Listening to the Land | Christina Battle & Lara Felsing

2023–24 Gallery Information

FAB Gallery, 1-1 Fine Arts Building
University of Alberta
(780) 492-2081
gallery@ualberta.ca

Please note: 
FAB Gallery will be closed April 29 - May 14, 2024

Gallery hours effective May 15, 2024:

  • Wednesday to Friday from 11 am - 5 pm
  • Saturday from 12 - 3 pm

Please check specific exhibition start and end dates to ensure the gallery is open when planning your visit.

Admission is free.

Second floor gallery can only be accessed by stairs at this time. We apologize for this significant barrier to access.

Listening to the Land | Christina Battle & Lara Felsing

June 8 - July 6, 2024

First Gallery @ FAB and FAB Gallery Main Floor

Opening Event:

Saturday, June 8, 2024 | 12-3pm | FAB Gallery
(view the PDF e-vites: Battle | Felsing)

About the exhibition:

An exhibition rooted in collaboration, conversation, and knowledge-sharing, Listening to the Land presents recent works by Treaty 6 based artists Christina Battle and Lara Felsing. Considering our relationships to land and community, as well as the potentials of artistic gesture during times of crisis, this exhibition invites viewers to engage in conversations centering caring and careful perspectives of approach.

Deepening engagement:

We invite you to explore Christina Battle's two exhibition essays (Lara Felsing and the delicate nature of response and Christina Battle—What does can a curator do?) as well as her interview with artist and curator Alana Bartol (Considering the Role of the Curator with Alana Bartol), at the following links:

About the artists:

Lara Felsing is an interdisciplinary Métis artist from Northern Alberta, Canada. Her practice explores the interconnectedness of all life on Earth and aims to bring awareness to the necessity of caring for the Earth and all living beings. Felsing’s material practice and research are approached with ‘two-eyed seeing’, with one eye looking through a lens of Indigenous teachings and the other through a lens of Western knowledge. Traditional plant harvesting is at the core of her practice, and Felsing collects the likes of roots, leaves, berries, petals, spruce tips and pine needles to create compostable paintings, sculptures and blankets that speak to the necessity to honor and show gratitude for the gifts provided by Mother Earth. www.larafelsing.com 

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. Through this research, Battle looks closer to both online models and plant systems for strategies to learn from, and for ways we might help to frame and strengthen such response. 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 artistic and online models might help to frame and strengthen such response. Battle’s practice prioritizes collaboration, experimentation, and failure; she has a B.Sc. with specialization in Environmental Biology from the University of Alberta, a certificate in Film Studies from Ryerson (now Toronto Metropolitan) University, an MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute, and a PhD in Art & Visual Culture from the University of Western Ontario. She has exhibited internationally in festivals and galleries as both artist and curator. www.cbattle.com

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