3 minute read
Re:consider
Re:consider
Alberta Craft Feature Gallery – Edmonton September 14 – December 24, 2019 Artist Reception: Saturday, September 28 from 2- 4 pm
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We are all in this together. The actions we take as makers and consumers have a major impact on future generations. The most effective and enduring forms of sustainability incorporate environmental, social and economic measures. Re:consider contemplates ways we can craft a sustainable future.
Many artists are achieving and exploring sustainability in holistic and thoughtful ways while working toward a greater good. Community building is a common thread interwoven in many craft artist’s practices. As Julia Reimer of Firebrand Glass says of her contributions to a sustainable craft community: “It is one of the things I am proud of in my life when I see the skill and accomplishments of our former studio assistants because I believe that a strong and vital craft community makes my career and life better.”
Longstanding to Alberta indigenous artists’ holistic practice is a respect for materials and how they are gathered and utilized. There is cultural and community value placed on traditional knowledge, for those who keep it, and the passing down of skills and knowledge.
“As a cultural practitioner I take an active ethical stance in the production of my own work as well as passing on my knowledge to community members and students at Portage College, to contribute to a sustainable art community. I find practicing ancient art forms to be very healing for one’s health and well-being, it also gives one great pride in who we are as people and as a culture who is almost lost.” Ruby Sweetman
To many makers, sustainability is an ethos that’s entwined throughout their practice, from the materials they use, to the processes and impact their creative choices make on the environment.
“I’ve always considered sustainability to be one of the cornerstones of my practice as a maker of wooden objects. Wood is a renewable resource if it isn’t consumed at a rate greater than it can regrow. It means building in a way that is both structurally and aesthetically sound. A table can be constructed to last generations, but it will not survive long if its design is subject to short-term fads or if its visual or functional design is so ill-considered that nobody wants to keep it around.” – Doug Haslam
Nowadays there is a renewed sense of urgency to conversations around sustainability. It has many looking to how things were done in the past, before times of great excess, fast fashion, disposable goods and their environmental impact. Craft has long traditions of being counter to mass-consumption and mass-produced goods.
Sam Uhlick has been a full-time production potter for the past 50 years, creating over 50,000 pieces of functional pottery. Sam apprenticed under Michael Cardew, himself a student of Bernard Leach, who is considered the ‘father’ of the studio potters’ movement in the UK. Sam built his home/ studio and much of his own equipment, sourcing everything from reused industrial kiln bricks to scrap metal. He even creates his own clay body, processing three raw dry clays ordered straight from quarries. “I’ve purchased four B train loads or 120 tonnes of raw clay when I was about 26 years old and I have maybe enough left to last me to the end.”
Cathy Terepocki’s Chilliwack River Clay Series is an experimentation with making functional ceramics from the wild clay she collects by hand or shovel from various stops along the Chilliwack River near her home studio in Yarrow, British Columbia. Each clay body she sources comes with its own unique properties and technical challenges. The source is cleverly referenced in the simple and utilitarian stamps and decals revealing their geolocation. “The Chilliwack River Clay Series is as much about the materials as it is about the human connection to place. It is also an investigation into labour and industry and the positive role of technology in sustainable practice.”
With sustainability as the cornerstone of so many craft practices, there is ample ground to explore. Mirroring the reciprocity of ecological systems, we all play a role in achieving sustainability. Artists often act as instigators, investigators, and trailblazers. The featured artists are both creating a demand for sustainability and responding to an existing demand. Re:consider is sure to spark new ideas, conversations and even initiatives.
PARTICIPATING ARTISTS:
Trudie Allen Melissa Jo Belcourt Richard Boulet Linda Chow Firebrand Glass (Julia Reimer & Tyler Rock) Evelyn Grant Crys Harse Doug Haslam Eveline Kolijn Loyal Loot (Doha Chebib Lindskoog & Anna Thomas) Irene Rasetti John Smith-Jones Ruby Sweetman Cathy Terepocki Sam Uhlick