"When I saw that burned out car, I thought it would be a good spring break activity to show the kids how art can exist outside a gallery setting, how art can activate a community and invite interaction and also how art can bring an element of brevity."
In helping them create their artworks, they talked about the idea of the gallery…how works are displayed, how a viewer is allowed to interact with those works, the cut the gallery takes, etc.
"A burned out car can mean a lot of different things to many different people. For me, it was a simple thing that I imagined would make a lot of people laugh and it did. So many people posted pictures of the signs, or reached out to me personally. And then someone put up a sold sign, others added things to our signs. And on the day it was towed someone made a crocheted sold sign. Just so great."
Her two young daughters (Ora Hunter age 11, Nova Hunter age 7) love participating in the annual youth art show at Gibsons Public Art Gallery GPAG and this year Mira's niece (Lula Labreche age 8) and nephew (Henry Labreche age 10) also submitted works.
Mira Hunter is a visual artist and a second-generation whirling dervish, an all-male 13th century mystic tradition. She began her training at the age of 16 with her father.
As a visual artist, she studied at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, Yale University, and the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, graduating with a MFA from Columbia University in 2013. She has performed at the Montreux Jazz Festival, the London Forum, Istanbul’s Arena, Celebrate Brooklyn, and the Dubai International Film Festival. She has collaborated with Turkish born musician/producer Mercan Dede, the Modern Dance Company of Turkey, and she was featured in David Michalek’s Slow Dance project that was exhibited at the Venice Biennale in 2008, and appeared in Fatih Akin’s award winning documentary Crossing The Bridge: The Sounds of Istanbul.
Hunter’s sculptural installations often involve imagery captured using a bullet time camera ring she created with her husband Derek Junck Hunter, which they presented at dorkbot NYC in 2011.
She currently lives and works on the edge of the wilderness in Roberts Creek, British Columbia.
#PHOTO courtesy Mira Hunter https://www.instagram.com/mirekistan
Sunshine Coast BC Canada 🇨🇦 Facebook Page https://facebook.com/bc.sunshine.coast
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