Archive for February, 2010

Feb 24 2010

All’s Quiet On The Western Front

Published by kiku under Uncategorized

All’s Quiet On The Western Front

560 Seymour Street

Curated by Sean George

March 5th – 9th May, 2010

Opening :  Thursday, March 4th from 7:00pm – 9:00pm

One of the really delightful things about the Culture Crawl is that you never know who will walk through the door.

This year I met and had a wonderful conversation with Sean George. Sean is curating the VIP lounge at 560 Seymour, the old A&B Sound space, which, at this very moment, is being turned into an interesting club space.  The image below, “persephone rising (sea to sky)” is in this exhibition.

Mark Mushet, Aaron Blake Evan, Nadia Thibault, Sean Panarden, the dark and Carl Meadows Sr. are also exhibiting works.

The image was made at the end of a week-long mediation retreat, and shot on an old SX-70 camera, when this gorgeous film, with all its flaws and wonky colour, was still available.

persephone rising  copy

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Feb 19 2010

Mail Art Olympix comes to Vancouver

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olympic grafitto, Strathcona alley

Ed Varney is BC.’s king of mail art, and has organised the Mail Art Olympix show, opening at the Havana Gallery on Commercial Drive,  on February 21. It runs until March, 2010.

Some excerpts from the PR:

“…he felt this would be a great opportunity to stage an art event which paralleled the Olympics but which was completely egalitarian and based on co-operation rather than competition. He felt that such an exhibition would have many of the qualities which drove the modern Olympic movement before it became distorted by rampant commercialism.

… he picked three “event” categories. The first “event”, the artist Self Portrait, is a format which has always been interesting to both artists and the public. He felt that this intimate form would be an exciting visual treat, focusing as it does on how artists present themselves and the many masks they wear.

The second event, Artistamps, seemed like a good choice since many artists around the world worked in this format which parallels and parodies official postage stamps – something which mail artists use a lot. Artists interpreted the Artistamp category liberally and produced not only sheets of artistamps, but designs for potential stamps, collages that used stamps, and rubber stamp art as well.

He chose Manifestos as the third event knowing that even if there were not as many entries as the other events, it would give insights into the concerns, methods and intent of artists. Surprisingly, many of the manifestos that were sent to him were visual rather than written.

Beginning in early 2009, he sent out invitations to about 250 artists on his mailing lists and distributed the invitation through arts journals and the internet. He received work from over 350 artists representing 41 countries, much of it in colourfully decorated envelopes. Mail Art is seen as a particularly important form in countries where freedom of expression is limited. Mail Art allows artists to comment on political and personal issues outside their home countries in a completely free and uncensored environment. There is also a Dadaist sense of humour apparent in a lot of Mail Art and a sense that Mail Art exists outside the “art world” of commercial and institutional galleries, art criticism, and an unhealthy concern with money which dogs much of contemporary art. Many of the manifestos address these concerns.

For more information,  e-mail Ed Varney at evarney@shaw.ca

The Mail Art Olympix has also been exhibited at:

The Comox Valley Art Gallery, November 13 to December 31, 2009 


The Penticton Art Gallery, January 22 to February, 2010


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Feb 18 2010

Gung Hai Fat Choi!

Published by kiku under Uncategorized

Around here Chinese New Year’s is a major event and this year Chinatown went all out. The parade was extra-long and the crush of spectators particularly dense.  Offerings of lettuce and red envelopes hung from almost every doorway, and bands of lion dancers and drummers roamed the streets long after the main parade had dispersed.

A DTES Art Walk ran on the same day, and we  finally got to explore  some of the  spaces we’d lusted after as art students, a couple of decades ago. Back in the ’80’s, the Chinese owners just laughed at us when we asked about studio rentals in those great, high-ceilinged old buildings. But the area’s economic downturn, its aging population and growth of Richmond’s malls has given art students and other gwai lo access where there had been none before.

tiger-tattoo-2

This beautiful young woman had just come from the parade, and was walking home with her boyfriend. I think  the body-paint tattoo was done at Sun Yat Sen Gardens on Pender Street.  They had events on as well… a local Peking Opera performed… and the gardens were full of music and sunlight.

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