Over seven years, I stitched, on a large scale, images from the Codex Canadensis, the first natural history of Canada, drawn in a rather fantastical way by Louis Nicolas, a French Jesuit missionary. What do you consider your greatest achievement? It felt like a real community effort, and is now in the collection of our local museum. Other people who knew him contributed words and images that I was able to stitch into the coat, at the same time mending the many moth holes that had appeared over time. So I took the little pink dress and embroidered lines such as “Good for you!” and “Way to go” and “You are precious to me” into its fabric, embodying the love and care that I felt my young self needed.Ī more recent project was “ Victor’s Coat,” where I took the actual coat that was worn by a much-loved member of the community who died way too young, and embroidered some of his distinctive sayings into the cloth. It was saved out of sentiment, but a few years ago I came across a list of “100 Ways to Praise and Encourage a Child,” which almost brought tears to my eyes, as I felt I had not received such support in my own childhood – it just wasn’t done then. One is a little pink dress, handknit for me by my grandmother when I was a baby. What is your favourite art piece or project you’ve created? The comment I hear most often is “There’s so much work in that!” And I answer “And I loved making each and every stitch!” I hope that viewers find pleasure in my work on all levels, and are reminded that our human hands are capable of so much more than sending text messages. I use the inherent qualities of cloth – the tactility, the materiality, the protective and comforting aspects – as a ground for asking more complex, deeper questions. What are things that you hope your art conveys to audiences and your communities? So I returned to the more portable, rewardingly intimate field of textiles. Afterwards, I moved from city to city and the big crates I needed for my work were just ridiculous. But when I went to art school, I studied sculpture and installation. As a young punk rocker in Toronto, I made all my clothes and even was commissioned to make clothes for others.So sewing was a valuable skill. I grew up in the 1970’s, when home ec was a thing, and had several fabulous sewing teachers. She does all of her own stitching, by hand. Her work is in the collections of the Canada Council Art Bank, the Saskatchewan Arts Council, the Dunlop Art Gallery and the Cambridge Art Galleries, as well as numerous private collections in Canada, the U.S. These days, she works primarily with textiles, using the rich historical and metaphorical associations the medium provides to explore issues of human relationship to nature, colonialism, labour, time, etc.She graduated from the Experimental Arts program at the Ontario College of Art in 1989.She has received grants from the Canada Council for the Arts, The Ontario Arts Council, the Saskatchewan Arts Council, the British Columbia Art Council and the Gabriola Arts Council. Heather Cameron is a visual artist of settler heritage, living in Snuneymuxw territory. In preparation for UNSCRIPTED: Mermaid Spring, our Dramaturg, Creative Engagement, Davey Calderon, caught up with fibre artist Heather Cameron. We ask them to choose seven questions from our list that resonate with them. Playwright’s Process – or, in this particular case, Artist’s Process – is a new blog series inspired by the Marcel Proust Character Questionnaire, where we introduce you to playwrights and theatre artists that are creating exciting new works.
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