Canada's History

Brushes with climate change.

By the Numbers: War Amps key tag service. Photograph­ic Memory: The Bluenose. From the Archives: Making a landmark. Protecting and promoting the Ojibwe Horse.

- by Brooke Campbell

Almost one hundred years ago, Banff, Alberta, painter Catharine Robb Whyte ventured into the surroundin­g mountains with brushes and paint to capture the magnificen­t landscape. Now an all-women collective of Indigenous and nonIndigen­ous artists is retracing her steps and bearing witness to the effects of climate change in the Canadian Rockies.

The work is part of the Rockies Repeat project, which is working to produce a documentar­y, an exhibition, and a digital storytelli­ng capsule.

By revisiting iconic sites in the Rocky Mountains and repainting Whyte’s original paintings, the artists hope to demonstrat­e the scale of the climate crisis and to inspire the next generation of stewards of these lands. “If we can speak as artists to people through their hearts, then hopefully we can impact their thoughts and their motivation­s,” said Kayla Eykelboom, one of the emerging artists associated with the project.

Displaying the original works of Whyte alongside the paintings created by the Rockies Repeat artist team will not only illustrate the profound physical changes to these lands but also speak to the cultural changes over the past century. Early landscape paintings typically depicted the mountains as part of a pristine and untouched wilderness — one that excluded Indigenous peoples and their relations with the land.

The Rockies Repeat project aims to reframe this colonial representa­tion and to build a new cultural narrative associated with the mountains. The artists are taking an active

role in reconcilia­tion by honouring all of the cultures that are traditiona­lly associated with the land and by aiming to inspire future creators. “I want to see the next generation of Stoney youth painting here,” said artist Cheyenne Ozînjâ θîhâ from the Stoney Nakoda Nation in the foothills west of Calgary near Morley, Alberta.

Eykelboom added: “This project serves as a reminder of the work that needs to be done on a daily basis to understand this land, know its history, and to work to protect its future.”

The Rockies Repeat film and exhibit will be shown as part of Alberta’s 2022 Exposure Photograph­y Festival.

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Members of the Rockies Repeat artist team recreate a photograph created nearly a century ago showing painter Catharine Robb Whyte, second from right, and other plein air painters in the Rocky Mountains near Banff, Alberta.
Caption Members of the Rockies Repeat artist team recreate a photograph created nearly a century ago showing painter Catharine Robb Whyte, second from right, and other plein air painters in the Rocky Mountains near Banff, Alberta.
 ??  ?? Top: Rockies Repeat artist team member Cheyenne Ozînjâ θîhâ of the Stoney Nakoda Nation in Alberta works on a painting.
Top: Rockies Repeat artist team member Cheyenne Ozînjâ θîhâ of the Stoney Nakoda Nation in Alberta works on a painting.
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 ??  ?? Above: A print of Catharine Robb Whyte’s 1940– 50 painting Snow Dome, Columbia Icefield, is compared to the same landscape in 2020.
Above: A print of Catharine Robb Whyte’s 1940– 50 painting Snow Dome, Columbia Icefield, is compared to the same landscape in 2020.

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