Current Residencies
Georgia Dawkin
November 8 – December 14, 2024
During this residency I will be developing a new performance series titled PROFESSIONAL WOMAN: OFFICE HOURS, as well as further developing existing bodies of work as PROFESSIONAL WOMAN through printmaking and new media. PROFESSIONAL WOMAN is a performance character that is used to reflect upon systems of gendered expectation, performance, and barriers in work spaces. OFFICE HOURS will be an installation and interactive pop-up performance that uses classic bureaucratic tropes and hurdles to address gendered expectations of time management, access, and social pressures.
I will be using photography, printmaking, video and sculpture to create a set and props for the live performances. Conjointly I will be developing these prop and set aspects into both physical and new media pieces to further explore PROFESSIONAL WOMAN and expand this body of work.
Upcoming Residencies
Tough Guy Mountain
January 31 – March 15, 2025
Blandscape is an interactive narrative experience presented in virtual reality (VR) and comic format. In the 15-minute virtual reality experience, a solitary intern wanders through an immense wasteland, following familiar stone statues. A bored executive watches from their office, passively observing the intern from a disembodied perspective. Eventually the intern, played by a performer in virtual reality, succumbs to the stone themselves, and the executive clicks to release a new intern into the wasteland. The interns look remarkably similar to the executive, as if they are sending endless iterations of themselves to a screen-mediated doom.
The project Blandscape is a continuation of a decade-long narrative role-play from the Tough Guy Mountain collective. Working together since 2012, the collective has developed a critical approach to creation with emerging technology. Their projects bring audiences into a fantasy world of unpaid interns and ebullient exploitative executives. The proposed project, Blandscape, is designed uniquely for the Eastern Edge studio space and audience. Through the residency at Eastern Edge we will develop a single-player, 15 minute VR experience and performance of Blandscape. We will also complete our 35 page comic of the same name, which will be made available as a zine for studio visitors during the residency. The collective will present their work through a live on-site performance of Blandscape at the end of the residency period. During this event, the audience will also be invited to put on the VR headset and experience Blandscape for themselves.
Shay Hucklebridge
March 28 – May 10, 2025
Our understanding of the world is inherently tied to the landscapes we inhabit. These landscapes shape our perceptions, our cultural identities, and the narratives we construct about ourselves and the world around us. The project of this residency will explore the interplay between local environment, mythology, and the nuanced experiences of individuals, with a specific focus on the natural history of Newfoundland. Art serves as a translator between external stimuli and inner experiences, an interpretive tool that helps fold reality into narrative. At the heart of this project is the creation of a symbolic narrative that brings the audience into my own internal life and perspective. The bridging of internal and external experiences is universal, since human perception is limited and unreliable. However, for those who are ‘othered,’ it can become a way of negotiating a reality that may not always be accommodating and a means of building internal protective structures out of dreams, beliefs, and fantasies. I am interested in how this phenomenon holds not only for individuals but also on a broader social scale. Materially, this project will take the form of watercolour paintings that document, fuse, and reshuffle elements of the tundra and taiga of Newfoundland while incorporating symbolism drawn from both mythology and modern culture. The goal is to encourage viewers to reconsider their own perceptions of place, identity, and narrative, particularly within the context of the North American landscape, which has no place in the mythological canon of western culture that forms the basis of mainstream understandings of fantasy and storytelling.
David Nasca
May 23 – July 5, 2025
Sun Forest
February 6 – March 21, 2026
The project focuses on the creation of speculative IBPOC bio-armour for radical resistance and healing through multi-species connections and embodied practices of care. Incorporating biomaterials and living microorganic cultures within speculative body armour, the work transfigures forces and human-centric timelines of violence into conditions that can propagate equity and regeneration, and push for modes of collective and radical future imaginings. Developing a transdisciplinary installation using sculpture, performance, video, and new media, this project will continue to undergo change throughout the course of its installation, proposing symbiotic, evolving modes of being that can liberate and resist systems of racialized violence and techno-ecological harm.
Rae Swan
April 10 – May 23, 2026
Inspired by Susan Sontag’s essays on photography, I am interested in actively engaging with the camera in a way that blurs the boundaries between the natural world and the voyeur’s world. Today’s voyeur sees the world through a screen, through a glass box, a mirror world. Yet the physical world beyond it exists in a separate space, free of bounds. The project I will be creating is a series of videos and photographs that explore and challenge the relationship we have to these realities. During this residency I will be exploring a new and unfamiliar landscape through the idea of equal relationship and play. Beginning the project without the camera is crucial to attempting decolonial lens based work. After spending time with the land, I will venture out again and bring the camera with me, only taking photos and videos when there feels like consent from the land. This creates a trusting relationship with the land and works with the belief that the natural world has its own autonomy in relationships.
