Sumara, D. J. (June 2002). Enlarging the Space of the Possible. Educational Insights, 7(1). [Available: http://ccfi.educ.ubc.ca/publication/insights/v07n01/contextualexplorations/sumara/]
 
 
Enlarging the Space of the Possible

Dennis J. Sumara
University of Alberta

Writer's Comments Artist's Statement
              March, 1976, Lethbridge, Alberta. I am walking down a candle-lit hallway of my high school, which, for this weekend, has been transformed into a location for a Catholic religious retreat. There are about thirty of us in the procession, mostly grade twelve students, several nuns who are also teachers in the school, and one priest. We are singing, "Make Me a Channel of Your Peace" and moving through the "Stations of the Cross," a series of images depicting Jesus' journey to crucifixion and resurrection.
              At each station we stop and stand silently as Father Watrin reads the scripture that accompanies the image. At some point during this ritual, I begin to feel disoriented, light headed. I am not sure what this means. Will I faint? The feeling persists until it collects into a rush of emotion that runs through my entire body. I wonder if this is Jesus speaking to me. Or am I just exhausted? Perhaps two days confined indoors, without television, radio, clocks, or any contact at all with the world outside the retreat, coupled with sleep deprivation, and continuous participation in unfamiliar rituals and routines, have made me giddy. Maybe I'm hallucinating. Whether by divine intervention or simply from the effects of fatigue, I feel content and happy.
              The next morning I am energized. I continue to feel physical traces of my experience of the previous night. Although I have not discussed it with anyone, I can see that my peers are also excited, eager to continue with the last day at the retreat. I begin to believe something important has happened.

* * *

 
 
              January, 2001, Edmonton, Alberta. I am reading Mark Salzman's (2000) novel Lying Awake, the story of a cloistered Carmelite nun, Sister John of the Cross. After many years of religious confinement, Sister John finally experiences what is perceived by her as God and is able to create large amounts of writing that represents and interprets these spiritual events. At the height of her spiritual and literary powers, Sister John begins to experience debilitating migraines, which are eventually associated with a rare form of epilepsy caused by a small tumor in her cerebral cortex. In addition to pain, she learns that other common symptoms include hypergraphia (voluminous writing), an intensification and narrowing of emotional response, and an obsessive interest in religion and philosophy. She learns that Dostoevsky, an epileptic, had these symptoms and that Van Gogh, Tennyson, and Proust are believed to have suffered the same condition. Unlike these historical figures, who needed to learn to live with their symptoms, Sister John is told that a relatively uncomplicated surgical procedure will eliminate the petit mal seizures that create her symptoms. Of course, eliminating the physical pain associated with this disorder would also mean abandoning the conditions that have structured experiences Sister John considers spiritual and, at the same time, would abruptly halt her ability to write about them.
              As I read about Sister John, I feel the hair rise on my arms. I have migraines. Although I do not write about a relationship with God when I emerge from my hazy white storm, I am able to create new focus with current writing projects. Usually the exit of a migraine creates a window of insight that unravels some knot I am trying to untangle in my thinking. I wonder if I have a brain tumor. I decide this is something I must think about investigating. However, like Sister John, if there is a growth on my cerebral cortex that helps to create conditions for my creative work, I am loath to have it removed. How would I organize my experience if I could not stitch it together with reading and writing?

* * *

 
              January, 2001, Edmonton, Alberta. I am writing about my experience of reading Lying Awake, and making connections between this literary experience, Sister John's epilepsy and her relationship with Jesus, and my recent rereading of letters I received from friends and relatives at a Catholic retreat I attended during my last year of high school. As I type I feel hypnotized by the words appearing on the screen. I am holding my breath. I am exhilarated. I realize that the physical responses I am experiencing during this moment of interpretive writing are almost identical to those I have when in the middle of generating some sort of insight from reading books that I like. Often these books are novels, but just as often they are memoirs, philosophical arguments, or works of theory.

