White Mountain Academy of the Arts

The White Mountain Academy of the Arts was an art school based in Elliot Lake, Ontario, Canada. Formally opened to students in 1998, the academy sought to combine European and First Nations approaches to painting, photography, graphic design, and other arts forms.[1] James Bartleman, the Lieutenant-Governor of Ontario, became an honorary patron in August 2004.[2]

History

The original committee which sought to establish the school, the Northern Institute of the Arts Planning Commission, acquired the building, a former Canada Centre for Mineral and Energy Technology (CANMET) research laboratory, in 1998.[3]

White Mountain was located in a fairly isolated area in Northern Ontario, and it never received enough students or donations to survive as an institution. It folded in 2006,[4] after failing to secure status as a degree-granting institution. During its operation, however, it did grant its own certificates and diplomas, and offered degree programming in collaboration with OCAD University in Toronto, leading to a Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA). It only offered its four-year program to one cohort of eleven students. However, many subsequently transferred to OCAD in Toronto or other fine arts programs.[5]

The White Mountain Campus

Originally housing a nuclear research laboratory, the building features three naturally lit floors with several rooms from each floor, centred upon a massive arboretum, spanning the steps from the first to second floors. After the school's closure, the building was subsequently leased by the city, and served primarily as a storage depot for municipal equipment.[5]

Beginning in 2012, the White Mountain building became a temporary home to the Elliot Lake Public Library and other services displaced by the Algo Centre Mall roof collapse.[6] Having been shut for several years, the building required significant renovations for this purpose.[5]

The library faced controversy over its planned final location in 2013, with the board favouring remaining at White Mountain[6] while many users preferred a move to the more centrally-located Pearson Plaza.[7] The library ultimately announced that it would move to Pearson Plaza, after White Mountain declined to offer the institution a long-term stable lease.[8]

Elliot Lake's city council subsequently faced controversy around significant cost overruns in the 2012 renovation project,[3][5] as well as other municipal investments in the building and its maintenance.[5]

As at October 2016, the building remains in use providing host to a variety of tenants, including the Nuclear Waste Management Organisation, Service Canada, a dance studio, the business incubator and some of their clients. The board, officially the Northern Institute of the Arts, remains active whilst plans are to dissolve the board after the sale of an art collection. The building, now owned by the city of Elliot Lake, was reported as having been sold for $200,000 to a multinational firm, Eissa Group.[9] It was later clarified in council that this was misreported in that it was not sold yet, but only a conditional offer made.

gollark: Oh, and as an extension to the third thing, if you already have some sort of vast surveillance apparatus, even if you trust the government of *now*, a worse government could come along and use it later for... totalitarian things.
gollark: For example:- the average person probably does *some* sort of illegal/shameful/bad/whatever stuff, and if some organization has information on that it can use it against people it wants to discredit (basically, information leads to power, so information asymmetry leads to power asymmetry). This can happen if you decide to be an activist or something much later, even- having lots of data on you means you can be manipulated more easily (see, partly, targeted advertising, except that actually seems to mostly be poorly targeted)- having a government be more effective at detecting minor crimes (which reduced privacy could allow for) might *not* actually be a good thing, as some crimes (drug use, I guess?) are kind of stupid and at least somewhat tolerable because they *can't* be entirely enforced practically
gollark: No, it probably isn't your fault, it must have been dropped from my brain stack while I was writing the rest.
gollark: ... I forgot one of them, hold on while I try and reremember it.
gollark: That's probably one of them. I'm writing.

See also

References

  1. Linda Denley, "Press Releases: Excerpts from press releases sent to the Citizen newsroom", Ottawa Citizen, 2 June 1998, C2.
  2. "Bartleman named patron of Elliot Lake arts academy", Sudbury Star, 18 August 2004, A2.
  3. "Delegations ask council about White Mountain renovations cost overrun". Elliot Lake Standard, February 20, 2014.
  4. Rob O'Flanagan, "Elliot Lake art school didn't have a chance: Academy never had enough money or students", Sudbury Star, 15 February 2006, A4; Rob O'Flanagan, "Good-bye White Mountain: Loss of Elliot Lake arts academy will be felt across Northern Ontario", Sudbury Star, 12 April 2006, A4. See also Owen Brush, "White Mountain Academy a victim of poor management" [letter], Sudbury Star, 4 March 2006, A9.
  5. "White Mountain’s fate in council’s hands". Elliot Lake Standard, January 21, 2015.
  6. "Library board votes to stay at White Mountain". Elliot Lake Standard, September 18, 2013.
  7. "White Mountain not most suitable location for library". Elliot Lake Standard, October 24, 2013.
  8. "Library board votes to enter lease for Pearson Plaza, Council unanimously supports library board’s decision". Elliot Lake Standard, November 27, 2013.
  9. "White Mountain sold to global investment firm - My Algoma Manitoulin Now". www.myalgomamanitoulinnow.com. Retrieved 2016-12-03.
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