The videos each come in two parts. One where the video camera sits on a tripod, taking in the landscape, still, like a finished painting – The voyeur’s perspective. The second video becomes unstill and instead; a performance. With the camera affixed to my body, I’ll explore the landscape so the camera experiences the landscape in an intimate and full-bodied way. I want to know How does the world change when we change the way we look at it? By exploring the unfamiliar landscapes of Newfoudland and Labrador and connecting with local communities about land stewardship I hope to create a project that inspires discourse about connected and conscious art making with and about the land.
Jem Woolidge
June 12 – July 25, 2026
Jem Woolidge will spend his residency developing a collection of garments for musicians, inspired by the camp aesthetics of performance spectacles and stagewear, and in collaboration with local performers. Inspired by designers like Bob Mackie describing Elton John as a ‘Male Showgirl’, his costume methodology is inherently queer, colorful, silly, and imagery-based. He is interested in the ways in which garments can disarm both the wearer and the viewer, and create a more permissive environment to perform and be an audience in.
“I was fascinated by the social permissiveness of stage performance. You can ‘get away with’ wearing anything under the prerequisite of performance, including draggy, campy, tacky garments. In contexts where dressing in a gender nonconforming manner in a casual setting would potentially cause a stir, stage performance is an outlet where things can go unquestioned. Historically, costume designers would dress their subjects in high camp, effeminate garments, and from Liberace to Twisted Sister – their oftentimes conservative fan bases would watch and applaud.”
Past Residencies
2024
2023
Contemplating Queer Space Through Textile Collage with Renée Brazeau
Sarah Lewtas (Artlink Exchange)
Is It a Book? Workshop with AiR Sarah Lewtas
Artist Talk with AiR Sarah Lewtas
Megan & Clayton’s Artist Talk + Screening Event
Bark Tanning Workshop with Susan Furneaux
Wander + Wonder: A Practice of Observing and Dreaming – Workshop with Brenda Reid
Auditory Fun 101 – Workshop with Oz
Chroma Keying Textiles Workshop with Ale Monreal
Digital Storytelling Workshop with Jane Walker
Artist Talk with Michael Lucenkiw
Other Ways of Knowing: Sonification as Data – Workshop with Michael Lucenkiw
Nasim Makaremi Nia (Mainframe)
Artist Talk with Nasim Makaremi Nia
2022
Jillian McDonald
Artist Talk with Jillian McDonald
April White
Artist Talk & Workshop with April White: slowness and comfort in creativity
Glenn Gear, Paige Gratland & Daniel Barrow
Pedro Rebelo & Geraldine Timlin (Artlink Exchange)
Geraldine Timlin and Pedro Rebelo on their Artlink Exchange!
Artist Talk & Film Screening with Pedro Rebelo & Geraldine Timlin
Workshop with Xenia Lucie Laffely: Expression through Textiles
Art Link International Atlantic Residency Exchange, Cliodhna Timoney
International Artist Talks: Micheal Flaherty & Cliodhna Timoney
2021
Summer 2021 HOLD FAST AiR Drew Pardy and Elizabeth Cook, Lily Taylor, and Phlegm Fatales
Summer 2021 Traveling Residency, Emily Neufeld Holding Place: Christeen Francis, Emily Neufeld, Andrew Testa
2020
Summer 2020 Artist in Residence, Ashley Hemmings
Rug Hooking Tutorial with Ashley Hemmings
Makers Afternoon with Ashley Hemmings
Spring 2020 Artists in Residence, Drew Pardy & Faune Ybarra
Drew Pardy: Move Together Series
Faune Ybarra: Unusual Encounters, sharing circle
Drew Pardy: The Nipple of Stitches Workshop & Video Tutorial
AiR Faune & Drew: Makers’ Afternoon
Winter 2020 Artists in Residence, Amery Sandford & David Carriere, Melanie Colosimo, and Kate Lahey
Melanie Colosimo hosts satellite Art Bar + Projects
2019
Fall 2019 Artists in Residence, Tanea Hynes & Christeen Francis
Thank God It’s Friday: Studio Hangout & Artist Presentation
Tuesday Art Jam with Christeen Francis
Labrador City artist explores personal connection to mining through art practice
OPEN STUDIO: Visit our Artists in Residence, Friday, October 18th, 12-5pm
To Care on Visited Land – Middle Cove Beach, Saturday, October 12, 2019
Conundrums, Confessions, Contradictions, and Concerns: Working as Environmental Artists in 2019
Summer 2019 HOLD FAST artist, Craig Francis Power, Ethan Murphy, Teresa Connors
Eastern Edge Exhibition, Surface Tension (or What Holds an ‘Us’ Together): Joshua Vettivelu
Reading Close: Joshua Vettivelu and legibility in absence – Kailey Bryan
Arbitrary Lines: Refugee Law in Canada 1986 – 2012 – Gobhina Najarajah
CBC: Artists create 40-tonne sand sculpture at downtown St. John’s gallery