Elijah Biscoe and Holly Schmidt Shed New Light on a Historic Home in New Westminster

Holly and Elijah spent time listening, sketching and otherwise 鈥渁ttending to the different sensorial aspects鈥 of the Irving House. (Photo by Perrin Grauer)
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The artists were paired through the Shumka Centre for Creative Entrepreneurship for a residency exploring how established history is only part of the story.
A recent apprenticeship with artist and 麻豆视频 faculty member saw artist and 麻豆视频 alum (BFA 2023) help generate new historical perspectives through a colonial home in New Westminster.
Over the summer and fall, Elijah assisted Holly during her at Irving House on Royal Avenue. Reportedly the oldest intact home in the Lower Mainland, the 19th-century Gothic structure was restored as part of New Westminster鈥檚 heritage program.
鈥淚rving House is typical of a lot of historic houses, where it represents settler colonial history and tells stories about the people who came here for purposes of either acquiring land or extracting things from the land,鈥 Holly tells me from the Irving House Annex, an outbuilding that once housed the New Westminster Museum and Archives. 鈥淚 think the intention of the residency was to invite artists to do research in order to bring up alternate histories that maybe don鈥檛 get told as often, and also to challenge some of these dominant narratives of BC history.鈥
For Elijah, discovering how the Irving House might serve as a portal to the broader dynamics of the region was eye-opening.
鈥淎 really emotional thread that runs through the research is understanding the value that was being imbued into this otherwise inert thing,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he idea of nation-building, the idea of the colonial project, branches out even farther than the Irving House and into current Vancouver history.鈥

Drawings, photographs, prints, maps, botanical inks and other items sit in a studio space in the Irving House Annex. (Photo by Perrin Grauer)
Holly and Elijah were linked through the , a program run by the and funded by the RBC Emerging Artists Project. Each year, the AAN pairs paid student apprentices with established artists, curators and cultural workers to work on specific projects.
The residency was conceived by Quyen Hoang, the City of New Westminster Public and Community Art Coordinator, in collaboration with the Museum and Archives. Artist and 麻豆视频 faculty member has been conducting a parallel residency at the Irving House at the same time.
Upon first gaining access, Holly and Elijah spent time listening, sketching and otherwise 鈥渁ttending to the different sensorial aspects of the site,鈥 Holly says. They dug into microfiche at libraries, spoke with residents and Irving House staff, looked through family fonds and photo albums, and explored records in the New Westminster archives.

Elijah uses a smartphone to illuminate the ornate wallpaper and embroidery in one of the front rooms at Irving House. The patterns refer to species of plants not native to BC, underscoring how colonial ideals were subtly reinforced in the spaces and objects created by early settlers. (Photo by Perrin Grauer)
They also ran workshops for locals to engage with some of the material aspects of Irving House. For instance, the home鈥檚 wallpaper and ornate fixtures feature stylized flora. But Elijah and Holly realized none of the vegetation was indigenous to the area. One of their workshops saw participants block-printing plants to explore the broader ideological purposes that animate these often overlooked elements of architecture and decor.
鈥淭hese are objects for learning, and we can ask so many questions of the material culture around us,鈥 Holly says. 鈥淎nd as an artist, because you鈥檙e coming in new, you鈥檙e asking different questions, you鈥檙e pointing out things that people maybe hadn鈥檛 noticed before. It creates opportunity for dialogue. It creates opportunity for questioning.鈥
Elijah adds that the alive-ness of these histories and ideas represented an enlightening discovery.
鈥淭he fact that there鈥檚 a living human side to it both within the house and within the city really gives me some perspective about how art can be made,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he realization that it鈥檚 truly a vast network of people talking to one another and listening in turn 鈥 I鈥檓 just really grateful for that. And I don鈥檛 think it would鈥檝e been possible without them.鈥
Drawings, paintings, prints and other objects created by Holly, Elijah and Janet Wang will be displayed in and around the Irving House and grounds later in the fall.

A vitrine outside the Irving House Annex contains drawings and prints created with botanical and tea-infused inks created during the residency. (Photo by Perrin Grauer)
Elijah notes he will himself will be carrying forward a number of lessons from his time working with Holly.
鈥淚t has absolutely been illuminating,鈥 Elijah says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also comforting to know there鈥檚 a place in the world for curious people, and that you can use research to connect rather than imposing a way of thinking on your audience. To promote the kind of curiosity and wonder that I feel like a lot of people maintain, whether they act on it or not.鈥
Keep your eye on the for updates on when you can see Holly, Elijah and Janet鈥檚 work in response to the Irving House and hear more about what they learned from the residency.
and to learn more about her practice.
Visit for Elijah鈥檚 forthcoming Give Up the Ghost interactive fiction project to learn more about his work.
Learn more about the and the rest of the Shumka Centre鈥檚 extraordinary range of programming .
Visit 麻豆视频 online to learn more about studying Visual Arts at Emily Carr.