* * *

 
              March, 1976, Lethbridge, Alberta. The retreat is over and my stepfather is driving me home. The sun is too bright, the street too wide. I yearn for the closeness of the retreat. When we arrive home, I immediately excuse myself to my room claiming fatigue, although I am not tired. I sit on my bed and re-read my letters. I notice that my room is small and cluttered. For the first time, it seems insufficient, almost vulgar. I hear my mother and stepfather arguing upstairs about some matter I consider minor and I realize that my world is not theirs. At this moment I feel caught in the web of their relationship. At the same time, I feel less attached to them and our shared circumstances, and this is satisfying to me. I know that the world of this family and this house can be transgressed without leaving it. The space of what seems possible has been enlarged and I am grateful for that. I re-read the scripture that I transcribed on a card before leaving the retreat. I decide that I can believe what I imagine, not just what I see. Although I did not know it then, I realize now that this insight has likely saved my life.

* * *

 
              January, 2001, Edmonton, Alberta. My involvement with the character Sister John helps me to understand that the positive effects of my high school religious retreat were not so much organized by what we humans have come to call God but, rather, by the conditions created for those of us who participated in such removals from the familiar world to invent a needed relationship to the "mysteries." As I now reflect upon that event, I am amazed at the audacity of my teachers who organized and created the structures for these retreats. During a time in our young lives when we sought certainty (Who will I marry? Who will love me? What career will I have? How can I respond to those who hurt me?), we were thrown into the arms of ambiguity. While one might argue that religious retreats create another kind of certainty (If you love God and surrender yourself to God you will find peace and happiness), my small experience of immersion at this retreat suggests to me that the opposite is true: In asking human subjects to believe in something that is unseen, unknown, "unlanguagable," the world of spirituality asks modern citizens to give up the idea of certainty and submit some of their consciousness to the mysteries.
              The challenge to submit to a "more than human" spirituality is not, of course, confined to Christians. Whether one organizes spiritual life around the teachings of Jesus or Buddha or Mohammed, the key to the sort of productive spirituality that I am thinking of is not so much reverence to a person, or a spiritual being, or to a set of dogmas but, rather, is a daily lived belief that there are some things that humans cannot know or, at least, that humans will never find language to describe or fully interpret.

* * *

 
              March, 1976, Lethbridge, Alberta. It is Saturday night, 24 hours since we arrived at the retreat. I am pleasantly tired. It has been a full day of prayer, singing, and meditation. There have been periods of the day when I have been asked to perform different tasks on my own: reading scripture, writing responses, meditating upon a particular idea, sitting quietly. Juxtaposed with this isolation are communal meals, group mass and prayer services, and attendance at testimonials given by some of my peers who made retreats earlier in the year.
              Now, during the time that I would usually be at home watching TV, working at my job as a baker's helper in a local supermarket, or partying with my friends, I am handed a packet of letters addressed to me, written by different people I know. This surprises me. We are told to find a private place to read these letters and to reflect on what their contents mean to us.

