Mi'kmaw photographer Patricia Bourque featured at Indigenous Artisan Christmas Market
CBC
Mi'kmaw photographer Patricia Bourque is one of 30 Indigenous artists whose work will be featured this weekend at P.E.I.'s Indigenous Artisan Christmas Market.
Indigenous artists are selling everything from quill art to beadwork and photo prints.
While she is excited for the market, Bourque says her mental health has made creating difficult as of late.
"There's a rule that a lot of Indigenous artisans go by and it's one of the biggest ones: you have to be in a good place before you work. I've been struggling to be in a good place."
As a child, photography provided an escape for Bourque. She was adopted by an Acadian family and grew up alone, as the other siblings had already moved away, she said.
"I spent a lot of time by myself. My home wasn't the happiest, it wasn't the most fun."
Getting her driver's licence provided Bourque with a newfound freedom.
"When I got my licence, I started going for drives. It was like my first time seeing P.E.I. — fresh eyes, brand new, everything was brand new for me. I would take any back road I could find. I remember just taking the camera with me. Only the keys and the camera. And that was part of the adventure."
That love of capturing moments and places that made her happiest has followed Bourque her whole career.
Fifteen years after first picking up the camera, Bourque was a single mother working an office job. She had recently lost her father, and she was burning out at work.
An employment counsellor encouraged her to take up photography again, said Bourque.
"It was Betty Gordon. I always like to name her because she was the person who was my biggest cheerleader in this chapter of my life. She was the person who encouraged me to find the courage to step out of that place and find my artistic self."
Bourque sat in silence for a moment.
"It's been 20 years since I started this chapter of my life."