Aberdeen researcher to study sea ice loss at Canada art studio

Aberdeen researcher to study sea ice loss at Canada art studio

The Universities of Aberdeen and Oregon have partnered with Canada's oldest Indigenous owned and Inuit led arts organization, The West Baffin Cooperative, to study the loss of sea ice surrounding its art studio in Kinngait, which is located on Baffin Island in Canada's far north.

Using printmaking and drawing, alongside satellite imagery, From the Floe Edgeexamines the stories, science, and visual histories of coastal sea ice which forms along the remote community’s coastline during winter and spring. 

While research has been carried out into sea ice around Kinngait before, it has largely focused on monitoring sea ice conditions for shipping and transportation. In collaboration with local Inuit artists, hunters and residents, which rely on sea ice, researchers from both universities intend to use an interdisciplinary, visual approach to understanding evolving local sea ice conditions. They are specifically interested in understanding the important local indicators of sea ice change, and how these indicators have changed over the past three decades.

The project also aims to offer a local perspective on sea ice change, deepening our understanding about Inuit people and their culture. The experience of coastal sea ice, siku, and the floe edge, or sinaaq, varies across Arctic communities. By analysing and understanding the ice edge position, ice thickness, ice quality and length of ice season, researchers hope to address questions about local sea ice change and its climatological divers. 

The project was made possible thanks to a £259,000 ($447,000 CAD) grant from the British Academy Knowledge Frontiers International Interdisciplinary Research programme. 

Dr Isabelle Gapp, an Interdisciplinary Fellow in the Department of Art History, said: “We're really excited to work alongside the artists at the Kinngait Studios to explore how Arctic visual culture and glaciology might understand historic and future sea ice changes.”

West Baffin Cooperative President, Pauloosie Kowmageak, said: “We are very excited to participate in this groundbreaking and multinational initiative that bridges environmental science and the visual arts.

“This project will certainly highlight the unique observational skills of Kinngait artists, who have carefully documented their surroundings through drawing, print and sculpture since the very beginnings of Inuit creative expression.”

 

ENDS

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