Heather Morigeau
About Heather Morigeau
Visual Arts / Indigenous ArtsHeather Morigeau is an award-winning Indigenous artist who came to the region from Calgary for the first iteration of the Suncor Indigenous Artist Program (a component of Artist in Residency). Morigeau created art and shared her expertise and experiences from October 26 until November 17, 2021.
During her residence, she held a series of workshops including resin casting and pine-needle basket weaving. This was the first time that the resident artist was able to teach workshops for multiple communities, including Fort Chipewyan, Anzac and Fort McMurray.
Morigeau’s contemporary expression of traditional Indigenous arts focuses on encapsulating Indigenous teachings and medicines. Her practice embodies her own healing journey from addiction, mental illness and colonialism.
During Morigeau’s residence, she teamed up with Fall 2020 resident artist, Carla White, for the Artist in Residency Showcase. The showcase featured a live, virtual Q&A session with both artists, who discussed their residency experiences and their impressions of the healing qualities of art.
Following the Q&A session, Arts Council launched the premiere of Sparking Creativity, a short documentary about tragedy and the healing power of art. Directed by M’Guphynn Media, the documentary captures White’s residency and her cathartic insights.
Workshops Across the Region
Morigeau held a series of workshops, including resin casting and pine-needle basket weaving for artists across the region.
She held two pine-needle basket weaving workshops, one in Fort Chipewyan (virtually) and one in Anzac (in-person). The workshops culminated in the creation of a small, wooden-base Medicine Basket for storing sage or other Sacred Medicines.
She also held a resin casting workshop in Fort McMurray, where she offered basic instruction, demonstrations, and an opportunity to experiment with UV resin and silicone molds. This contemporary expression of traditional Indigenous arts focuses on encapsulating Indigenous teachings and medicines.
Frozen Aurora: Resin Painting Series
When she wasn’t focused on planning and delivering workshops, Morigeau developed a series of resin paintings to capture the spectacular Aurora Borealis.
She used a mixture of iridescent, neon, and UV reactive glow-in-the-dark pigments, and black silhouettes of pine trees and wildlife commonly found in the area to accentuate the bright colours of the starlit sky and Aurora Borealis.
These paintings are to be framed with ponderosa pine needles in natural resin is released from pine trees as a healing and protective element for the trees, the sticky sap captures infections and harmful insects.
Many Indigenous communities use resin for their own medicines. The synthetic resin I use in my artwork is perfectly transparent, I use it to capture a frozen moment in time which is commonly fleeting and difficult to replicate.
Heather’s Thoughts on Her Residency
“Fuelling creativity was my goal for coming to Wood Buffalo for the Suncor Indigenous Artist Program. I had never been to the region, and it was my first opportunity to teach workshops and my first residency away from Calgary.
During this time, I was supported by the amazing team at Arts Council of Wood Buffalo, who welcomed me warmly and ensured I had everything I needed to make this an amazing arts opportunity (including a cozy AirBnB in Fort McMurray for myself at my furry traveling companion Izabella, the cat).
The space at Keyano College’s printmaking studio was a dream come true. I would only dream of having a space that incredible all to myself back in Calgary. This space gave me the ability to work on my resin everyday, 24/7 and I spent as much time there as possible, including a 22-hour all-nighter in my last few days.
When I wasn’t working, I was also able to enjoy the Keyano Theatre’s production of “All Together Now.” I didn’t realize how much I had missed live theatre over the past 2 years.
Nick Vardy connected me with Elders in Fort Chipewyan and Anzac for my Pine Needle Basket Weaving workshops, and ensured everything was done in a culturally appropriate way.
Hiy-hiy Maarsi. Thank you to the ACWB team for this wonderful experience.”
Carla White
About Carla White
Literary ArtsHosted from August to December 2020, this iteration saw playwright Carla White engaging as the Fall 2020 Artist in Residence and supported White in developing a script dramatizing the events, demographics, learnings and community-building that arose out of the 2016 Horse River Wildfire.
Arts Council recruited a Dramaturg and Director to support White with her project, as well as videographers from M’Guphynn Media, who compiled her residency into a documentary.
