May 16, 2003
Handle with care
High school shop students
sell stained glass at heritage society
CHARLOTTE PETRIE
Nunatsiaq News
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
The stained-glass
ornaments for sale in the display case at the Kitikmeot Heritage Society were
created by three high school students from Cambridge Bay. (PHOTOS BY CHARLOTTE
PETRIE)
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Visitors to the Kitikmeot Heritage Society in Cambridge Bay not only get to
admire the work of local artists, in one case they can actually meet the artist
by having him pulled out of one of his Grade 12 classes.
Ashley Otokiak has lived in Cambridge Bay all his life. With the help of shop
teacher Dan Wilmot at Kilinik High School, Ashley has triumphed over blindness
to make and sell stained-glass art.
He is one of three students who currently have their work displayed and on
sale at the society office, located inside the high school. For this reason,
archivist Colleen Rusk can easily arrange a spontaneous meeting between artist
and buyer.
And meeting Ashley is one opportunity you wouldn't want to miss. The student
is curious and funny with a flare for telling stories.
After seeing several stained-glass pieces at a local bazaar a few months ago
and striking up a conversation with Wilmot, Rusk found out the kids were making
them in shop class.
Impressed, Rusk quickly offered to display the students' work at the heritage
society office.
"We encourage anyone with a craft to display it and possibly sell it.
We're hoping the children's art will be a good draw for tourists coming in this
spring," she says.
Meanwhile, Ashley is busy in the shop room demonstrating his skill of cutting
and breaking the glass with Wilmot's guidance. Ashley is legally blind and has
been tooling his stained-glass trade with Wilmot's assistance during class.
Together, they cut a line from one end to the other before Ashley performs
the final touch one light tap on the glass and it breaks evenly down
the centre.
Ashley
Otokiak gets a little guidance from shop teacher Dan Wilmot as they put the
beginning touches on his next stained-glass masterpiece. Ashley, who is legally
blind, is a Grade 12 student at Kilinik high school in Cambridge Bay.
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But his favourite part about making stained-glass pieces is the scraping. This
is where the edge of the glass is softened with a piece of metal. This task
Ashley can do all on his own.
"I have to scrape it before we put the tape on it or else it will cut
the tape," he explains.
Ashley's artistic background includes making harmonicas from playdough for
his friends and family. But it was Wilmot, not playdough that gave him the necessary
skills to handle stained-glass tools of trade.
Wilmot says the kids are pretty good with the sharp tools, but getting them
to wear goggles is the toughest part of his job.
"I go ballistic when they don't wear them when we are soldering. We've
had a few minor burns but nothing serious," Wilmot says sparking a laugh
from Ashley.
"The biggest cuts are when they don't keep the paper clean and start the
next one. They know, they've been told, but when they get into what they are
doing..."
The sort of intensity he is talking about is what Ashley appears to be experiencing
as he continues to scrape with great attention and care.
Ashley says he will continue to make stained-glass after he graduates this
year but is still looking for an assistant to replace Wilmot. For now he will
continue working on his latest pièce de résistance.
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