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This Northern B.C. high school is honouring community elders through portraits
CBC
Kalem Nelson will never forget one of their artistic achievements from their final year of high school in the North Coast community of Smithers, B.C.
For several months during the 2018-2019 academic year, Nelson painted a portrait of the late MLA Bill Goodacre as part of Smithers Secondary School's Honouring Our Elders Legacy Portrait Project.
The project, which has been running for 15 years, aims to honour individuals and their contributions to the northwestern community of more than 5,000 residents. Since 2006, a committee at the school selects who to portray, with input from the community.
Goodacre, who graduated from the school in 1969, served as Smithers councillor in the 1990s and 2000s, then as MLA for Bulkley Valley-Stikine from 1996 to 2001. He was also the president of the Dze L' Kant Friendship Centre and was heavily involved in the Shared Histories project with the Wet'suwet'en.
He died in January 2019, several months after his selection by the committee.
Last month, his portrait — as well as that of Likhts'amisyu Wing Chief Hagwilowh (Antoinette Austin) — became the latest additions to the series of portraits publicly displayed on the side of the school building.
Nelson, now a first-year visual arts student at the University of Victoria, says they have wanted to paint an elder's portrait since they were in Grade 8 and felt honoured when they were selected to do the job.
LISTEN︱Art teacher Perry Rath on the Honouring Our Elders Legacy Portrait Project
Originally completed in October 2019, the portrait's display was delayed due to limited wall space and human resources, according to a school representative.
Though they aren't happy about the belated display, Nelson says they're glad to know their effort has paid off and that the public appreciates their representation of Goodacre, who is also a longtime friend of Nelson's father.
"Being [part of] such an important project, I knew I had to keep going, and I'm really happy with the outcome," they said. "Everybody was really enthusiastic with their praise in the likeness of it, seeing how realistic he looks."
Perry Rath, Nelson's art teacher, says it's not easy to capture character in a portrait.
"We do a bunch of preliminary sketches, we look at a bunch of photos of the person, also sometimes we try different styles," he told host Carolina de Ryk on CBCs's Daybreak North.
"I'm helping students move through, like 'how can I let this flow out of me?' and 'how can I capture this person's character?'"