* * *

 
              January, 2001, Edmonton, Alberta. In preparing to write about what it was like to receive and read these letters at the retreat, I spend an hour re-reading them. It is surprising to me that I still have these letters. Because I am not much of a collector, I am able to contain all of what I have saved in my 43 years in a cheap brown vinyl briefcase. I have eighteen letters, equally divided between those written by peers and those written by teachers and other adults in my life. I have a letter from the mother of a young woman I was dating at the time. She includes a hand-written copy of a religious poem and she thanks me for being so considerate to her daughter. I have a letter from my stepfather, most of which is an excerpt from a published inspirational essay with a sentence of his own at the end that encourages me to work hard and do well. I remember feeling disappointed and relieved that my mother did not write a letter. One letter is from a friend who chastises me for being too eager to accommodate to others' wishes.
              I have a few letters from teachers. One is from the school librarian, a woman who I hardly knew. She writes about her own interpretation of what spirituality means. I cannot recall what I thought of it in 1976. Today, I am struck by one of her sentences: "Two key attitudes in our search for the Lord in our life are silence and joy." I know that one gift writing has given me is the opportunity to sequester myself in silence for several hours a day while I write and read and think. The word "joy," however, is not one that I use to describe my experience. Instead, I wonder if I am happy. I conclude I probably am, but find I cannot find language to create a representative shape for happy. Joy, on the other hand, echoing words like "rejoice" or the French "jouissance" feels like pleasure, gratitude, celebration.
              Another is from my former grade one teacher, a woman I knew as Sister Mary Louise but who eventually left the convent. As I reread this letter I think that Sister Mary Louise (that's who she'll always be in my memory) is now in her mid sixties. I remember her face and her hands clearly, likely because this was all that was visible, the rest of her shrouded by the black habit she wore every day. To my six-year-old eyes, Sister Mary Louise was perfection incarnate and I loved her. I know that the "most improved student award" I received at the end of Grade One represented my efforts to please her. Although promotion to grade two meant a new teacher, I continued to visit Sister Mary Louise every day after school, helping with small tasks.
              Reading these letters helps me to understand why my grade twelve year was remarkable, and why I continue to feel such a strong attachment and commitment to that experience and to the persons I knew during that time. In choosing to create relationships around something that we could not "see" or could not explain in human terms -- something that was organized by ethics of care, love and consideration -- we learned how to continually interrupt the certainty of our daily lived situations and the usual imperative to focus only on individual development.
              While I am not a participating Catholic, I have continued to organize my life around a deeply held conviction that it is crucial for humans to refuse to believe in the supremacy of the human subject. For me this has meant remembering that human beings simply cannot simultaneously participate in the world of their experience and, at the same time, be fully and mindfully aware of the fullness of that participation. Although I can provide informed descriptions and interpretations of my experience, which utilize insights learned from research and personal experience, I understand that these experiences are, in large measure, organized by what I do not notice or understand. Although it is popularly believed that human beings must understand their contexts in order to function effectively, it is largely the case that most of our daily experience is maintained through acts of imagination and invention. As I drive down the freeways that criss-cross the city in which I live, for example, I do not know what everyone else is doing or thinking, nor can I be aware of what's around the next corner. While rules of the road create some conditions to support my ability to drive safely, like all drivers I also depend on acts of faith and invention. Like an act of human conversation, where meaning is continually shifted through a dance of dialogic exchange (Gadamer, 1990), any shared activity requires an ongoing evolution of structural relationship (Maturana & Varela, 1987). That one should be able to proceed without knowing everything that influences one's experiences means that human existence is always, to a large extent, a surprise, not a plan.

* * *

 
              May, 1997, Tofino, British Columbia. It is the evening of the third day of our teacher research group's retreat. Guided by structures created by our colleague Rebecca Luce-Kapler, we have produced writing that we are now reading aloud to the group. Terry writes about her love of the natural spaces that still comprise the tiny amount of the North American Rain Forest located on the west coast of Vancouver Island where our cabins are located. Her writing is poignant, reminding us that we European-descended white people were not the first to lay claim to these lands. As others read poems, autobiographical narratives, and interpretations of ideas they have been thinking about over the last few days, I am struck with the intensity of our engagement with one another. While we had been meeting for a full day, once a month for two years prior to the retreat, it is not until tonight that we seem to have found new ways of understanding and expressing our experiences.
              Sitting in this wood-paneled candle-lit room, the small roar of the open ocean outside our front door, we read writing that represents insights we have created. As I read my own writing, I feel a new fondness for my colleagues. And, as I look at the faces of the others, I realize something is happening. No one is fidgeting, or merely waiting for his or her turn to read. Everyone is attentive, waiting for the next word to drop, wondering what it will mean when it does. When we are finished reading we sit quietly, nervously, not wanting to break the spell that has been created.
              Understanding that this event needs personal interpretation before it is ruined by public pronouncements, Rebecca quietly asks us to take our writing journals and spend thirty minutes writing. She does not tell us what to write, but by now we understand that the directive to write means to simply open our notebooks and start writing. The act of writing, we have learned, is an act of learning what needs to be learned.
              The morning that we are to leave our cabins we are different people. Although our shared living experiences over the last few days created a communal bond that did not previously exist, our interpretation practices, and the rituals that conditioned these, have also made us strange to one another. We are quiet and tentative. I am anxious to enter into my old life with the new insights I have gained, but I am also reluctant to leave behind the conditions that made these insights possible. I understand, however, that if I were to stay here those conditions would quickly evaporate, since what made them possible was the fact that this place is not home, my colleagues are not my primary relational contacts, and the writing rituals we shared are not identical to those I would use at home.

