Artists take on 2016 oil leak that impacted North Saskatchewan River
It’s an artistic list that depicts a dark episode for a critical waterway: an adding machine, the colour black, fauna displaced, visual cut-outs of children “lost” by environmental damage, and quilted cubes representing the communities that live by and access the river.
These are some of the images Saskatchewan artists brought together for the show at the Chapel Gallery in North Battleford called “As Long As the River Flows: an art response to the North Saskatchewan River oil catastrophe.” The artists reflected on the 2016 oil leak that impacted the waterway, and also the general impact overall when any environment becomes contaminated, leaving communities vulnerable.
In July 2016 a pipeline broke near Maidstone and sent about 40 per cent of 225,000 litres of diluted heavy oil into the North Saskatchewan River, affecting water intakes in the cities of North Battleford, Prince Albert and Melfort. In June 2019, a judge at Lloydminster Provincial Court fined Husky Energy $3.82 million for three environmental charges related to the incident.
Artist Heather Hochbaum from Battleford created a set of quilted cubes, representing the river and the communities that live by it and access it as a water source, for her piece “To Lose Or Not To Lose.”