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  • Apr17

    MOV high tea banner

    This upcoming Mother’s Day weekend, the Museum of Vancouver mixes learning, fashion, and tea for its “High Tea @ MOV” museum fundraiser. Whether guests attend with friends or together with their mum, it’s sure to be a delightful afternoon spent at this special sit-down tea service.
     
    Guest speaker Brendan Waye, accredited tea specialist (aka “The Tea Guy”) as well as a Vancouver Community College tea sommelier program instructor will provide insight on both the traditions and rituals of high tea culture over time.
     
    Guests will enjoy a variety of teas and a delicious assortment of petite sandwiches and cakes. A guided tour of the Art Deco Chic exhibition will provide a base for conversation, and tea demonstrations will give guests an opportunity to discover new tastes while learning about teas from around the world.

    High Tea @ MOV
    Date: Saturday, May 12, 2 to 5 pm
    Venue: Museum of Vancouver, 1100 Chestnut Street, Vancouver
    Tickets: $40; $60 for two; order tickets online

    All proceeds will benefit the Museum of Vancouver’s programs for conserving Vancouver’s history and material items.
     
    The Museum is grateful to sponsors Herbal Republic, Bernardin, Salt Spring Coffee, and Angela James.

  • Feb24

    Beat Nation

    Beat Nation: Art, Hip Hop and Aboriginal Culture is a new exhibit kicking off February 25 at the Vancouver Art Gallery. Yesterday morning, I was invited to preview the collection, meet a few of the artists, and get a feel for the space.

    Beat Nation

    The exhibit aims to reflect the changing face of Aboriginals today through the 27 artists from across the continent, from Nunavut to Newfoundland, down to New Mexico. Their art incorporates mash-ups of other modern cultures, transforming and repurposing the items as they see the world. The various pieces range from street life, graffiti, video, and costumes to bikes, merging pop culture with Aboriginal traditions.

    Beat Nation presents a strong, bold, and positive affirmation of Aboriginal people. Artists from Beat Nation come from the Aleut, Apache, Cree, Haida, Inuit, Lakota, Mi’kmaq, Mohawk, Navajo, Tsimshian, and other communities.

    Aboriginal hip hop draws on the heritage and background of these nations and over the past decade has become an important voice for urban aboriginal youth.

    Dustinn Craig, 4wheelwarpony bro team, 2007, production still. Courtesy of the artist.
    [Dustinn Craig, 4wheelwarpony bro team, 2007, production still. Courtesy of the artist.]

    The idea originated from grunt gallery, whose space has a history of showing current Aboriginal works. The original project has grown to incorporate Beat Nation Live, and the VAG exhibit is an expanded version of what started back in 2008. There’s also 16 hip hop videos chosen for the exhibit including local artist Ostwelve (Musqueam Nation), to connect with the physical art. Jackson 2Bears’ video Heritage Mythologies (2012) explores Canadian heritage, asking ‘what does it leave out’? Several video artists chose to feature political and cultural themes in their works as well.

    “This art sings, screams, whispers, beats a drum and proclaims our presence,” says Secwepemc co-curator Tania Willard, “Beat Nation shows, despite the many efforts to repress and eradicate our culture, that we are here. And we are thriving. Like the beats of our sacred drums, we echo our ancestors in the expression of culture regardless of medium: whether electronic beats or drum skins, natural pigments or neon spray cans, beads or bling, break dancing or ceremonial dancing, we do it as an expression of who we are, as indigenous peoples.”

    Jackson 2Bears, Iron Tomahawks, 2006-11, live video remix (VJ performance) on turntables using digitally recorded vinyl records, laptop & video projector.
    [Jackson 2Bears, Iron Tomahawks, 2006-11, live video remix (VJ performance) on turntables using digitally recorded vinyl records, laptop & video projector. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Mark J. Bennett]

    If you’re interested in hearing the hip hop artists live, this Friday night’s FUSE will be your ticket to both the exhibit and the performers. Ostwelve, Skeena Reece, Jackson 2Bears, Bear Witness, Nicholas Galanin, Raymond Boisjoly, and A Tribe Called Red will showcase their talent between 8:30 pm and 1 am on the 24th.

