
Southern Alberta Art Gallery celebrates summer ahead of 50th year
Two artists will control the show floors, with Leila Sujir displaying her Forest Documents, while Namaakii Bear Hat presents Something Given.
'These exhibitions have some similarities, especially in their approach to nature and our reciprocity to nature and how materials are extracted and how we learn and pass knowledge to each other,' said Adam Whitford, curator of SAAG.
Forest Documents is a two-video display with several written works about deforestation on tables nearby. The two video screens run the same content, but one is 2D, while the other is 3D.
'We're providing these documents and various books in the reading room for people to browse, to open at random and see where that takes them,' said Sujir.
Story continues below advertisement
Jorge Zavagno is the technical director of Forest Documents and he says he hopes people will learn something while enjoying the art.
'People can come in and they can both be amazed by the images, the 3D, the beautiful old growth, but also learn a bit about what's happening.'
Get daily National news
Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy
As for Bear Hat's Something Given, she hopes people will learn to simple share and enjoy the moment.
'I want people to feel like they can also share with me their experiences,' she said.
She says her work was made in, and by, southern Alberta.
'I made (the sculptures) from the clay from the Old Man River and the plinths were also from around here, from southern Alberta. They're cottonwood.'
After the summer exhibit, SAAG is turning its attention to its 50-year anniversary in 2026. The gallery is pairing new and veteran artists to produce four separate exhibits over the year.
'These artist pairings are working together in a mentorship model to produce a new exhibition,' said Whitford.
One of the up-and-coming artists is Jaeden Blewett, a university student currently based in Vancouver.
'It's always wonderful already having something lined up right after I graduate. I'll graduate in the spring of 2026, then have this exhibition in the fall,' said Blewett.
Story continues below advertisement
She says SAAG has a tremendous reputation and she believes this will be a big first step in her career, especially considering she gets to work with a veteran artist.
'I think it's a great stepping stone for the next thing to come. It's always hard to find exhibitions that really align with what I'm interested in, so it's always exciting to have something on the calendar.'
Blewett describes her work as focuses on textile and site-specific art installations to give onlookers a very real understanding.
'My work investigates the hidden labours of women, often using industrial materials and weaving to challenge representational failures and disrupt embedded hierarchies.'
Whitford says he's very excited to see what Blewett brings to his gallery next year.
'I think her weaving and textiles are really exciting. Seeing them brought into an installation, especially working with Germaine Koh, they're both currently based in Vancouver, so it's a really good chance for them to work together. Germaine also brings a history of practice with textiles, so I think they're going to work really well together,' said Whitford.
Blewett says she hopes to be an exhibiting artist and become a professor someday.
'I really have a lot of admiration for universities and how they can help inform and shape people. I'm really excited to hopefully pursue that as well.'
Story continues below advertisement
The SAAG summer exhibition begins Aug. 9, while the 50-year anniversary launches in 2026.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Global News
a day ago
- Global News
Southern Alberta Art Gallery celebrates summer ahead of 50th year
Starting this weekend, the Southern Alberta Art Gallery (SAAG) is launching its summer exhibitions. Two artists will control the show floors, with Leila Sujir displaying her Forest Documents, while Namaakii Bear Hat presents Something Given. 'These exhibitions have some similarities, especially in their approach to nature and our reciprocity to nature and how materials are extracted and how we learn and pass knowledge to each other,' said Adam Whitford, curator of SAAG. Forest Documents is a two-video display with several written works about deforestation on tables nearby. The two video screens run the same content, but one is 2D, while the other is 3D. 'We're providing these documents and various books in the reading room for people to browse, to open at random and see where that takes them,' said Sujir. Story continues below advertisement Jorge Zavagno is the technical director of Forest Documents and he says he hopes people will learn something while enjoying the art. 'People can come in and they can both be amazed by the images, the 3D, the beautiful old growth, but also learn a bit about what's happening.' Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy As for Bear Hat's Something Given, she hopes people will learn to simple share and enjoy the moment. 'I want people to feel like they can also share with me their experiences,' she said. She says her work was made in, and by, southern Alberta. 'I made (the sculptures) from the clay from the Old Man River and the plinths were also from around here, from southern Alberta. They're cottonwood.' After the summer exhibit, SAAG is turning its attention to its 50-year anniversary in 2026. The gallery is pairing new and veteran artists to produce four separate exhibits over the year. 