Visual artists: Counter-urbanites in the Canadian countryside?

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Abstract

Professional visual artists have always enjoyed considerable latitude in the selection of a place of work and residence. Recent decades have witnessed their growing presence within the Canadian countryside. This paper seeks to provide an interpretation of this phenomenon by exploring two sub-objectives. First is to determine whether artists who establish themselves in rural communities can be considered to be part of the counter-urbanisation movement, involving the relocation of urban residents down the settlement hierarchy. Second is to identify what types of migration are occurring and why. Our surveys of visual artists residing in the southern Ontario communities of Elora and Parry Sound reveal that most participants are part of a movement involving the decision to take up both residence and employment in a rural locale. We further find that the relocation of visual artists is driven to some extent by a strong attachment to natural landscapes. By way of conclusions, we briefly speculate about the broader population of urban residents. We remind ourselves that artists often have been harbingers of new movements and that today there are growing numbers of workers outside the artistic community who also have increasing latitude in regards to choosing where to live and work. Overall, our findings suggest that there is ongoing blurring of geographic boundaries-between space and place, between place of work and place of residence and, of course, between rural and urban. © / Canadian Association of Geographers.

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Mitchell, C. J. A., Bunting, T. E., & Piccioni, M. (2004). Visual artists: Counter-urbanites in the Canadian countryside? Canadian Geographer, 48(2), 152–167. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0008-3658.2004.00053.x

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