听We are pleased to present our Heritage Conservation Symposium 2017 Speakers
Annette Arsenault-听Heritage Conservation in Quidi Vidi Village, Newfoundland and Labrador
Annette is a Masters student in 杏吧原创 University’s School of Indigenous and Canadian Studies. Born and raised in Labrador City, Newfoundland, Annette moved to Ottawa in the year 2000 and has worked as a federal public servant since that time. Annette holds a Bachelor of Arts honours degree in International Development Studies and Social Anthropology from Dalhousie University.
Mathieu Dormaels-听Cultural heritage landscapes in Quebec: challenges in local development
Mathieu Dormaels is a professor in the urban and tourism studies department at the University of Quebec in Montreal. His teaching and research focus on urban heritage, heritagization processes and cultural landscapes, and especially UNESCO World Heritage. He is also member of ICOMOS Canada and of the Canadian commission for UNESCO. He wrote several articles on World Heritage, Heritage management and Tourism, and gave more than 30 conferences in Europe and the Americas.
Lauren Archer-听Climate Change and the Hockey Cultural Heritage Landscape
Lauren Archer is a Cultural Heritage Specialist at ASI Heritage. 听She is an experienced cultural heritage planning professional with eight years of experience working in the heritage planning and historic conservation field. She has a special interest in hockey cultural heritage landscapes, public consultation and the sub-cultures that define communities.
Lindsay Reid- Location, location, (re)location? Moving heritage resources in the age of Ecological Bias
Lindsay Reid, OAA, CAHP, LEED AP is a licensed architect with extensive experience in the field of heritage conservation. An Associate at ERA, Lindsay has a special interest in the conservation of our cultural institutions as well as the protection and appreciation of modern era and vernacular rural heritage.
Zeynep Ekim-听Ruin-Ophilia: Preserving the Narrative without Restoration
Zeynep Ekim is a Master of Architecture student at 杏吧原创 University. She holds a bachelor degree in architectural studies with a major in conservation and sustainability 听also from 杏吧原创 University. Currently in the concluding stages, her thesis research focuses on communal identity and its relationship to the left-over buildings of post-industrial landscapes.
Rebecca Dolgoy,听Sarah Gelbard and听Amanda Montague-听鈥淏ut what about the鈥ibrary?鈥: Place-Forward Place-making
Rebecca is a SSHRC-funded postdoctoral research fellow based in Ottawa. Her work explores questions of cultural memory in museums, architecture, and urban space. She is the co-founder and co-orgnizaer of Ottawa’s Cultural Memory Workshops.
Sarah is a PhD student in urban planning at McGill and graduate of the Azrieli School of Architecture and Urbanism. She is interested in how we shape our cities, how our cities shape us, and transgressive urban spatial practices, traditions, and tactics of marginalized and alternative groups. Sarah is editor of Spacing Ottawa and hosts the Brutalism walking tour with Ottawa (de)tours.
Amanda is a PhD candidate in the Department of English at the University of Ottawa. Her research focuses on the impact of digital technologies on memory practices in urban space. She is a co-founder of Ottawa’s Cultural Memory Workshops.
Heena Gajjar and Amita Sinah-听Dwarka Lost and Reclaimed: Planning for a Resilient Landscape
Heena Gajjar was a University Olmstead Scholar in 2015 and graduated with a Masters in听Landscape Architecture from University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, USA. She is听currently working as a landscape designer with Sasaki Associates in Watertown, MA.
Amita Sinha is a Professor in the Department of Landscape Architecture at the University听of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, USA. She is the author of Landscapes In India: Forms听and Meanings (University Press of Colorado, 2006; reprinted by Asia Educational听Services, 2011) and editor of Landscape Perception (Academic Press, 1995) and Natural听Heritage of Delhi (USIEF and INTACH, 2009). Her co-edited volume Cultural听Landscapes and Heritage Conservation in South Asia was recently published by听Routledge.
Angela Garvey and Hallie Church-听It鈥檚 not ours to name
As an emerging heritage conservation professional in Toronto, Angela provides site听research and the coordination of various heritage assessment projects. Her specific听interest lies in how we incorporate community understanding into cultural heritage听evaluations and the interpretation of our environment.听Angela brings a cultural landscape approach to the heritage planning process, and听draws on holistic methods for understanding the interrelationship between the听natural landscape, built environment, and the intangible practices that support them.听As an active member of ICOMOS Canada, Angela contributes her time to facilitate听the ongoing 鈥淣ational Conversation on Cultural Landscape鈥 to connect practitioners听across Canada who are working within this topic of inquiry.