'These artist pairings are working together in a mentorship model to produce a new exhibition,' said Whitford. One of the up-and-coming artists is Jaeden Blewett, a university student currently based in Vancouver. 'It's always wonderful already having something lined up right after I graduate. I'll graduate in the spring of 2026, then have this exhibition in the fall,' said Blewett. Story continues below advertisement She says SAAG has a tremendous reputation and she believes this will be a big first step in her career, especially considering she gets to work with a veteran artist. 'I think it's a great stepping stone for the next thing to come. It's always hard to find exhibitions that really align with what I'm interested in, so it's always exciting to have something on the calendar.' Blewett describes her work as focuses on textile and site-specific art installations to give onlookers a very real understanding. 'My work investigates the hidden labours of women, often using industrial materials and weaving to challenge representational failures and disrupt embedded hierarchies.' Whitford says he's very excited to see what Blewett brings to his gallery next year. 'I think her weaving and textiles are really exciting. Seeing them brought into an installation, especially working with Germaine Koh, they're both currently based in Vancouver, so it's a really good chance for them to work together. Germaine also brings a history of practice with textiles, so I think they're going to work really well together,' said Whitford. Blewett says she hopes to be an exhibiting artist and become a professor someday. 'I really have a lot of admiration for universities and how they can help inform and shape people. I'm really excited to hopefully pursue that as well.' Story continues below advertisement The SAAG summer exhibition begins Aug. 9, while the 50-year anniversary launches in 2026.


Global News
a day ago
- Global News
‘The Paper' trailer is here, teasing the return of an employee from ‘The Office'
The first trailer for The Paper, the new spinoff of The Office, has dropped, and while it's been a long time coming, now that it's here, it's left legions of fans satisfied and smiling. (That's what she said.) The premise of the mockumentary series, much like the original, follows another struggling industry as it attempts to revive its business. This time around, the same documentary crew that followed Michael Scott and his employees at Scranton's Dunder Mifflin is now zeroing in on a Midwest local newspaper in Toledo, Ohio, as it tries to get back on its feet with a team of (untrained) volunteer journalists. Meet the newsroom 🗞️#ThePaper arrives September 4 on Peacock. — Peacock (@peacock) August 8, 2025 Story continues below advertisement The trailer opens with the voice of Tim Key's character, the publisher at the Toledo Truth Teller, listing off the products that are now being made in the same building, where the newspaper has slipped to being an afterthought in its 100-plus year history: 'Toilet tissue, toilet seat protectors and local newspapers; and that is in order of quality.' Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy Sabrina Impacciatore's (The White Lotus) character then reveals to the camera the kind of hard-hitting news the Truth Teller is covering, turning her computer around to show an article she's particularly pleased to have penned: 'You Won't Believe How Much Ben Affleck Tipped His Limo Driver.' That's where Domhnall Gleeson (Star Wars, Harry Potter) comes in. His character, Ned Sampson, is brought in as the Truth Teller's editor-in-chief and is given the Herculean task of getting an oddball group of wannabe reporters trained up and finally telling the stories that matter to Toledoans. The Office director Greg Daniels is back at the helm of The Paper — a good sign that the formula that made The Office a huge hit will be preserved — but viewers can expect an almost entirely new, but not unknown, cast. Story continues below advertisement And while both mockumentaries technically follow companies that rely on paper to make money, the trailer saves the biggest connection (and what technically makes the show a spinoff) for the end: former Dunder Mifflin accountant Oscar Martinez (Oscar Nuñez) shows up, none too pleased to be subjected to camera intrusion, yet again. 'Not again, I'm not agreeing to any of this,' he tells the camera, vowing to make any footage unusable, and cursing to prove his point. Daniels previously told USA Today that The Paper is 'technically' a spinoff of The Office because both feature Oscar's character. 'But you know, it isn't like the story of Oscar in a new land,' he said. He described The Paper as a show 'about journalism in the modern age,' adding, 'They're following a very idealistic person who is really trying to swim against the tide.' As of now, there have been no details of other stars from The Office returning to The Paper, even as guest appearances, but you never know. 'The Paper' premieres Thursday, September 4 at 10 p.m. ET only on Showcase and streaming exclusively on STACKTV.


CBC
a day ago
- CBC
Teen crowd surfs his way to Shaboozey at Osheaga
Tristan Kaulbach, 14, tells The National about #TheMoment concert-goers helped him reach musician Shaboozey and his dad's reaction from across the crowd.