i made it through the wilderness

Artist Residency Program

“i made it through the wilderness” will be examining the importance of landscape art in the context of the deforestation of 85% of the world’s forests, uncontrollable wildfires, and catastrophic climate hazards that disproportionately affect the most vulnerable. This residency is an attempt to collectively understand more deeply through the practice of art the vibrancy and agency of the world around us. Although the theme of the residency sounds somber, participants will be encouraged to access this knowledge through gratitude, play, and emergent experiences in co-authorship with the site and with each other. performance, and site responsive work. Confirmed guest speakers include Christina Battle, Johnathan S Green, and Fake Art School’s Leida Englar and Jim Belisle.

This is a facilitated residency, but the aim is to work non-hierarchically and in co-authorship across the collective of visiting artists and participants.

Christina Battle, “Learning the Signals/Change is Coming”

Christina Battle, “Learning the Signals/Change is Coming”

SURVEY FOR “LEARNING THE SIGNALS/CHANGE IS COMING - the main page is here (password = island). Includes: Background for the project, and instructions - folks read through and then participate in the survey - ideally twice, once before meeting on June 12th, and once after.

Residency Artists Biographies

2023 Residency Facilitator

Images: Jonathan S. Green, '& there's no more living on the land (top left), Jim Belisle, painting a shipwreck on Gibraltar Point Beach, Toronto Island (middle), Jim Belisle, plein air sketch “Uplifting Sidewalk” (top right) Leida Englar, plein air sketching on Toronto Island (bottom left) Lisa Cristinzo, “Just like the strawberry moon” (bottom middle) Leida Englar watching her mother plein air, 1946 (bottom right)

Virtual/In Person Visiting Artists

Christina Battle is an artist based in amiskwacîwâskahikan, (also known as Edmonton, Alberta), within the Aspen Parkland: the transition zone where prairie and forest meet. Her practice focuses on thinking deeply about the concept of disaster: its complexity, and the intricacies that are entwined within it. Much of this work extends from her recent PhD dissertation (2020) which looked closer to community responses to disaster: the ways in which they take shape, and especially to how online models might help to frame and strengthen such response. [www.cbattle.com]

Jonathan S Green is of Mi’kmaq and Inuit, British and Scottish heritage from Labrador City, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. He does not know a lot about his indigenous heritage but is trying to learn more. Green earned an MFA in Printmaking from the University of Alberta in 2016, a BFA from Memorial University of Newfoundland – Grenfell Campus. He has been a Visual Arts Studio Work study at the Banff Centre. He has canoed down the Yukon River as part of the Canadian Wilderness Artist Residency. He currently resides in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada at his studio Campsite Press. [www.jonathansgreen.com]

Leida Englar’s formal education includes a Sciences degree from McMaster University and studies at Toronto School of Art. Leida is a dedicated artist, peacemaker, environmental and community activist and has been a Plein Air painter since 1980. Whenever Leida and her husband Jerry traveled around North America, Plein Air painting became the tool of record keeping. Leida was co-founder of Shadowland Theatre and band leader in Caribana from 1985-2005 where she built costumes for the Trinidad Carnival, in Toronto and Trinidad and Tobago.  In 1993 Leida and Jim Belisle and Jerry Englar created L’Ecole de Faux Arts/Fake Art School, a base for their love of painting outside, PLEIN AIR.

Leida Englar and Jim Belisle (Landscape Architect/Painter) from the Fake Art School will be conducting an Artist Talk and taking participants on a Plein Air excursion.

The venue: Artscape Gibraltar Point @gibraltarpointto

In respect to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s Calls to Action (2015), we want to acknowledge this sacred land on which we live. Today, the meeting place of Toronto is the home to many Indigenous people from across Turtle Island and we are grateful to have the opportunity to live and work on this territory.

We would like to begin by acknowleding that the land on which we will gather is part of the Treaty Lands and Territory of the Mississaugas of the Credit.

It has been a site of human activity for 15, 000 years. This land was previously occupied by the Huron-Wendat and Petun First Nations and the Seneca.