The project ended in a stage reading of White’s final script, as well as a Writing and Publishing workshop for the local public.
Playwright by Fire
Here you can see Carla White telling her story to M’Guphynn Media and explaining her process for writing a play about the 2016 Horse River Wildfire.
Carla White shares her disaster experiences and how she healed through the arts. It’s not lost on her that she went through this healing process in the middle of a global pandemic.
Her stories are sometimes emotional, often relevant, frequently funny, and always encouraging.
Sparking Creativity – M’Guphynn Media
Arts Council recruited videographers from M’Guphynn Media to compile Carla White’s residency into a 40-minute documentary called Sparking Creativity.
The documentary premiered on November 8, as part of the Artist in Residency Showcase, which featured a Q&A session with Carla White, and Fall 2021 resident artist, Heather Morigeau, followed by the documentary premiere.
Watch the Sparking Creativity trailer, or visit Arts Council’s YouTube channel to watch the full documentary.
Michelle Thorne
About Michelle Thorne
Performing ArtsHosted from March to April 2020, this iteration saw theatre director Michelle Thorne engaging as the Spring 2020 Artist in Residence and supported her journey as she directed a community theatre run of The Great Gatsby at the Keyano Theatre & Arts Centre. Though the theatre run was cancelled in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Thorne continued to offer a 4-week “Directing from Script to Stage” program for local theatre artists. Workshops included such elements as script analysis, design concepts and collaborations, stage management, auditions, casting, marketing and publicity and culminated with participants creating their own Director’s Proposal by the end of the workshop series.
Taking Artist in Residency Online
This iteration of Artist in Residency was held as COVID-19 and quarantine conditions became a reality in Wood Buffalo.
But, the show must go on. So resident artist, Michelle Thorne, graciously adapted her workshops to an online platform to support social distancing and those that were quarantined or self-isolating.
All 15 workshop attendees gave the workshop series rave reviews.
Feedback from Participants
- 98% STRONGLY felt this course will help them direct their own work in the future, and are STRONGLY interested in taking an intermediate level of this course
- 98% STRONGLY felt that the program instructors were knowledgeable
- 96% STRONGLY agreed that the program instructors were easy to understand and created a positive learning environment
- 96% STRONGLY felt that they learned something new about theatre direction as a result of this course
- 96% STRONGLY felt that the instructors and Arts Council Wood Buffalo were readily available to support with questions and issues
- 85% STRONGLY felt that the program instructors used different learning techniques to teach new concepts
Wayne Arthurson
About Wayne Arthurson
Visual Arts / Indigenous ArtsWayne Arthurson is a professional writer of Cree and French-Canadian descent, with over 30 years’ experience including the bestselling and award-winning Leo Desrcohes crime series. Aurthurson spent time in our community working on his literary practice and performed several in-person readings and discussions, sharing his experiences as an Indigenous literary artist. He worked with Indigenous and non-Indigenous artists in two of our rural communities and in the urban centre Fort McMurray.
The Red Chesterfield
As part of Wayne Arthurson’s residency, he hosted an Author Reading & Discussion, at the Wood Buffalo Regional Library.
Arthurson gave a reading of his new book The Red Chesterfield (University of Calgary Press), followed by a group discussion and individual meetings with local artists.
He was impressed by our region’s focus on the arts.
“Any community with a strong arts scene is a strong community. Arts not only help the economy, they helps the spirit. Economically it’s been proven one dollar spent on art translates into $10 in the community. Art connects and builds.”
Photo and quote supplied by YMM Magazine and Kiran Malik-Khan.
Human Rights Day
Wayne Arthurson was the first artist to be hosted by ACWB for our first rendition of the AiR program. Titled Up Close & Personal with Indigenous Author Wayne Arthurson, this iteration of AiR was held in partnership with the Multicultural Association of Wood Buffalo.
As part of the residency, the Multicultural Association of Wood Buffalo hosted a Human Rights Day Conference on December 10, 2019, in line with the United Nations’ International Human Right’s Day. This year’s theme was “Honouring Diverse Voices.”
Photo supplied by the Multicultural Association of Wood Buffalo.