“… a space that is somehow meaningfully organized and on the very point of speech, a kind of articulated thinking that fails to reach its ultimate translation in proposition or concepts, in messages … the various landscapes, from frozen inland wastes to the river and the coast itself, speak multiple languages … and emit a […]
Last year, Winnipeg’s Nestaweya River Trail included a striking ruby-red shelter. Its swooping form was inspired by the red jingle dresses that have become a symbol of commemoration for missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls, and LGBTQ2S+ people. Inside, a circle surrounded by iridescent panels opens up to the sky, creating a space of light […]
Book Review: Voices of the Land Indigenous Design and Planning from the Prairies Book Review: Voices of the Land Indigenous Design and Planning from the Prairies
A compilation of work by Indigenous students from the University of Manitoba s Faculty of Architecture provides glimpses of what Indigenous knowledge can bring to design education.
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Voices of the Land: Indigenous Design and Planning from the Prairies
Edited by Reanna Merasty, Naomi Ratte, Danielle Desjarlais and Desiree Theriault (Indigenous Design and Planning Students’ Association, 2021)
In 2019, Ininew (Woodlands Cree) architecture student Reanna Merasty and Peguis First Nation landscape architecture student Naomi Ratte met at the University of Manitoba. To bring their cultures more strongly into the school’s design teaching, they founded the Indigenous Design and Planning Students’ Association (IDPSA). The group now includes 16 First Nations, Inuit, and Métis students of architecture, landscape architect
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Voices of the Land: Indigenous Design and Planning from the Prairies, was recently produced to create a conversation about Indigenous inclusion and representation in design education.
Created by the Indigenous Design and Planning Students’ Association (IDPSA) at the University of Manitoba (U of M), the book presents the work of 16 Indigenous students across Turtle Island as well as nine alumni from the U of M’s Faculty of Architecture.
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The publication collects their artistic visions and designs to inspire the coming generation of Indigenous youth to think about planning and design as a career option.