    Duane Linklater "Tautology"

    The entry point of the exhibit is The Beat room, containing Duane Linklater’s “Tautology” (2010), a neon thunderbird that becomes a future beacon, or an “entrance to a club within a city”.

    The exhibit features several rooms, starting with The Beat and ending with The Tag. Here’s a few highlights of the exhibit, on through June 3, 2012.

    Shawn Hunt "Master of Ceremony"
    [Shawn Hunt, Master of Ceremony, 2011, acrylic on panel]

    This piece depicts a master of ceremonies holding a talking stick as a microphone, an association to mainstream hip hop, drawing on the artist’s heritage and background.

    Jordan Bennett "Turning Tables"
    [Jordan Bennett, Turning Tables, 2010, walnut, oak, spruce, sound work]

    Nature is recorded on these turntables, events embedded into the land. The visitor hears the span of the spruce tree’s life through the wood turntable set.

    Sonny Assu's series of 136 copper LPs
    [Sonny Assu: Series of 136 copper LPs on the wall]

    Copper is considered a traditional display of wealth in Sonny’s North West Coast community.

    Maria Hupfield "Bear Mask, with Ear to the Ground"
    [Maria Hupfield: Bear Mask, with Ear to the Ground, 2011, fabric]

    Maria’s worn this in various performances. She uses silver as a reference to its value as well as to a shiny object.

    Maria Hupfield "Jingle Boots"
    [Maria Hupfield: Jingle Boots, 2011, felt and jingles]

    These are boots normally worn in pow-wows.

    Skeena Reece "Raven on the Colonial Fleet"
    [Skeena Reece: Raven on the Colonial Fleet, 2010, performance regalia]

    Skeena is a performer, comedian, and community organizer. Raven on the Colonial Fleet was a collaborative piece, worn by Reece when she performed at Sydney’s Biennale (Colonial Fleet was the title of the performance). The outfit is a mash-up of different traditional regalia. The costume uses many forms of Aboriginal culture to create this unique piece.

    Skeena Reece "Raven on the Colonial Fleet"

    The rear has a sequined grenade on it!

    Anishnaabensag Biimskowebshkigewag (Native Kids Ride Bikes)
    [Dylan Miner: Anishnaabensag Biimskowebshkigewag (Native Kids Ride Bikes), 4 lowrider bikes, mixed media, 2012]

    Anishnaabensag Biimskowebshkigewag (Native Kids Ride Bikes)

    The piece represents the colours of the four directions (red, black, white, yellow). Dylan Miner, a Metis Michigan based artist was brought to Vancouver in late January, to work with several emerging local artists to create unique expressions of each artist involved.

    Anishnaabensag Biimskowebshkigewag (Native Kids Ride Bikes)

    The bike is seen as a tool of freedom, autonomy, and a sustainable mode of transportation.

    With Jeneen Frei Njooti, Vuntut Gwich'in First Nation member
    [Jeneen Frei Njootli posing in photo with her bike creation]

    Coppers from the Hood
    [Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas, Coppers from the Hood “Terse Cell”, 2010, copper leaf and ink on car hood. Courtesy of the artist and Gordon Diamond.]

    In this series, the artist repurposed car hoods and turned them into valuable, shiny objects using copper leafing and painting. Known for his Japanese Manga-specific style (Haida Manga), the figures painted on top are from this adapted style.

    Corey Bulpitt and Larissa Healey site specific mural
    [Corey Bulpitt, site specific graffiti mural in exhibit space, created with Larissa Healey]

    A gorgeous piece painted on the wall in eight hours, using no stencils. Corey is a very accomplished carver who utilizes his talent to create large scale paintings.

    Brian Jungen repurposed the Nike Air Jordan sneaker to resemble Northwest Coast Aboriginal masks. Five are included in the exhibition, including the first, Prototype for a New Understanding #1.
    The last piece in the series is Prototype for a New Understanding #2, commissioned by Michael Jordan and regularly hangs on Jordan’s office wall.

