Cleo Reece
Cleo Reece is a Cree Métis Red Power movement activist, environmental activist, and filmmaker. She is currently a band councilor for Fort McMurray #468 First Nation.
Cleo is the mother of Skeena Reece, and has taken part in some of Skeena's work. This includes the performance piece I Still Know, which was performed as a part of Skeena's solo exhibition at the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery in 2019.
Activism and filmmaking
Much of Reece's environmental activism highlights the intersections of resource extraction and its ongoing negative effects on the environment, and its effects on Indigenous peoples' lives, bodies, and territories. Drawing from a background in film making, she often uses film alongside activism on site. She produced the 1998 film Red Power Women, which focuses on a lively community of urban Indigenous women in North Vancouver, and reflects on the political coalition they formed in the 1970s as a form of self-empowerment. She was also involved in the production of No Turning Back, a 1997 documentary film which followed Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples across Canada.In 2010 she co-organized the Keepers of the Athabasca's first 13-kilometer Healing Walk, which was undertaken to draw attention to the negative environmental consequences of development in the Fort McMurray area, including resource extraction in the tar sands.