Architecture through a lens: re-framing narrative sovereignty, landscape and indigenous film pedagogy
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Abstract
How can architecture re-frame narrative
sovereignty, landscape and Indigenous
film pedagogy? This question is
explored alongside the community of
the Weengushk Film Institute (WFI),
located on Manitoulin Island which
is the home of six Anishinaabe First
Nations (M’Chigeeng, Sheguiandah,
Sheshegwaning, Aundeck Omni Kaning,
Wiikwemkoong and Zhiibaahaasing).
The institute is situated outside of
M’Chigeeng, a First Nation which is
home to the Anishinabek of the Three
Fires Confederacy: Odawa, Ojibway and
the Pottawattomi Nations. Indigenous
Filmmaker Shirley Cheechoo is the
founder of the Weengushk Film
Institute, a school that reflects narrative
sovereignty, connection to land and
Indigenous film pedagogy.
Her school curriculum incorporates
pedagogy based on land and traditional
Indigenous culture (moose hunting,
language restoration, cultural practices,
trapping) and pedagogy based on deep-rooted
colonial filmmaking systems
(screenwriting, directing, production and
post-production). The balance between
these two aspects of the pedagogy
establishes a foundation for narrative
sovereignty.
In order for Indigenous students to
succeed in filmmaking they must
adapt to the existing colonial systems
and standards put in place within the
filmmaking industry. Cheechoo has
developed an education program that
does just that. Her curriculum foregrounds
the individual behind the lens, providing students with the skills and resources
necessary to direct, produce and share
their stories independently. The existing
architecture for this unique curriculum
model takes the form of a warehouse
building. The existing building does not
reflect Cheechoos unique and creative
currciulum model, that highlights
narrative sovereignty, landscape
and Indigenous film pedagogy. The
community is looking for design ideas
that will encourage creativity and express
the existing pedagogy within the school.
The methodological approach follows
a strategy of “Two-Eyed Seeing.”
1 This
term is a Mi’kmaq concept of observing
the world through both an Indigenous
and Western lens. Taking on the role as
a facilitator I have designed through my
own lens to generate a school for the
Weengushk Film Institute (WFI) that is
responsive to their collective needs and
desires. As a settler designer there was
never an intention to answer this question
or solve the existing issues surfaced
within the project, the goal of this thesis
is to re-frame readers’ perspectives,
deconstruct a traditional approach
to architecture, welcome Indigenous
filmmakers and their stories, and continue
the conversation about narrative
sovereignty.