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TEXADA

An impressionistic VR documentary

Written & Directed by
Claire Sanford and Josephine Anderson

March 5 to 6, 2025
at Texada Island Museum
co-presented by Texada Heritage Society and qathet ART
Viewing hours coming soon
March 24 to April 3, 2025
at qathet Art Centre
Viewing hours: Monday to Thursday 2 – 5pm

How big is time?

On the remote Canadian island of Texada, the everyday stuff of human existence—work, play and dreams—is juxtaposed against the tectonic shifts of the planet, rising and falling in cyclical patterns of creation, extinction and renewal.

In this impressionistic VR project, co-directors Claire Sanford and Josephine Anderson merge 360-degree live-action footage, captured across the island, with 3D animation of geologic upheaval to create an immersive, poetic experience. A chorus of residents’ voices ebbs and flows, unravelling the complexities of the surrounding limestone that is central to the community and economy of the island. Present in everything from toothpaste to the great Pyramids of Egypt, this humble yet ubiquitous rock is a critical element in the construction of our modern society.

Texada is about rocks, people and time—the head-spinning vastness of terrestrial epochs contrasted with the immediacy of day-to-day human experience. Real and imagined landscapes document a journey from the Earth’s formation to the current moment: twinned streams of existence mixing and mingling in an ever-changing flow. As geologic forces continue to unfold, the only constant is transformation. Yet amongst the great heave of history, glimpses of temporal beauty, like discovering beautiful stones on a beach, help us understand our place in the universe.

Claire Sanford

Claire Sanford is a Canadian documentary filmmaker, cinematographer and video artist whose work explores the natural world, human identity and how they overlap. Her films and immersive installation work have been exhibited at film festivals and galleries internationally. Her first virtual reality documentary, Texada, premiered at IDFA DocLabs. Her intimate documentary Violet Gave Willingly was featured at IDFA, DOC NYC and Hot Docs, was selected as a TIFF Top 10 short and Vimeo Staff Pick, won Best Female Directed Short at Whistler Film Festival, and is nominated for a Canadian Screen Award.

Josephine Anderson

Josephine Anderson is a Vancouver-based documentary filmmaker who works across the documentary and interactive formats to address themes like time, irreverence and female experience. Josephine’s work has screened at international festivals, including Tribeca and IDFA, and has been presented by The New Yorker Documentary, Vimeo Staff Picks, CBC, the Canada Council for the Arts.