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Artist in Residence

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Chantal Molleur, headshot
Artist in Residence

Chantal Molleur

GIV

After working for more than two decades in the Canadian media arts field, during which she was involved in distribution and exhibition production, Chantal Molleur co-established White Frame several years after moving to Switzerland in 2005. Since then, she has curated over 50 media art projects, including both screenings and exhibitions. Molleur also mentors students in film and art, offering promotional strategies and distribution support to graduates of the Lucerne School of Art and Design in Switzerland. She has further contributed to the arts community by serving on boards of directors and grant juries for art institutions in both Switzerland and Canada.

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Lorna Boschman, headshot credit: Leanne Boschman
Artist in Residence

Lorna Boschman

Curator in residence
Groupe Intervention Vidéo

As a media artist, Lorna Boschman is renowned for her collaborations with the 1990s lesbian art collectiveKiss & Tell and for her experimental documentaries like Scars and Butch/Femme in Paradise. Lorna wasawarded the 2016 Vancouver Mayors Arts Award in Film & New Media. Her most recent collaborations involvegeo-location audio projects with gardeners and other community-led local initiatives.

Photo credit: Leanne Boschman

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Sebnem Ozpeta headshot
Artist in Residence

Sebnem Ozpeta

Curator in residence
Groupe Intervention Video

Sebnem Ozpeta studied graphic design in Turkey and completed the Digital Film Program at The Art Instituteof Vancouver. Her work includes short experimental films, documentaries, and video installations. For morethan 15 years, Ozpeta has collaborated with artists, storytellers, dancers, and filmmakers. Since 2015, she hasmentored youth and adults inDigital Storytellingprojects.

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A photo of a young man sitting in the back seat of a car. He is wearing large dark sun glasses, had shaggy dark brown hair, and is wearing a blue denim jacket.
Artist in Residence

Easton Arnouse

Independent Artist
VIVO Media Arts
Pronouns
He/Him/His

Easton Arnouse is a 19 year old creative artist, and photo documenter. Based in the home of his ancestors Native to the lower mainland of British Columbia. Son to Roxanne Charles from Se’mya’me’, and Joseph Arnouse of the interior Secwépemc people. His interest in Art creation outlines the importance of cultural identity, self, furthermore ones interconnection with nature and tradition. Easton is on a path to represent the need in preserving Indigenous methods, belief systems, and ways of living. “Although our lives as Indigenous people have changed; we are still rooted in ceremony and we are still in contact with our traditions. It represents our ability to adapt to these colonial ways of living without forgetting who we are as a people” Arnouse says. The influence of traditional art forms, and cultural teachings have led Arnouse to emerge as an Artist in an effort to improve the quality of Indigenous life. He uses Art as a tool to make these things possible for the coming generations of young Indigenous people and Artists. Easton Arnouse began this path as a young boy working alongside his mother Roxanne Charles and Master Carver Leslie Wells as an apprentice and Artist in training. His Artworks appears on the likes of the Semiahmoo Minor Hockey jersey design “Honouring the children and survivors of residential schools” crest, which was unveiled on National Truth and Reconciliation Day in 2022. Arnouse also has designed for the City of Surrey “Skelkelosen” pollinator seed package that housed a blend of traditional medicines. The intent of his future work entails the personal connectivity with nature, and reclamation of native land/space and resources through photo documentation and Coast Salish design.

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A photograph of a woman sitting on a rocky beach in front of a large lake with a forested small mountain in the background. The woman has very short dark hair and is wearing a denim jacket and holding a bundle of plants in the air.
Artist in Residence

Roxanne Charles

Independent Artist
VIVO Media Arts
Pronouns
She/Her/Hers

Roxanne Charles of Semiahmoo First Nation is a cultural historian employing means of visual representation, oral history, and ceremony. Methods which have been utilized by Semiahma People for thousands of years. Her work explores and documents a variety of issues that reflect her daily life such as spirituality, identity, urbanization, trauma, and various forms of systemic violence.

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A photo of a woman with red-brown hair who is wearing a dark blazer and beige blouse. She is standing in front of a white wall.
Artist in Residence

Jordan King

Independent Artist/Curator/Writer
The ArQuives / OCAD University
Pronouns
She/Her/Hers

Jordan King is a Canadian multi-disciplinary artist, curator and writer. Her practice is rooted in performance, archival research and intergenerational dialogue. She is currently a Curatorial Practice MFA student at OCAD University in Toronto, Canada (Graduating 2024), with a focus on documentary film and multimedia documentation of
underground queer performance.

Jordan spent her formative years immersed in nightlife culture, which continues to influence her work and research. Recent projects have included curation of gallery exhibitions in Montreal, acting as story editor for documentary film “The Empress of Vancouver”, and performing with New York City based dance-theater-media company thefeath3rtheory.

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Headshot of Angelina McLeod
Artist in Residence

Angelina McLeod

Independent Artist / Master's Student
Urban Shaman / University of Manitoba
Pronouns
She/Her/Hers

Angelina McLeod (Anishinaabekwe) is an emerging filmmaker, writer, and documentary subject from Shoal Lake First Nation. Angelina is a land and water defender that is passionate about sharing Anishinaabeg history, culture, languages and stories. Her research is focused on Midewiwin birch bark scrolls that were once held by her grand uncle James Redsky, WWI veteran and prominent member of the Midewiwin, interpreted the scrolls before they were sold to the Glenbow Museum in Calgary for preservation. Angelina is currently working on a series of short films with the National Film Board about her community Shoal Lake 40, First Nation, the source of Winnipeg’s drinking water.

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A portrait photograph of a person wearing a black long coat with dark brown long hair and Indigenous face tattoos. They are standing outside in a forested area close to a concrete or stone wall and an old knocked over ladder.
Artist in Residence

Redsun (Sahgothé)

Independent Artist
The Winnipeg Film Group
Pronouns
They/Them

Redsun (Sahgothé) is a two-spirit Denesuline Nehitho land and water defender, poet & multimedia creator. The beauty of the land, people & spirits inspires the creation of their art. Their work as a two-spirit is deeply ingrained in the land, ceremony, & arts. Their practice is rooted in ancestral knowledge, which is expressed through dreams, visions & the natural way we flow through our bodies.

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A selfie photo a young man with short dark hair, a moustache, short facial hair, a black scarf, and a black leather jacket. They are standing in front of a window during the day.
Artist in Residence

Aaditya Aggarwal

Independent Writer/Curator
CFMDC
Pronouns
He/They

Aaditya Aggarwal is a writer and film curator based in Toronto and New Delhi. Aaditya has contributed writing to outlets like C Magazine, Rungh, POV Magazine, Canadian Art, The New Inquiry, and Ethnic Aisle, and has previously worked at TIFF, Images Festival, Regent Park Film Festival, and Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival.

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David Clark
Artist in Residence

David Clark

Professor
NS Archives / NSCAD University
Pronouns
He/Him/His

David Clark is a media artist interested in experimental narrative and cinematic use of the internet. Recent works include interactive narrative works for the web: 88 Constellations for Wittgenstein, Sign After the X, and A is for Apple and also the non-linear film Meanwhile and the feature film Maxwell’s Demon. His work has been exhibited at Sundance, SIGGRAPH, EMAF, Transmediale, and the Museum of Moving Images in New York. His work has won awards at FILE, Sao Paulo, and the SXSW Interactive Festival. 88 Constellations for Wittgenstein was included in the Electronic Literature Collection #2 and won the $25,000 2011 Nova Scotia Masterwork Award. He teaches Media Arts at NSCAD University in Halifax.

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