The original drawing I made a few months ago inspired by the film Hausu. Haylee Fortin 2020
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ellievsbear
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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Sweet Seals For You, Always
d e v o n
YOU ARE THE REASON

izzy's playlists!
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
trying on a metaphor
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Today's Document

Discoholic 🪩

shark vs the universe
KIROKAZE
Misplaced Lens Cap
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Stranger Things

#extradirty
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
seen from Spain
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seen from Mexico

seen from Netherlands
seen from Mexico

seen from Mexico
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seen from Mexico
seen from Brazil
seen from United States
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@hayleefortin
The original drawing I made a few months ago inspired by the film Hausu. Haylee Fortin 2020
Feeling terribly conflicted about the background colour. Leaning towards yellow?
Drawn two weeks ago, post-election.
Still sad that Church was run over by a truck in Pet Semetery. Haylee Fortin, 2020
I used to get extremely anxious about art openings - my face would melt clean off! Haylee Fortin, 2020
The Witches.
Spooky draws for October
I’m not usually into fan art but I can’t resist Nobuhiko Obayashi’s Hausu.
I became a Situationist and all I got was this t-shirt
By: Haylee Fortin, Curatorial Assistant.
Image: Drawing by the author Haylee Fortin
Without access to a car, I do a lot of walking. In this process of moving, a physical connection is created between body and place. Walking can be meditative, energizing, challenging and rewarding. As the act of walking translates distance into time, sights seen, sounds heard and energy spent, it imparts an appreciation for what exists between point A and point B. However, with the advent of digitizing maps at the street level, walking is affected more and more by the technology we use.
Bekk Wells’ The Walking Stitch, is an ongoing project which invites participants to explore and re-think wayfinding in urban spaces through walking and craft. Maps of the participant’s city are printed onto fabric and then made into pillows. Wells encourages small groups to set out on an exploratory route, to seek out unfamiliar places or re-experience the familiar in a new way. Each person is given a printed pillow, as well as a needle and thread to stitch the progress of their path. With every iteration of The Walking Stitch a new physical record of a walk taken is generated.
There is a commitment to meandering in The Walking Stitch that contrasts the increasingly common practice of using an app to deliver the most efficient and direct course to a destination. Wells’ work responds to the Situationists’ practice of dérive, an unplanned journey guided by the landscape and whatever encounters take place en route. Movement without purpose is at odds with the new trend towards monetizing where people go, when they go and how they get there. In a society of smart phone users, we are often unknowingly supplying the data of our day to day movements to interested parties through “geolocation” data. Phone applications like the popular Pokémon Go have the ability through their terms and conditions to track user’s location in real time, allowing marketers the possibility of predicting a user’s buying habits or digitally customizing advertising to each individual. Habits that may be imperceptible to you are useful to companies that see your potential as a consumer. To deviate from your daily routine is disruptive to this form of data collection.
Without a labeled map or destination, The Walking Stitch requires you to take notice of the space around you and operate, albeit temporarily, outside of your usual routine. By isolating map reading and embroidery as experiences without an express goal, Wells draws your attention to their changing roles in a society inundated with technology. What future do these skills have?  As we move towards an increasingly digitized world, it’s worth contemplating how the loss of analog knowledge impacts our relationship with digital systems. Â
Image: Bekk Wells’ The Walking Stitch, 2019Â
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About the author: Creative both in practice and thought, Haylee Fortin is an Edmonton based painter, new media artist and printmaker. Haylee’s practice often addresses themes of isolation and femininity through collage and imagery sourced from online hunting forums. Graduating with distinction from the University of Alberta’s Fine Art program in 2015, Haylee has since pursued an interest in art as a means of community engagement with local artist run centers. Through her position as studio assistant, Haylee supports programming for artists with developmental disabilities at the Nina Haggerty Center as well as courses in print-making at the Society of Northern Alberta Print-artists (SNAP). As the installation artist for the 2016 and 2017 URB PRK concert series, Haylee developed an appreciation for public art through creating weekly public art installations. An appreciation which continues to grow through her position as curatorial assistant with The Works.
A piece of writing from my summer job with The Works!
So it turns out the trick is to make what you wanna make when you wanna make it and not care too much about the fact that it doesn’t “fit” with your other stuff. Just make stuff.Â
Have a good day! Haylee Fortin, 2019
New Drawing Haylee Fortin 2019
Village Dog, Laos Haylee Fortin 2018
The Wait, Six N. Five