* * *

 
              In 1987, biologists and cognitive theorists Umberto Maturana and Francisco published a small revolutionary book entitled The Tree of Knowledge, where they used recent discoveries in evolutionary biology as well as insights from philosophy to argue that the mind is not confined to the human brain. Several years later Varela co-authored a book with Evan Thompson and Eleanor Rosch (1991), which provided a more comprehensive account of how this view of mind was supported not only by recent scientific research but, as well, by the ancient eastern wisdom traditions, particularly Buddhism.
              Arguing that the mind exceeds the brain is a risky business, particularly in Western societies that have been influenced by Enlightenment thinking which, according to Descartes' famous maxim "I think therefore I am," suggests the human subject can only be known by what goes on in his or her brain. Supported by the ideas and structures of democracy and capitalism, which are organized around the belief in the rights of the individual and are elaborated by naive interpretations of Darwin's "survival of the fittest" idea, the "mind" is considered to be something that each human subject develops from some seed of disposition present at birth.
              Notwithstanding the fact that this view of mind has, to a large extent, supported the continued belief in infinite growth so valued by developed countries, and has brought about disastrous effects through practices associated with this fundamental belief, it has also created conditions where each human subject, to some extent, is considered responsible for "being all that she or he can be." This emphasis on personal achievement and development can only exist alongside the belief that the mind is confined to the individual brain.
              But, of course, this commonsense theoretical belief is contradicted by daily experiences. Anyone who has watched a child learn language understands that the ability to speak can only occur when one is immersed in communities in meaningful ways. Although the particular degrees to which a human is able to learn and creatively manipulate language are always influenced by an inherited biological structure, language is not an individual achievement but, rather, functions as the glue that knits people together into communities.

* * *

 
              My colleague and friend, Pat Chuchryk, begins her qualitative research course by asking pairs of students to spend the first half hour of class interviewing one another. Then she asks them to sit back to back so that they cannot see one another and to list details about the other person: What color are the eyes? Are there earrings? What do they look like? Shirt or sweater? Jeans or skirt? Shoes or runners? Of course, most students are quite inaccurate in their descriptions. What is perceived and remembered usually has little relation to what exists. This is not only a lesson about conducting research; it is a lesson about reading. As is now well known, readers are prone to projecting their interpretations and wishes on a text, even when the arguments presented discourage them. And, of course, it is a lesson of everyday life: Are things seen as they "really are" or are they seen as the perceiver wants them to be?
              Recent research in the science of perception (Norretranders, 1998; Sacks, 1995; Pinker, 1995) has clearly shown that in order for humans to be able to perceive, processes of discarding must be learned. This means that when we humans look at anything, we usually see what we expect to see. It is difficult to be surprised. Learning to notice something new usually means that it needs to be distinguished from the backdrop of what is usually ignored. That is why it is so interesting to go for a walk with someone who is either more familiar or less familiar with a landscape than we are (Butala, 1994; Norris, 1993). Those who have decided to learn about the details of a particular landscape can provide informed details: "This plant is called spear grass. This is a buffalo flower." Those who are new to a landscape usually notice larger things: "There are so many trees that I can't see the sky!" Or, as is common with those who are new to a prairie landscape: "Standing out here makes me dizzy! It all looks the same."
              It seems that human beings do not merely "see" what's out there; human beings learn to see and, most importantly, in order to accomplish this, they learn how to "not see" most things in their immediate worlds of contact. It is this learned discarding process that allows each of us to negotiate our daily worlds without becoming exhausted. If the discarding process were not in effect, each day would be like visiting anew a strange land, which, as any traveler can attest, requires considerable energy.
              The problem with creating conditions for a relatively effortless daily existence, however, is that familiarity often obscures the possibility to notice what is interesting. As Grumet (1991) has explained, it is the major work of the teacher to "point" to aspects of the world that interrupt familiarity. And, as Gallop (2000) has suggested, this attention to detail must be learned.

* * *

 
              In recent years I have been asking my pre-service undergraduate teacher education students to write about old shoes. At the beginning of the term I ask them to find a pair of old shoes of their own and bring them to class, concealed in bag. I insist that they do not show these shoes to other members of the class. I then redistribute the shoes, asking each class member to take home someone else's shoe and place it in a prominent place in their home -- for example, on top of their computer monitor, on their bedroom dresser top, on the bathroom counter.
 
