Yukon Arts Centre
As one of three official partners for the 2022 Arctic Arts Summit, the Yukon Arts Centre (YAC) is gearing up for an intense calendar…
Creating
Circumpolar Collaboration
Possible Futures
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Organizer: University of Lapland
Time: Wednesday, Jun 29, 2022 – 11:30 AM MST
Mirja Hiltunen
Mirja Hiltunen (Doctor of Art, MEd ) is professor of Art Education in the Faculty of Art and design, University of Lapland, Rovaniemi, Finland and adjunct professor in University of Oulu. She has devised a performative art strategy as part of her work in art teacher education and has been leading community-based art education projects in Lapland for twenty years. The place-specificity, performativity and socially engaged art are particular interests to her. She has presented numerous international research papers and published her work in art education journals and books and art exhibitions. She is with professors Timo Jokela, and Glen Coutts the leader of Northern Art, Community and Environment Research group (NACER) in which visual art education and applied visual arts are researched and developed in a Northern context (https://nacerteam.weebly.com).
Aubyn O’Grady
Da-Ka-Xeen Mehner
Ebbe Volquardsen
Gunvor Guttorm
Aubyn O’Grady is the Program Director of the Yukon School of Visual Arts in Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in Territory, Dawson City, Yukon.
Aubyn’s interdisciplinary academic and art works exist in the space between performance and pedagogy. Community engagement is the focus of her arts practice, often taking up the very place she lives in as her material. She is a frequent and enthusiastic collaborator, and so, can rarely take sole credit for any project she organizes. However, she can be credited with conceptualizing the Dawson City League of Lady Wrestlers (2013-2017), the Swimming Lessons Aquatic Lecture series (2017-2018), Local Field School (2020+), and Drawlidays (2019, 2020), a Dawson City-wide portrait exchange. Aubyn is also a PhD candidate in the Curriculum, Teaching, and Learning program at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto.
Ebbe Volquardsen is an Associate Professor of Cultural History and Chair of the Department of Cultural and Social History at Ilisimatusarfik, the University of Greenland in Nuuk. Originally from Germany, his academic background is in cultural anthropology, Scandinavian studies, and political science. His work thus represents an interdisciplinary approach. He has been working on the cultural history of Greenland and enduring colonial legacies in its relationship with Denmark for years, including analyses of historiography, representations in literature, film, and arts, public discourse, and more recent political implications. His research interests include images of Nordic colonialism in the North Atlantic and in the Global South as part of a more general figure of thought that generates narratives of exceptionality. Furthermore, he has been focusing on politics of remembrance, nationalism, processes of political and mental decolonization and reconciliation, and colonialism’s aftermaths in both the former colony and metropolis.
We, the hosts and organizers of Arctic Arts Summit 2022, recognize and respect the many languages of the circumpolar region. The core information on this site is presented in English and French, Canada’s two official languages, as well as in Inuktut, the most widely spoken Indigenous language in the North of Canada, and Southern Tutchone, one of the many First Nation languages in Yukon and the language of the nations on whose territory the in-person Summit will be hosted. The discursive and artistic content on this platform will be available in the language in which it was submitted and/or created.
We acknowledge the predominance of English on the site. This is, in part, a reflection of the use of English as a widely understood language throughout the circumpolar region today. We will, however, encourage and actively seek to include content that reflects the many languages of the North.
View in French | View in Inuktut | View in Southern Tutchone
The hosts and organizers of Arctic Arts Summit 2022 acknowledge and affirm the Articles of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) and recognize the inherent rights and historical territories of Indigenous peoples across the North and around the world. We recognize and respect the First peoples of the many lands of the circumpolar region.
Connection to land, territories, histories, and cultures are fundamental to our sense of who we are as peoples and societies. We honour this connection and commit to our shared journey of conciliation as we work to build an equitable, sustainable, just, and collaborative future for all.
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