The Southern Alberta Art Gallery has some interesting new exhibits focussing on First Nations and the environment, opening on Saturday, Oct. 14.
Gabi Dao, the SAAG artist in residence last year uses the image of bats to explore several different issues including environmentalism, green energy, misinformation and the perceived role of bats on the Covid plague in her new exhibit “ What Breaks on the Horizon.”

She began working on the exhibition, which includes three short films and a set of stylized bat marionettes with SAAG curator Adam Whitford right before Covid happened in March 2020.
“There was this viral video, pardon the pun, that was circulating on far right websites of a woman eating bat soup, but the video was released in 2016 and it wasn’t even in Wuhan. It was on an island ( in Palau, Micronesia), so it got me thinking about misinformation and what people perceive to be coded as evil, viral, devilish and deviant,” Dao explained, adding she also decided to research bats by talking to experts in Cypress Hills and Southern Alberta including out by Frank’s Slide.
Her three movies include footage of bats, more experimental work using a fish-eye lens “bat cam” , conversations with experts about bats and at mining company Teck Resources Limited about the environmental impact of actually building the wind turbines and a 15 minute film “ Lucifer Falls to Earth” — a fictional story about Satan as a bat, falling to Earth after hitting a wind turbine
“ Bats are very good for the earth because they eat insects that pesticides are used to eliminate. And a lot of bats die after flying into windmills,” she said.
The Upper Gallery features a new exhibition from artist and electronica musician Elisa Harkins celebrating and preserving First Nations music from Oklahoma, B.C and Lethbridge.
Five different songs from Osage, Cree, Seminole, Cherokee, Kiowa and Blackfoot traditions are featured including the sheet music, photos and a shawl inspired by the music.
“ There‘s sheet music, photos of the musicians and a video of them singing their songs. I’ve also created shawls inspired by each person,” said Harkins who is also a DJ on an all indigenous radio station.