 
              When they return the following week (with the shoe), I ask them to place the shoe on the table in front of them. Throughout these exercises, I continually remind them that they must not identify their own original shoe. I ask students what it was like to live with someone else's shoe. "It was strange!" "I found it disturbing and eventually had to put in my closet." "It was like an invasion of someone else's and my privacy." "I felt like the shoe was watching me."
              For the next several hours, I ask students to engage in short writing practices that try to create new contexts and situations for the shoe they have adopted: "Write about a place this shoe might have been." "Write about something this shoe might have done." I then ask each student to pair up with another to link these short narratives. "Tell each other the stories of where your shoe has been and what it has done and see what happens when you put these together." In every case, students invent interesting stories that reveal complex characters.
              Although I use this activity to teach a lesson about identity (Identities are not innate, they are made.) and, as well, to teach something about creative writing (Characters emerge from settings and plots, they do not announce settings and plots.), I also use it to demonstrate to my students the importance of interrupting perceptions of the mundane objects and events that structure daily experiences. When students complain that the old shoe made them feel uncomfortable in their own home, and later when they produce rich narratives from imagined features that become attached to these shoes, they are learning to transgress the boundaries of what organizes their perceptual and interpretive worlds (Davis, Sumara, & Luce-Kapler, 2000).
              This experience of boundary crossing becomes especially interesting when the owners of the old shoes bear witness to the new narratives that have been constructed around them by others in the class: "This was the shoe that I wore to my high school graduation -- Now I'll never be able to look at it without remembering how it was involved in a passionate love affair on a cruise ship!"
              Memory, it seems, is not only a representation of a particular event that happened in the past, it is also an interpretation of those images and narratives that have, over time, collected around that memory (Gadamer, 1990; Merleau-Ponty, 1962). As a cultural object, the shoes of my students become newly significant in ways that do not always please them: "That sandal was the one I wore during my year in South Asia. I'm not sure that I like the fact that for me it is now associated with a character who was, it seems, utterly loathsome! I'm going to try to forget I ever heard that!" Good luck. Whether the perceived attachments are explicit or rendered covert, seemingly not noticed or forgotten, they continue to influence the topography of thinking.
I mention my "old shoe" lessons in this writing because, for me, this activity helps both my students and I to remember that while perception is structured by physiological abilities, it is continually organized and reorganized by experiences. As neurologists have shown (Damasio, 1994; Calvin, 1996), in order to see, human beings must learn to see.
 
 
              In his essays documenting the experiences of those with neurological or perceptual disorders, Oliver Sacks (1995) has helped clarify this idea. In a study of Virgil, a middle-aged man who regained sight through a new surgical procedure after a lifetime of blindness, Sacks shows that one's history of learning how to see becomes integral to the organization of memory and experience. Although Virgil's surgery was successful and he was able to physiologically "see" following the procedure, what he perceived was the visual equivalent of "noise." In order for Virgil to discern faces and objects in his visual field, he needed to learn to discard most of this visual noise. In addition, Virgil needed to re-interpret his memories, since the addition of new visual images meant a required revision of the past. This, of course, was exhausting and, in many ways debilitating. After several years, Virgil eventually became "agnosic" -- psychically blind.
              Interrupting familiarity is exhausting. That is why learning is such hard work. This is not merely a psychological or social phenomenon -- it is a biological one. Any time the brain is asked to learn something new it uses many times more physical energy than usual. Thinking requires fuel. Learning to accommodate to new understanding requires much more. This is one reason why traveling to new places creates daily exhaustion for the traveler. It is why my partner and I choose to go to the same location by the sea and rent the same cabin for one week each year. While we want to become removed from the pressures of daily work life, we do not want to be challenged with the energy-sapping task of having to learn and negotiate a new setting.
              This also helps to explain why many readers choose to read a steady stream of romance, mystery, or crime novels, and why the most popular television shows are soap operas, police or hospital dramas, or situation comedies. While the players and settings change, each of these genres is developed around specific and well-known plot structures. In order to be entertained, it seems that our perceptions must not be overly taxed or challenged. This does not mean that learning does not occur, nor does it mean that these activities should be discouraged. It does suggest, however, that an exclusive menu of such activities can create fixed boundaries for one's perceptions, reducing possibilities for the enlarging experiences that have the potential to condition the development of new insights. Involvement in formulaic experiential structures only makes small challenges to perception while involvement in more unfamiliar structures becomes a much larger perceptual challenge.
 