Darlene Bearskin,听Dr. Sarah Pashagumskum and听Laura Phillips-听Exhibitions, Landscape, Community Cultural Heritage and Healing: The development of a travelling exhibition- 鈥淔ootprints: A Walk Through Generations鈥
Laura took up the post of consulting Coordinator of Collections & Exhibitions at听Aanischaaukamikw Cree Cultural Institute in September 2014. Prior to this, she was the Collections听Manager at The Wolfsonian-Florida International University in Miami Beach, Florida. Laura has worked听in museums and heritage organisations for over fifteen years: at the University of Oxford鈥檚 Pitt Rivers听Museum of Anthropology and World Archaeology, English Heritage鈥檚 National Monument Record Centre听in Swindon and Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery (UK).
From 2010 to 2013, Laura was the Head of Museums Documentation for Qatar Museums and completed听the implementation of a national centralised collections management database for all of the public听collections. Laura achieved her Honours BA in Classical Studies at Western University (Canada). She听undertook a Post-Graduate Diploma in Professional Archaeology at the University of Oxford (UK), and a听research Masters (M.Phil) at the University of Bristol (UK). Laura specialises in collections information听management, museum documentation, and collections management. She is particularly interested in听adapting museum practice and training museum professionals to support emerging museums,听particularly indigenous institutions.
Dr. Sarah Pash is a member of the Cree Nation of Chisasibi in northern Quebec, and听has been the Executive Director of Aanischaaukamikw, the regional Cree Cultural听Institute for Eeyou Istchee, since 2015. She joined the Cree Cultural Institute when it听opened in 2011 as Director of Programs, assisting in the organizational听development of the Institute with her experience in program development and听implementation, indigenous research, and public sector planning and management.听In her capacity as Executive Director, Sarah leads a dynamic team supporting听culture and heritage programming for the 10 Cree communities in Northern Quebec.听Sarah has a background in First Nations education, culture and language听maintenance, as a teacher, university instructor, education consultant, research听coordinator, and author. Her community service includes terms as a band councilor听and board member on various First Nations community organizations. Sarah holds B.A.听(Hons.), a B.Ed. and M.Ed., a PhD. in education, and a Master鈥檚 Certificate in听Public Organization Management.
Ben Gallagher and Aubyn O鈥橤rady-听Material Distance: Memories and the Poetics of Landscape
Artist- researchers Aubyn O鈥橤rady and Ben Gallagher鈥檚 collaborative work is anchored in social practices and the relational capacities of poetry. Their work responds to the ways in which the material and natural world is active and dynamic. Drawing on theories from Feminist New Materialism and post-human phenomenology, they contend that landscapes themselves are agential and propose artistic methodologies.
Emma Bider-听Sounding the World: Imagining ontologies as mobile through sound and song
Emma Bider is a graduate student at 杏吧原创 University in Anthropology and African studies. Her work focuses on the intersection between music, ethnic identity and forced migration.
Marie-Paule MacDonald-听Trajectories and Territories: Hendrix Soundscapes
Marie-Paule Macdonald obtained a Bachelor of Architecture from Dalhousie University and a post-professional graduate degree from the听Institut Fran莽ais d鈥橴rbanisme, Universit茅 de Paris VIII,听studying with Fran莽oise Choay. She is a registered architect, and member of the Order of Architects of Qu茅bec. She is an associate professor at the School of Architecture, University of Waterloo and has coordinated graduate and undergraduate off-campus design studios in Montr茅al. Macdonald recently published听Jimi Hendrix: Soundscapes (London: Reaktion Books, 2016), reviewed by Brian Morton in the Times Literary Supplement, Aug 3, 2016. Other publications include the architectural project and text entitled Rockspaces (Toronto: Art Metropole, 2000), and 听the rock opera scenographic design project Wild in the Streets: the Sixties, in collaboration with Dan Graham (Ghent: Dirk Imschoot, 1993). Articles include 鈥楻each for the Pain鈥 in the volume When Pain Strikes, (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999) and 鈥楪lass Perception鈥 in Parkett no. 68, 2003.
Passerelles-听Passerelles/Vivre le patrimoine 鈥 Richelieu Park cognitive maps workshop听
Passerelles est une coop茅rative de travail qui offre des services visant la mise en valeur du patrimoine culturel des collectivit茅s. L’organisme valorise le patrimoine par la recherche, la sensibilisation et contribue 脿 sa diffusion, tout en d茅veloppant des projets 脿 caract猫re festif, cr茅atif, novateurs et rassembleurs. Passerelles se positionne 脿 l鈥檃vant-garde des pratiques de m茅diation culturelle et inscrit ses actions au regard de l鈥檃ctualit茅.