ground like it’s been
18:06
sheared on the edge so those are very
18:08
specific design moves
18:10
that i’m thinking about when i’m
18:12
creating the pattern
18:14
and so i’m trying not to just associate
18:17
with
18:18
indigenous people which is my prime mode
18:20
of operation but it’s also just to be
18:23
thought about in the contemporary sense
18:25
of of
18:26
artwork in general so that’s kind of
18:30
all of the things in my brain that i
18:33
could tell you about
18:34
the work this is a composite of three
18:37
different patterns
18:38
um so it’s not just one particular
18:40
pattern
18:42
and i also felt like if people didn’t
18:44
recognize that it was a cream at pattern
18:46
if that just wasn’t in your lexicon
18:48
that you would still think it was like a
18:50
beautiful place to occupy so
18:52
hopefully it was like a win for
18:53
everybody i guess i’ll talk a little bit
18:56
more about the materials because it is
18:57
interesting and i like talking about
18:58
materials so this is a
18:59
called a trespa panel this is something
19:01
you i
19:02
thought at first we were just going to
19:03
put a bunch of holes to make the pattern
19:06
i was trying to think about how to make
19:07
it successful because we have two layers
19:09
you have to think about freeze frost
19:11
that’s why you see all the seams
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happening with these panels is so that
19:14
because they couldn’t get panels super
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large to make it look like one whole
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thing
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so the panels are meant to be like a
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field condition that’s a technical term
19:22
in architecture
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to make it look like it expand is
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expansive
19:27
and so similarly i couldn’t find a
19:30
material that could make it look all
19:31
like one thing so we tiled it in this
19:33
trespa
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and we were originally thinking
19:38
to make it shiny just like the panels
19:40
above it
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but we couldn’t make them an exact match
19:45
but it turned out that this was more of
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a matte so we felt like you could see it
19:47
better
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i was trying not to make the artwork be
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read so clearly apart from the canopy
19:53
it’s meant to be integrated
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rather than separated is again it’s that
19:57
ego thing i’m trying to kind of fit
19:58
within something rather than taking over
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directly
20:02
but when the fabricator came
20:06
up with the trespa idea when you router
20:08
into it it creates the black line
20:11
so i thought that could be interesting i
20:12
accepted that
20:14
and when we had to go down to the ground
20:17
we couldn’t use the trespa because
20:18
it’s um it would have to have a lot of
20:21
structure built within it so these are
20:22
actually aluminum
20:24
pieces that touch the ground they’re
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completely separate materials
20:27
and so we tried our very best to give it
20:29
similar characteristics to the
20:31
tr to the the to the panels
20:35
so that’s why you’ll see the black line
20:37
continuing a little bit
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um but in this way i was able to create
20:41
holes more holes
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and like it’s perforating it in a way
20:47
and hopefully it’s not super
20:50
cleanable it’s the goal
20:54
but people will do whatever they can do
20:55
to get up there where’s lighting is
20:57
there lighting in the evening
20:58
yes you can see um these white objects
21:01
are the lighting and
21:02
they just wanted an award actually for
21:03
lighting very recently and so we tried
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to combine those together i don’t know
21:07
if
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the white was supposed to be there but
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maybe it was
21:11
but it looks quite nice at night it’s
21:12
like meant to create kind of like
21:14
columnar lighting as well
21:15
and keep it really safe and well lit
21:19
what’s also really amazing is right
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beside rebecca belmore’s piece
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and i mean she’s one of my favorite
21:26
all-time artists and uh
21:29
her piece is beautiful it’s it’s
21:31
basically about alberta this is like the
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wild rose at the top
21:34
and this is like a large pole or a birch
21:37
kind of pull there’s some writing there
21:39
but it’s a casted aluminum on the top
21:43
and the bottom and the bottom piece
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looks like
21:45
wood it’s very beautiful so i find it
21:48
really soulful to be beside her work
21:53
sometimes she knows who i am and
21:57
just across the street just down there
21:58
is a collector so i’m a part of one
22:00
contemporary art collective
22:02
and i’m just going to give a shout out
22:03
to that building because the we got a
22:05
building for
22:06
from the city very recently we opened up
22:08
in the pandemic
22:09
and we just opened we’re just opening up
22:11
a community oh well a community gardens
22:13
mike mcdonald’s garden
22:14
is partnered with the aga a really
22:16
beautiful group of women
22:18
in the group and we have
22:21
five core members in the project and
22:24
we originally established as a place to
22:26
talk about contemporary indigenous art
22:28
and then it started blossoming to
22:29
getting our own building so we’re just
22:30
now exploring what that means to be a
22:32
bit more broader in the community
22:42
[Music]
22:46
you
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