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Selections from Forged

By: Steve Wadden
(2005, 2014/15)

Boardroom 207

This selection of four photographs from Steve Wadden’s Forged series is displayed inside Boardroom 207, a private meeting and gathering space within Eltuek. As a social enterprise arts centre, we offer affordable bookings for this room at eltuek.ca/booking, with all proceeds helping offset the cost of subsidized artist spaces throughout the building. We ask visitors to be mindful of any meetings or events underway in this space during your visit.

Forged examines the remnants of post-industrialization in Sydney and Whitney Pier with unflinching clarity. The series explores the complex and often profound connections between people and industry, examining economics, cultural identity, politics, environmental impact, and the emotional weight of deindustrialization. It is, at heart, a portrait of a place where the forging of steel led to the forging of culture.

This is the story of a small steel city gone bust. Set in Sydney, Nova Scotia, and its gritty steel working neighbourhood of Whitney Pier, the story features photographs from two separate bodies of work, shot approximately 10 years apart — in 2005 and later in 2014/15. To convey the romance and heartache associated with industrial cultures and their uncertain futures, Forged takes an unflinching look at the visually tangible aftermath of post-industrialization. This intimate work also aims to explore the complex, co-dependent relationships between humanity and industry, touching on economics, cultural identity, politics, the environment, and the industry’s incredible power to shape history. Primarily inspired by Robert Frank’s Welsh mining series of the 1950s, Forged is ultimately intended to serve as both a character tribute and a historical marker for a place where the forging of steel led to the forging of culture. — Steve Wadden

Forged 10 (photos on wall)

Expressions of love and family adorn the walls of an old family home, which was passed down through the generations on the outskirts of Whitney Pier in 2005.

Forged 19 (last supper interior)

Men gather for a drink at an old family home, in 2005, that was passed down through the generations on the outskirts of Whitney Pier.

Forged 20 (hammer/knife cabbage)

2014. At age 82, Mary Best uses a hammer to chop cabbage for homemade sauerkraut, made with ingredients from the backyard garden she still tended. Mary lived on Tupper Street in Whitney Pier, in a home she had built with her husband, Byron Best—a steelworker turned military man from Barbados. She often recounted, with pride and determination, the story of digging the foundation of their home by hand while pregnant with the first of their nine children. Mary’s parents were first-generation Ukrainian immigrants who came to Cape Breton in search of a better life. Her father began work at the steel plant in 1947, was injured during construction the following year, and passed away in 1950. Mary grew up in a house her parents built on nearby Frederick Street—a street that was later emptied and demolished during a government relocation program in the late 1990s, amid growing concerns over contamination from the coke ovens site. Her childhood home was among those lost. When buyout offers were extended to residents of Tupper Street, Mary stood her ground. “I told them, I want a million dollars—for the million nails that me and my husband put into this house. It’s worth a million to me,” she said. Mary remained in that home for the rest of her life. 

Forged 23 (camo father/son)

Father and son stand for a portrait while visiting family in Whitney Pier in 2014.

Selections from Forged

By: Steve Wadden
(2005, 2014/15)

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Eltuek Arts Centre

Piskwa’, Welcome to Eltuek Arts Centre, our contemporary arts centre here in the North End of Sydney, in beautiful Unama’ki, Cape Breton Island. 

There are public art pieces to experience and quiet nooks along the way. Please feel welcome to rest your feet, read, write, and reflect. Public Wi-Fi is offered.

Admission is free, but donations are kindly welcomed online.

If you need a light lunch or a cup of hot tea, our public cafe has many delicious options, featuring local, fresh food from the Island. On pleasant days, you can enjoy a conversation or a book on our seasonal patio. 

Our hours of operation are 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, and Saturdays from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Please note that gallery hours may differ.

Our adaptive repurposing of this heritage building, ca. 1895, illustrates our ethos of social enterprise and sustainability. It features contemporary design, high ceilings, public art, natural light, exposed foundation stone, and signage in Mi’kmaq, English, and Braille. Barrier-free access is available at all entrances, and the elevator is centrally located. Accessible, universal washrooms are available on all levels. 

Our exterior grounds have been designed with accessibility in mind and feature a variety of plants native to Canada.

Please respect the privacy and creativity of the artists in the building, as this is a safe place for them to work and gather.

Exit the gallery and turn to your left. Continue down the hall to the first door on your left. Gallery 203 is the first door on your left (directly across from the Central Stairs).

Navigating the Eltuek Arts Centre

The Eltuek Arts Centre is a four-level building with each floor represented by a colour. The upper three floors are divided into Upper and Lower wings by a short Central Staircase. A central elevator, and stairwells at the North and South ends of the building, allow for easy exploration of the four floors.

This self-guided tour will take you on a loop through the four floors. When leaving a stop, simply click NEXT in the app and follow the directions/map to your next stop. Once you arrive, click I’VE ARRIVED to find out more about the stop.

Level 1

01-Resonance-hor

Resonance

Level 2

02-StainedGlass-hor

Stained Glass

03-Edges-hor2

Edges

04-Kisituek-hor2

Kisituek / ‘We have made it’/nous l’avons fait

05-itiswhatitis-hor2

it is what it is

06-Deconstructing-hor

Deconstructing a Post-Industrial Memory

07-Gallery203-hor

Gallery 203

08-Forged-hor

Selections from Forged

Level 3

09-Corridor Gallery-hor

Corridor Gallery

10-Seven Teachings-hor

Seven Sacred Teachings of Indigenous Peoples

13-Droplets-hor

Droplets

Level 4

11-TowerLounge-hor

Bell Tower Lounge

12-OpenStudio-hor

Annette Verschuren and Stan Shibinsky Open Studio

Selections from Forged

By: Steve Wadden
Map08
Exit Boardroom 207 and turn right. Continue to the end of the hallway and take the North Stairwell up to the 3rd floor. Once you reach the 3rd floor, exit the stairwell and turn right. The Corridor Gallery is along the left wall.

Eltuek Arts Centre

Piskwa’, Welcome to Eltuek Arts Centre, our contemporary arts centre here in the North End of Sydney, in beautiful Unama’ki, Cape Breton Island. 

There are public art pieces to experience and quiet nooks along the way. Please feel welcome to rest your feet, read, write, and reflect. Public Wi-Fi is offered.

Admission is free, but donations are kindly welcomed online.

If you need a light lunch or a cup of hot tea, our public cafe has many delicious options, featuring local, fresh food from the Island. On pleasant days, you can enjoy a conversation or a book on our seasonal patio. 

Our hours of operation are 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, and Saturdays from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Please note that gallery hours may differ.

Our adaptive repurposing of this heritage building, ca. 1895, illustrates our ethos of social enterprise and sustainability. It features contemporary design, high ceilings, public art, natural light, exposed foundation stone, and signage in Mi’kmaq, English, and Braille. Barrier-free access is available at all entrances, and the elevator is centrally located. Accessible, universal washrooms are available on all levels. 

Our exterior grounds have been designed with accessibility in mind and feature a variety of plants native to Canada.

Please respect the privacy and creativity of the artists in the building, as this is a safe place for them to work and gather.