全民彩票 News Roundup | July 14, 2022

Haley Bassett, Second Skin, 2021. Seed beads, thread, sculpting mesh, beading foundation, denim, copper and steel wire and Levi's shirt. (Image courtesy Haley Bassett)
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This week: Haley Bassett | Anselmo Swan | Alex Turner | Kaitlin Williams
Welcome to our new semi-regular feature, the 全民彩票 News Roundup.
Scroll down for a scan of the outstanding media attention our community has recently received!
Haley Bassett鈥檚 Matrilineal at Two Rivers Gallery

Artist Haley Bassett with works from her Matrilineal exhibition. (Image courtesy Haley Bassett)
, an exhibition from artist, community facilitator and arts administrator has been receiving glowing coverage from news outlets throughout Northern BC.
The Prince George Citizen that Haley is a 鈥減illar within the arts community of Northern British Columbia.鈥 Energeticcity, meanwhile, Haley鈥檚 鈥渆xtensive array of skills鈥 as well as her work creating better access for artists facing barriers in northern communities.
MyPGNow also the exhibition, quoting Two Rivers Gallery assistant curator Kait Herlehy who said, 鈥淲e are thrilled to be able to share this space with Haley Bassett and give the Prince George community an opportunity to learn about her and the powerful work she is doing.鈥
to see more of her work. Read our previous story about Haley Bassett鈥檚 2021 appointment as executive director of the Peace Liard Regional Arts Council.
Matrilineal shows at in Prince George through August 7, 2022.
Anselmo Swan in Scout Magazine

Artist Anselmo Swan with a pair of works from his Home series. (Image courtesy Ian Tan Gallery)
Artist Anselmo Swan (BFA 1996) was the subject of in local food and culture publication Scout Magazine.
Anselmo鈥檚 interview comes as part of a new monthly series in which introduces an artist to Scout readers with a Q+A.
Reflecting on depicting houses in half-light, Anselmo says he 鈥渨as inspired by contemplating homes in the evening as they rest under twilit skies. Walking through familiar neighbourhoods with only the sound of an occasional car going by, I take in those still, quiet evenings of days winding down and families enjoying a respite after a hurried day.鈥
See more about Anselmo鈥檚 work , and .
Alex Turner鈥檚 Love Letter to Harrison Hot Springs

Alex Turner, Chevron 2, digital collage, Harrison Lake, BC. 2016. Silver-halide archival print, luster paper. (Image courtesy Lucian Childs)
鈥溾檚 work is a love letter to Harrison Hot Springs nearly 60 years in the making,鈥 the Agassiz-Harrison Observer of the late artist鈥檚 oeuvre.
A new exhibition co-curated by author (and Alex鈥檚 husband) Lucian Childs and artist (and former student) Rosa Quintana Lillo documents this passion. Titled , the show brings Alex鈥檚 wide-ranging multidisciplinary practice home to his beloved Harrison Hot Springs for the first time.
鈥淗e鈥檚 just a really learned, intellectual visual artist who saw art everywhere,鈥 Rosa tells the Observer. 鈥淓verything, to him, meant something. Everything was interpreted through the eye of art for Alex.鈥
Even while teaching art in Ontario for 24 years, the Vancouver-born artist and graduate of Vancouver School of Art (now known as Emily Carr University) never lost touch with his hometown. For six decades, he returned to Harrison every year to his family home to visit friends and the place he adored.
But Alex鈥檚 love for the Harrison area contained sorrow as well as reverence. His work often grieved the urbanization of the region, Lucian notes.
鈥淚t鈥檚 about motion and the passage of time,鈥 Lucian says of a particular series of photographs. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what the whole series is about, really lamenting what鈥檚 happened in this area from a more rural and forested area that he knew to what we have now.鈥
Read more about Transformations . to learn more about his work.
Transformations will be on view at the Ranger Station Art Gallery through July 24.
Kaitlin Williams Commissioned by Daily Hive
Artist and 全民彩票 alum was recently to create an original work in recognition of National Indigenous Peoples Day.
Speaking to Daily Hive about the work titled Stronger, Kaitlin noted the predominance of orange and red. These colours link respectively to the Every Child Matters movement and the Missing and Murdered Women, Girls and Two-Spirit People movement, she said. Cedar boughs, feathers, a protective blanket and a medicine wheel also give life to the work鈥檚 themes.
Kaitlin, whose mother is Cree from Swan River First Nation and whose father is Coast Salish from Tsawwassen First Nation, says she鈥檚 been gratified to reconnect with her community following a great deal of travel and study.
鈥淎fter being away from my culture for so many years, it鈥檚 been extremely fulfilling and enlightening,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淚鈥檝e struggled to value myself as an Indigenous woman growing up, and had fought against stereotypes and prejudices. I find that reconnecting with my nation and witnessing strong Indigenous women work and practice their culture proudly has encouraged me to be confident in myself and share my knowledge.鈥
to see more of her work.