 
              The significant differences between small and large challenges to perception can be understood by examining the shoe activity. In thinking about this activity, it is important to note that I do not ask students to write about their own shoes. I do not do so because, in most cases, students would not be able to detach the shoe from its remembered histories and, as well, because a familiar shoe evokes nostalgia, not insight. I ask students to examine other people's shoes, because old shoes are intimate artifacts that reveal the trace of one human's history. In noticing the marks of wear and the dirt embedded in creases, the interpreter feels as though the intimate world of another human is being presented. At the same time, by including this artifact in the middle of one's own present life, the interpreter feels watched. This is why the collection of shoes at the Holocaust Museum in Washington D.C., piled in glass walled rooms on either side of a hallway that all visitors must pass through, is such an emotionally charged experience. Shoes collect the biological and phenomenological traces of their owners and so become intimate artifacts of history and memory. As Anne Michaels (1996) explains in Fugitive Pieces "It's a strange relationship that we have with objects that belonged to the dead; in the knit of atoms, their touch is left behind (p.265).

* * *

 
              September, 2001, Edmonton, Alberta. I am revising some writing and thinking about the bombing of the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. All week, I have been watching the effects of this disaster, including the rescue and recovery efforts. As nations around the world conduct rituals of mourning, I am reminded that the boundaries erected around human experiences are merely heuristic conveniences. As national anthems and songs of remembrance are sung, as prayers are recited, as eulogies are given, I am reminded of the importance of shared forms and rituals. I remember what I learned at my Catholic Retreat. I understand again why my "old shoes" activity is interesting. I am more convinced than ever of the value of shared interpretive projects, especially those that ask human beings to imagine what exists outside the familiarity of perception.

* * *

References

Butala, S. (1994). The perfection of the morning: An apprenticeship in nature. Toronto, ON: HarperCollins.

Calvin, W. (1996). How brains think: Evolving intelligence, then and now. New York, NY: Basic Books.

Damasio, A. (1994). Descartes' error: Emotion, reason, and the human brain. New York, NY: G.P. Putnam's Sons.

Davis, B., Sumara, D. & Luce-Kapler, L. (2000). Engaging minds: Learning and teaching in a complex world. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

Gadamer, H-G. (1990). Truth and method. New York, NY: Crossroad.

Gallop, J. (2000). The ethics of close reading: Close encounters. Journal of Curriculum Theorizing, 17(3), 7-17.

Grumet, M. (1991). Lost places, potential spaces and possible worlds: Why we read books with other people. Margins, 1(1), 35-53.

Maturana, H. & Varela, F. (1987). The tree of knowledge: The biological roots of human understanding. Boston, MA: Shambhala.

Merleau-Ponty, M. (1962). Phenomenology of perception. London, UK: Routledge & Kegan Paul.

Michaels, A. (1996). Fugitive pieces. Toronto, ON: McClelland & Stewart.

Norris, K. (1993). Dakota: A spiritual geography. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin.

Norretranders, T. (1998). The user illusion: Cutting consciousness down to size. Trans. J. Sydenham. New York, NY: Viking.

Pinker, S. (1997). How the mind works. New York, NY: W.W. Norton.

Sacks, O. (1995). An anthropologist on Mars: Seven paradoxical tales. New York, NY: Alfred A. Knopf.

Salzman, M. (2000). Lying awake. New York, NY: Alfred A. Knopf.

Varela, F., Thompson, E. & Rosch, E. (1991). The embodied mind: Cognitive science and human experience. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.

 
About the Author
 
Dennis J. Sumara is Associate Professor of Teacher Education at the University of Alberta. He is author of Private Readings in Public: Schooling the Literary Imagination (New York: Peter Lang, 1996) and co-author of Engaging Minds: Learning and Teaching in a Complex World (Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum, 2000). His work is developed around studies of literary engagements, with particular attention to the ways they function to create sites for learning and interpretation. His latest book (in press with Lawrence Erlbaum Associates) is entitled Why Reading Literature in Schools Still Matters: Learning to Create Insight From Literary Engagements.

Correspondence: Dennis J. Sumara, Department of Secondary Education, Faculty of Education, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, T6G 2G5, Canada.
E-mail: educational.insights@ubc.ca

 
About the Artist
 
Gailene Powell is an artist and educator. She is a graduate student in the Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia. Gailene's paintings are symbolic in nature and often represent a solitary object set in an abstract space. Gailene has exhibited widely and her work is held in numerous private collections.

Correspondence: Gailene Powell, Faculty of Education, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C., Canada V6T 1Z4
E-mail: educational.insights@ubc.ca

 
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