
Alberta gallery hosting photographic exhibition called ‘Falling Through the Cracks'
Artist Wes Bell looks at his collection in his exhibit called 'Falling Through the Cracks' at the Alberta Society of Artists gallery.
For the month of June the Alberta Society of Artists is hosting an exhibition called 'Falling Through the Cracks' featuring black and white photos of cracks in asphalt.
Wes Bell, a Medicine Hat artist, put the collection together.
The title comes from a medical event he experienced in 2019 when he thought he had a heart attack.
After five visits to the emergency room, doctors couldn't pinpoint the cause of his pain.
A few months later the pain returned and Bell learned it was due to complications with his gallbladder.
'I sat down with the doctor, the ER doctor and he looked at my numbers and that's when he said 'you could have died, I'm sorry but you fell through the cracks',' said Bell.
It took Bell three months to recover after surgery and while out walking to build up his strength, he looked down.
'And I saw this major crack,' he said. 'It reminded me of the scar on my abdomen and from that, things just grew and later that summer I started researching and hunting for these cracks.'
Bell spent more than 20 years as a fashion photographer, moving to Milan, Italy in 1986 and then later to New York City.
'I worked for fashion editorial for magazines, major magazines; British GQ, British Esquire, the New York Times Magazine,' he said.
'Interestingly, most of them were color photographs, now my personal work is all black and white.'
Bell says the economic crash in 2008 saw advertising dollars dry up and his career with it. He became depressed and went back to school.
'I ended up taking five classes of history of photography, ' he said. And from that grew my passion for art photography, all of a sudden I was focusing on things that meant more.'
The exhibit at ASA has received good reviews from visitors since it opened according to Chawna Exner, program coordinator.
'It's really nice that it's been here during Mental Health Month,' she said. 'Because his work has a lot to say about mental health and I personally really resonate with that and I think a lot of people also really resonate with that.'
Exner says the gallery is focused on local, Alberta professional artists and giving them a platform along with providing a space where they can educate the public about their work.
'When I look back at my career in fashion, I was known for detail and driving people crazy on detail and here I am out photographing cracks, again looking for detail,' he said. 'And if I sharing my vulnerability, that would be the reward that somebody else benefited from it.'
The ASA Gallery is on the second floor of the Crossroads Market in southeast Calgary and the 'Falling Through the Cracks' exhibition runs through until June 26.
Learn more about Bell here: www.wesbellphoto.com/fine-art.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
37 minutes ago
- CTV News
Hard disease: Scleroderma awareness
Hard disease: Scleroderma awareness A Nova Scotia woman knows first-hand how tough it is to live with scleroderma.


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
Ontario summer camps sharing measles protocols as kids get set to head off
In this file photo, counsellors and campers walk to closing campfire, Thursday, June 20, 2024, at YMCA Camp Kern in Oregonia, Ohio. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel) As many kids prepare to head off to summer activities, summer camps are sharing their plans to keep kids safe amid a measles outbreak in the province. Ontario has been grappling with an outbreak of the highly contagious illness since October. According to the latest data from Public Health Ontario, there have been more than 2,100 cases so far. Measles is a highly contagious disease that can cause serious illness and even death in some children. Most of those who have contracted the illness in the latest outbreak have been unvaccinated, public health officials have said. Most of the cases have been in Southwestern Ontario. Waterloo Region recently told CTV news that protocols for its summer camps this season include isolating unvaccinated campers or staff for 21 days if there is an exposure, or until they can prove they've had two doses of a vaccine. Howie Grossinger co-owns two Ontario summer camps -- Camp Robin Hood in Markham and Camp Walden in Palmer Rapids. Speaking with CP24 Friday, Grossinger said that his camps have been heeding public health guidance and working to educate campers and staff. 'We've really educated our entire camp community about the expectations of being fully vaccinated, (and) the implications for campers and staff, should they not be fully vaccinated,' Grossinger said. He said the camp has been collecting vaccination records from those who will be attending camp this summer so that they are able to quickly work with public health officials to minimize spread in case there is an exposure. While campers are not required to be vaccinated in order to attend camp, they would have to go home if there were an exposure, as per public health guidance. 'The response has been great. Parents have been sharing our vigilance on this,' Grossinger said. 'Safety and risk management are of the utmost importance, and we also are educating or re-educating families, given our COVID experience, to the signs of illness; flu-like, symptoms, rashes, etc.' He said health staff at camp are also receiving training about how to be vigilant for signs of the measles, and staff will be communicating with campers regularly to quickly detect if anyone is feeling unwell. 'At the end of the day, we want the experience of camp – the fun, the education and really the lifelong skills that happen at camp – to be the priority, while always maintaining vigilance on all the health and safety stuff that I know parents and us as operators are so concerned with.'


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
Alberta surpasses 1,000 measles cases, second province to do so
Vials of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine are seen in this file photo. Alberta is the second province in Canada to count 1,000 measles cases this year, having crossed the threshold on Friday. With 24 new cases in as many hours, Alberta now has confirmed 1,020 cases of measles. As of Friday, 25 were considered active, or communicable, cases. No deaths have been reported. Ontario's total number of cases crossed 1,000 in late April and currently sits at nearly 2,180. Together, Alberta and Ontario account for more than 90 per cent of measles cases in the country. CTV News Edmonton has reached out to the Primary and Preventative Health Services' ministry for comment. In an interview last week, Dr. Chris Siroka, lead medical officer of health for the Edmonton zone, applauded the cooperation by all levels of Alberta's government and health system to promote immunization, educate the public about symptoms, and provide access to testing. 'Those steps are the good steps to take around prevention and around rapid contact identification,' Siroka told CTV News Edmonton. 'Rapid case identification and contact tracing is what will help stop transmission or help reduce transmission events… and that same work is happening in Edmonton as it is happening in Calgary and every other corner of the province.' However, one of the province's former chief medical officers of health, Dr. James Talbot, said the milestone suggests a grim outlook for the summer and fall, during which measles cases will likely rise not only in Alberta but also neighbouring provinces and territories due to summer travel. Then, Talbot expects Canada will lose its measles elimination status in October, which it achieved in 1998. Alberta reaching 1,000 measles cases also means that Alberta will begin to see more serious outcomes, like death, brain damage and miscarriages. Talbot said, 'If the measures were working, we'd see the numbers going down and we wouldn't see spread to new areas. And both of those are happening.' He expects cities and areas such as Edmonton that have so far avoided high measles cases will not fare as well in the summer. The Edmonton zone on Friday saw its first new measles cases since early May, one day after Alberta Health Services issued a warning about two measles exposures in the capital city. According to the government, between one and three people out of every 1,000 diagnosed with measles die. One in 1,000 diagnosed with measles will get encephalitis. Measles is considered preventable with immunization. Two doses of a vaccine makes a person nearly fully protected. Ninety-five per cent of a population needs to be immunized for herd immunity.