Watch Clips From OUr Conversations

This work is a four-film journey into climate change through Indigenous eyes: where we are, what we’re facing, and where this road is taking us.  These stories lead with community, Elders, and youth at the center, because that’s where the truth lives—and where solutions do, too.

These films are made the way we carry stories—listening first, laughing when we can, and refusing to let hard truths go untold. The lens follows the threads of land and water stewardship, sovereignty, and the knowledge of our people. The films aren’t just warnings; they’re invitations—to act, to learn, and to remember who we are to the places that hold us.

These films listen before they look. They hold grief and good humor in the same frame, and they insist that land, water, and people are family, not “resources.” These stories are more than climate warnings; they’re instructions for staying human on a changing planet.

 

Come watch, learn, and lean in. The future is calling—so are we.


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  • Summer Trailer: Etuapmumk / Two Eyed Seeing

    Summer Trailer: Etuapmumk / Two Eyed Seeing

    Rosemary Georgeson, Dr. Lyana Patrick, and Dr. Evan Adams discuss the concept of two eyed seeing through times of climate change. Shot on Galiano Island in Summer 2024.

    These discussions are based on the concept of "Etuapmumk- Two Eyed Seeing" coined by Mi'kmaq Elder Albert Marshall.

  • Fall Trailer: Etuapmumk, Two Eyed Seeing

    Fall Trailer: Etuapmumk, Two Eyed Seeing

    Shot in fall 2024 with Christie Lee Charles, Audrey Siegel, Rosemary Georgeson and Kimmora Charles on traditional Musqueam territory.

  • Winter Trailer: Etuapmumk / Two Eyed Seeing

    Winter Trailer: Etuapmumk / Two Eyed Seeing

    Etuaptmumk/Two-Eyed Seeing: Ways of Being and Seeing (TES) is a process-based project by Lara Aysal and Rosemary Georgeson. Rosemary Georgeson, Nicole Bird, and Lynn Powers discuss urban Indigenous life, working in the Downtown Eastside, and Indigenous-led collaboration across knowledge systems. in a world impacted by colonization and climate change. Recorded during winter 2025 at Carnegie Community Centre. With generous support from The Only Animal, British Columbia Arts Council, and Zeic.

  • Spring Trailer: Etuapmumk / Two Eyed Seeing

    Spring Trailer: Etuapmumk / Two Eyed Seeing

    Rosemary Georgeson, Bill Blaney, Darren Blaney, Kai Blaney, Dude Lennon, and Kw'astanya Blaney discuss the concept of two eyed seeing through times of climate change. Shot on Xwémalhkwu terriroty, Spring 2025. These discussions are based on the concept of "Etuapmumk- Two Eyed Seeing" coined by Mi'kmaq Elder Albert Marshall.

  • Fall: Rosemary Georgeson

    Fall: Rosemary Georgeson

    Audrey Seigel, Christie Charles, and Rosemary Georgeson discuss the experience of being Indigenous women living in a rapidly changing urban environment amidst the backdrop of climate change.

    Recorded Fall 2024 on xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) land at the Vancouver Maritime Museum.

  • Fall: Audrey Seigl 1

    Fall: Audrey Seigl 1

    Audrey Seigl, Christie Charles, and Rosemary Georgeson discuss the experience of being Indigenous women living in a rapidly changing urban environment amidst the backdrop of climate change.

    Recorded Fall 2024 on xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) land at the Vancouver Maritime Museum.

  • Fall: Audrey Seigl 2

    Fall: Audrey Seigl 2

    Audrey Seigl, Christie Charles, and Rosemary Georgeson discuss the experience of being Indigenous women living in a rapidly changing urban environment amidst the backdrop of climate change .

    Recorded Fall 2024 on xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) land at the Vancouver Maritime Museum.

  • Winter: Nicole Bird

    Winter: Nicole Bird

    Rosemary Georgeson, Nicole Bird, and Lynn Powers discuss urban Indigenous life, working in the Downtown Eastside, and Indigenous-led collaboration across knowledge systems. in a world impacted by colonization and climate change.

    Recorded during winter 2025 at Carnegie Community Centre. With generous support from The Only Animal, British Columbia Arts Council, and Zeic.

  • Winter: Lynn Power

    Winter: Lynn Power

    Rosemary Georgeson, Nicole Bird, and Lynn Powers discuss urban Indigenous life, working in the Downtown Eastside, and Indigenous-led collaboration across knowledge systems. in a world impacted by colonization and climate change.

    Recorded during winter 2025 at Carnegie Community Centre. With generous support from The Only Animal, British Columbia Arts Council, and Zeic.