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The "Winds of Change" is a series of watercolour paintings by Daniel Elliott - a Stz'uminus Elder who is a healer and teacher in First Nations communities. The paintings depict the beauty and power of Indigenous culture and community, along with the ongoing trauma of colonization. This book includes all paintings in the series, along with Elliott's own story, and his powerful insights on the path of truth and reconciliation. Elliott began studying watercolour painting as a young boy. He found that artmaking provided access to altered states of consciousness. Art became a crucial way for him to…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The "Winds of Change" is a series of watercolour paintings by Daniel Elliott - a Stz'uminus Elder who is a healer and teacher in First Nations communities. The paintings depict the beauty and power of Indigenous culture and community, along with the ongoing trauma of colonization. This book includes all paintings in the series, along with Elliott's own story, and his powerful insights on the path of truth and reconciliation. Elliott began studying watercolour painting as a young boy. He found that artmaking provided access to altered states of consciousness. Art became a crucial way for him to build capacity to live with purpose and choice, despite the intergenerational trauma, sexual abuse, family violence and relentless racism he experienced. He writes, "If you can access this alternate consciousness I have been describing, the consequences of trauma are not linear or predictable. Hopelessness is not inevitable. We can feel the grief, and understand the impact of ongoing violence, and stay with it long enough to choose the next right thing." In the introduction to Truth, Art and Reconciliation, Caffyn Jesse describes this book as "both challenging and comforting." She says, "This book asks us to understand many dimensions of Indigenous trauma. It invites us to feel our own - and each other's - traumas more intimately. It also opens new possibilities for healing, alternate ways of seeing, and transformative well-being."
Autorenporträt
Daniel Elliott says, "Unequivocally, I believe that reconciliation lives in me. Reconciliation is my art, and my work with people. I try to teach truth, without shame or blame. I try to offer hope, and a way forward." Elliott is a Coast Salish Elder of the Stz'uminus First Nation. He says he has been molded from infancy to walk in two worlds, since his father is Coast Salish, and his mother is Scottish. "I live the dynamics of the healing that needs to happen," he muses. Art has been part of Elliott's life, from his earliest memories. He found that artmaking provided access to altered states of consciousness; it felt deeply empowering. Art was a crucial part of building his capacity to live with purpose and choice, despite the intergenerational trauma, sexual abuse, family violence and relentless racism he experienced.