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March 14, 2003
A new take on "womens
work"
Iqaluit exhibition features
work by 24 women photographers
Female photographers
from all over Nunavut displayed their talents during a week-long exhibition
in Iqaluit.
(PHOTO BY CHARLOTTE
PETRIE)
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CHARLOTTE
PETRIE
Northern women photographers
are getting some high-profile exposure thanks to the interest and effort of
Kerry McCluskey, fellow photographer and founder of the Film Fatale photo exhibit
on display at Iqaluits Nunatta Sunakkutaangit Museum March 8 to 25.
Twenty-four women from
Nunavut and the Northwest Territories combined their talents to create an exciting
and celebratory display of female photography. Opening day coincided with this
years International Womens Day.
McCluskey, who has been
living and working in Iqaluit for the past five years, has a long history of
activism in womens issues tracing back to her pre-Arctic years in Peterborough,
Ont., where she organized feminist cabaret shows, violence-against-women campaigns
and served as Womens Commissioner while attending Trent University.
When she first moved North
she decided to take a break from it, feeling burned out and needing a rest from
the often taxing lifestyle of a committed social activist.
But it wasnt long
before her passions got the better of her and began to re-emerge.
"I started to look
around and think, OK, what can I do here? How can I combine talents I
now possess with a need to organize something?" And there, in the
dark room of her brain, the concept for a collective womens photography
show with participants from Nunavut and the NWT began to develop.
Besides having a personal
interest in photography, McCluskey has observed a lack of high-profile women
in the field.
"Its very, very
obvious when you look at the field that its still very much male-dominated,
and for all the same reasons that all the other fields are as well. Women just
arent getting out there and getting into it because of all the barriers,
like being busy with kids, lack of money, training and skills, and being intimidated."
It will take a couple of
years before they know they can depend on the shows consistency and get
into it, McCluskey asserted, but it gives women something to shoot for.
The number of women participating
grew to 24 this year. The number of Iqaluit participants has increased as well.
Still, McCluskey would
like to see the numbers grow even more, and to include more women from the NWT
and smaller Nunavut communities.
"And definitely, definitely,
the most important thing, more aboriginal women because its still largely
a sea of white faces and Id like to see more Inuit and Dene women participate."
Now that women are catching
on to the idea, McCluskey plans to raise the profile to a national level over
the next couple of years. Shed also like to eventually include women from
the Yukon and get the exhibit on the road and into museums across the country.
Upping the shows
profile will cost money, however, and as it stands McCluskeys personal
account is the only thing the exhibit is banking on.
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