    Brian Jungen "Prototype for a New Understanding #2"
    [Brian Jungen: Prototype for a New Understanding #2]

    Marianne Nicolson pictogram

    Victoria-based Marianne Nicolson created an enormous pictogram depicted on a cliff face using copper rendered in a red ochre pigment This 38 foot design sits at the entrance to her ancestral village. This is officially the first pictogram that has been done in her territory in the past 500 years. The pictogram is a way of claiming space and claiming land, and works wonderfully in the exhibit’s final room, The Tag.

    All exhibition photographs are mine, except where specifically noted in the caption.

  • Nov28

    Luminescence banner

    A new exhibit has launched at the Vancouver Aquarium. Luminescence is all about discovering the many ways that animals create and reflect light in nature.

    Vancouver Aquarium Luminescence entrance

    Through several exhibits, the Aquarium hopes to answer questions to some of the phenomena of the creatures in our oceans. Bioluminescence is light produced by a chemical reaction which originates in an organism. When both luciferin (producing light) and luciferase (creating a reaction) combine, light is generated as result of the energy released through the combination.
    Read the rest of the post »

  • Jul27

    Don’t give up on our Raincouver summer just yet! The Museum of Vancouver’s summer schedule of exhibits and events will keep you and your out-of-town guests forgetting about that golden disk missing from the summer sky in no time.

    Bhangra Me photo by Maurice Li
    [Bhangra.Me photo by Maurice Li]

    Dance. MOV’s feature exhibition, Bhangra.me: Vancouver’s Bhangra Story, is the perfect escape from cold, damp weather. Dance, play instruments, and learn about vibrant South Asian culture in this interactive, multimedia-based exhibit.  
    Read the rest of the post »

  • Jun23

    André Masson_Ophelia
    [André Masson, Ophelia. © Estate of André Masson]

    This week, I visited the Vancouver Art Gallery’s The Colour of My Dreams exhibit. Throughout the ground floor exhibition, rooms are divided into various themes, holding a total of 350 works, making this the largest and most comprehensive Surrealism show ever mounted in Canada!
    Read the rest of the post »

  • Jan14

    Entry Signage

    This evening, I attended Karen’s Room, a multimedia exhibition being presented in Room 103 of the Waldorf Hotel. Karen, an artist/activist, has been given “castaway” sheets discarded during the recent Waldorf Hotel renovations.
    Read the rest of the post »

  • May13

    Fox Fluevog and friends-10

    Starting with tonight’s opening at the Museum of Vancouver, those who fancy both gorgeous and locally-made shoes with attitude can get a look at 40 years of edgy design from three of the top innovators in the market: John Fluevog, Peter Fox, and Ken Rice.

    Fox Fluevog and friends-56

    Peter Fox

    The first Fluevog store dates back to 1970, when Peter and John opened a Gastown store at #2 Powell Street as equal partners in Fox & Fluevog.

    Fox Fluevog and friends-27

    I had the opportunity to attend the media preview this morning to get up close and personal with a variety of shoes and sketches amassing four decades of work in Vancouver (and beyond). I also had the chance to chat with Peter Fox and Ken Rice, two very different designers each of whose distinct personality is reflected in their shoe style. The retrospective will appeal to shoe-lovers everywhere. It traces the roots of all three designers in a dedicated 3,600 square foot space.

    Fluevog’s iconic shoes have been sought out by celebs, musicians, and trendsetters around the globe, including Iggy Pop, Jack White, and Madonna. Kate Winslet even sported a pair of Fox’s Anya boot in the movie Titanic.

    It was hard to pick a few shoes out of the dozens on display, but here’s a taste of what you can expect to see (and covet) when you visit. For more photos, see my Flikr photo set.

    Fox Fluevog and friends-41

    Fox Fluevog and friends-37

    Fox Fluevog and friends-60

    Fox Fluevog and friends-33

    The MOV website sells tickets to tonight’s party as well as the continuing exhibition. The show runs from May 14 to September 26, 2010.

    Visitors to the exhibit will also have the opportunity to sketch their dream shoe that will be collectively displayed during the show’s run.