How does our understanding of “the human” have to change to account for our unevenly distributed geological agency?

Layers of Landscape

On June 3, 2016, Jill Didur collaborated with artist Caroline Alexander on a performative site-specific installation, “Layers of Landscape,” displayed in connection with the Grey Nuns’ garden event, “’Un paradis sans pommiers’ Le jardins des Soeurs Grises.”

“Layers of Landscape” was a collaborative research creation piece between Didur and Alexander. The installation was comprised of twenty-five lanterns installed in the garden that hosted a different assemblage of images including photographs and documents associated with the archive, and a selection of images of the indigenous precolonial plant life

Installed in the garden for the event on June 3, the project offered visitors an invitation to engage with the history of the Grey Nuns’ labour in the garden as a feminist avowal of women’s work, while at the same time acknowledging visually that this history is part of the colonial and colonizing history of the area.

Video by Erin Weisgerber

See Dr. Cynthia Hammond’s website for more info on this event.

Photos courtesy of Jin Kim 2016