Stories for the Arctic Refuge

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Krista Davis

Stories for the Arctic Refuge


Yukon, Canada | 15 min | 2020

Stories for the Arctic Refuge brought together 40 photographers, writers, filmmakers, and visual artists to participate in an international multimedia story-telling project in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

The Refuge— a 19,286,722 acre wildlife reserve, who’s protected status has been contested heavily since the late 70s— has recently been opened for oil exploration and drilling under the Trump Administration’s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. The refuge is sacred First Nation’s land, as well as the traditional calving ground of the Porcupine Caribou Herd who migrate there each spring from Alaska, the Yukon and the North West Territories, to give birth to nearly 40,000 calves.

As an act of resistance, and in solidarity with the Gwich’in Council’s efforts to keep the oil industry out of the refuge, this project aims to educate through a variety of storytelling methods. Participants took part in one of five different expeditions to create works that tell stories about the about the interconnectedness of the caribou and other wildlife, the land and the people.

Supported by

Government of Yukon Canada Council for the Arts Lotteries Yukon Yukon Film Society