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Ā鶹¾«Ń” Art Gallery exhibit showcases studentsā€™ learning on Indigenous culture

The art represents what students learned about Indigenous culture
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The Dreaming Forward exhibit showcases what students learned about Indigenous culture, history and art. (Central Okanagan School District)

Ā鶹¾«Ń” Art Galleryā€™s newest exhibit displays what students have learned about Indigenous culture.

The new Dreaming Forward exhibit displays art from Indigenous and non-Indigenous students and shows how they connected with Indigenous Nations.

The curriculum was built with the help of Westbank First Nationā€™s elders and cultural leaders. Ten lessons have taught over a thousand students from Kindergarten to Grade 9 about traditional art techniques and cultural connections, with the goal of fostering a positive appreciation of the diversity of Indigenous cultures in Canada.

Each lesson included an eBook with videos, detailed instructions, and cultural links. The lessons represent a variety of nations and their art throughout time.

ā€œThe Dreaming Forward exhibit shares the goals of the lessons with the broader community,ā€ the Central Okanagan School District (SD 23) said in a statement.

ā€œIt is intended to represent student experience, a future of a public better educated on Indigenous visual culture, and the prospect of future Indigenous artists seeing their cultural heritage in their early education.ā€

SD 23 superintendent of schools Kevin Kaardal said art is one of the most powerful ways of communicating what someone has learned about history and culture.

ā€œWe are grateful for the elders, knowledge keepers, and educators who shared their wisdom and teachings to make this exceptional display of studentsā€™ creativity and learning possible,ā€ he said.

Mount Boucherie Secondary School art teacher Jim Elwood said Indigenous culture was never shown as an active entity until now.

ā€œToo often, Indigenous presence was trapped in museums or euro-centric textbooks, and cultural understanding as lost through overexposure or misinterpretation,ā€ he said.

ā€œThese lessons offer a way to repatriate these understandings back to their nations.ā€

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Twila Amato
Video journalist, Black Press Okanagan
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Twila Amato

About the Author: Twila Amato

Twila was a radio reporter based in northern Vancouver Island. She won the Jack Webster Student Journalism Award while at BCIT and received a degree in ancient and modern Greek history from McGill University.
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