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色库TV News Roundup | May 26, 2022

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Taylor Baptiste. (Image courtesy Taylor Baptiste)

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By Perrin Grauer

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This week: Taylor Baptiste | Kaitlyn Beugh | Amberlie Perkin | Fibre Stories

Welcome to our new semi-regular feature, the 色库TV News Roundup.

Below, you鈥檒l find a sample of some of the wonderful media coverage our community has recently received. Read on to learn more about our extraordinary colleagues, friends and neighbours!

Taylor Baptiste鈥檚 k史u sc蕰ac蕰ac煤la蕯x史 鈥 We Are of The Land

Taylorbaptiste

Taylor Baptiste, 办艂迟尘补濒虫史, 2021. Bronze size-11 cut beads, tanned buckskin, 7鈥 embroidery hoop. (Image by Taylor Baptiste)

A profiled artist and 色库TV student . With the opening of her first solo exhibition, , Taylor 鈥 who is from the Osoyoos Indian Band of the Okanagan Nation 鈥 became the first Indigenous artist to be featured at .

鈥淚鈥檝e been very removed from my territory that I鈥檝e been very close with my whole life, so this collection of items are ways that I used to stay engaged and keep a relationship with my culture and land,鈥 she told the Times Chronicle of her show.

Growing up on the reserve, Taylor was taught to foster 鈥渁 strong relationship with the land,鈥 she says. Her father taught her and her brothers how to hunt, fish and forage.

鈥淗e would have us walk the perimeter of our property every day and get to know the lifecycles of all the plants and animals and the materials there and how to gather them and how to use them,鈥 she continues. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why I鈥檓 drawn to using natural materials to really engage with the land here in the Okanagan. But a lot of it also comes from my culture as an Okanagan person. So I try to engage, interact and express the different Okanagan teachings that I have been taught growing up.鈥

runs through May 28 at The Art Gallery Osoyoos.


Kaitlyn Beugh at Lions Park

Beugh Kaitlyn Headshot

Kaitlyn Beugh. (Image courtesy Kaitlyn Beugh)

Artist (BFA 2019) was recently the latest Lions Park artist-in-residence for the City of Port Coquitlam.

with TriCity News, Kaitlyn says her first task will be exploring the downtown park to create a closer connection to the space and its natural rhythms. Over her six-month residency, she says she hopes to build workshops to teach how park plants and landscapes can be used in an artistic practice.

鈥淐reating in a natural setting is a low barrier way to access creativity,鈥 Kaitlyn TriCity News. 鈥淵ou get to know the land that we鈥檙e on.鈥

So far, Kaitlyn has several series of workshops planned throughout the summer and fall. Learn more about Kaitlyn and her residency, and sign up for an Invasive Species Walk, an Eco-printing workshop or a Drawing with the Rain Garden session now, .


Amberlie Perkin鈥檚 The Nature of Grief

Bio pic with sculpture

Amberlie Perkin in her studio with her mixed media sculpture titled Hush Now Sleeper, We Will Meet Again. (Photo by / courtesy Amberlie Perkin)

Artist Amberlie Perkin鈥檚 (MFA 2020) first solo show opened last month at the Gibsons Public Art Gallery on the Sunshine Coast.

Titled The Nature of Grief, the exhibition showcases Amberlie鈥檚 material explorations of ecological and personal sorrow. with the Coast Reporter, Amberlie recounts how many of her recent works began as responses to tremendous personal loss. Working intuitively with lichen, bark and charcoal, Amberlie started to make connections between the natural landscape and her own interior space.

鈥淚 realized that what I had been looking at and collecting was this intuitive language of the body in nature,鈥 she the Coast Reporter. 鈥淏ut it also spoke to the fragility of our changing bodies. I started thinking with nature, and thinking with grief: seeing nature in the process of decay and regrowth, loss and regeneration.鈥

is on view at the Gibsons Public Art Gallery through May 29. Amberlie will be on-hand in person for a pair of upcoming closing events: at 2pm on May 28, and from 2pm to 4pm on May 29.


Fibre Stories in Digits & Threads

Copy of Fibershed Field School 5951

From the 'Fibre Stories' book. (Photo by Benny Zenga; courtesy Fibreshed Field School)

A spotlighted Fibre Stories, the platform that provides free resources for exploring sustainability and ethical practice within the textile industry.

includes a book, a podcast and a series of how-to zines that share the knowledge and work behind the Fibreshed Field School 鈥 a community-focused program created by artist and educator Emily Smith aimed at connecting people more closely with local fibre systems and supply chains.

鈥淭hrough her academic research in textiles and circular economies, Emily developed the Fibreshed Field School, an experimental mentorship program that invited student researchers from Emily Carr University and Simon Fraser University to look at local textile production through the lens of ecology and economically viable methods of production,鈥 Digits and Threads .

Visit to learn more about their extraordinary work.