Showing posts with label Arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arts. Show all posts

Monday, March 9, 2009

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Why should you pay for my hobby?

Great post at Masthead online on the current threat to small magazines.

if i had a dollar....




for every time this kid ended up bloody after encountering a spiky plant.....

Seriously, it happens at least once a decade. You should have seen his butt after he fell on a cactus circa 1994.

Check out Robert Starr's wonderful photo blog of the WOMEN tour here.

Saturday, February 28, 2009

goddamn it harper!


Eeeek! I have been remiss from you, sweet internet, for quite some time. (I had the magical strep throat mutating thing which kept me on the couch with blankets over my head for several weeks.)

Recent situations have made me want to dive back under the covers, however. (This means you, Mr. Moore.)

Sachi, as usual, outlines the situation far more cleverly thank I, so I urge you to go here to read her take on the current threat to little literary magazines in Canada.

There is also a good article at Bookninja.

If you love poetry (or even if you just love the poet(s) in your life) I urge you to:

-Join this Facebook group

-Subscribe to a Canadian literary magazine today! (Magazines Canada has a Buy 2 Get 1 FREE offer good till March 15)

-Submit to STEPHEN HARPER magazine:
STEPHEN HARPER was started as the first magazine under new funding guidelines made by the Canadian Periodical Fund. We believe that the best response to these new guidelines is to try to produce a literary journal streamlined enough to meet the new realities of today’s publishing industry. STEPHEN HARPER has an official subscription base of 413 – each MP and senator in the Canadian government is a subscriber, including our namesake! As well, STEPHEN HARPER will be starting a list of unsubscribers (the SH! list) of people not quite lucky enough to be members of Canada’s own government, but who still wish to receive the light of STEPHEN HARPER into their heart.

-Write to the following:

Minister of Canadian Heritage: Hon. James Moore

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-992-9650
F: 613-992-9868
E: moorej@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
2603 St. John’s St.
Port Moody, BC V3H 2B5
T: 604-937-5650
F: 604-937-5601

Liberal Heritage Critic: Pablo Rodriguez

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-995-5080
F: 613-992-1710
E: rodripa@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
7450, Les Galeries d’Anjou Blvd, Suite 530
Anjou, QC, H1M 3M3
T: 514-353-5044
F: 514-353-3050

NDP Heritage Critic: Charlie Angus

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-992-2919
F: 613-995-0477
E: angus.c@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
20 Duncan Avenue S.
PO Box 276
Kirland, ON P2N 3H7
T: 705-567-2747
F: 705-567-5232

Bloc québecois Heritage Critic: Carole Lavallée

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-996-2416
F: 613-995-6973
E: lavalC@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
110-5540 Chambly
Saint-Hubert, QC J3Y 3P1
T: 450-926-5979
F: 450-926-5985

Liberal Leader: Michael Ignatieff

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-995-6364
F: 613-992-5880
E: ignatm@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
656 The Queensway
Etobicoke, ON M8Y 1K7
T: 416-251-5510
F: 416-251-2845

NDP Leader: Jack Layton

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-995-7224
F: 613-995-4565
E: laytoj@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
221 Broadway Avenue, Suite 100
Toronto, ON M4M 2G3
T: 416-405-8914
F: 416-405-8918

Bloc Québecois Leader: Gilles Duceppe

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-992-6779
F: 613-954-2121
E: duceppe.g@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
1200 Papineau Ave, Suite 350
Montreal, QC H2K 4R5
T: 514-522-1339
F: 514-522-9899

Conservative Leader: Rt. Hon. Stephen Harper

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-992-4211
F: 613-941-6900
E: harpes@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
1600-90th Avenue SW, Suite A-203
T: 403-253-7990
F: 403-253-8203

Remember to write MPs c/o both the House of Commons and their constituency offices. That way their entire staff will know about your concerns.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Saturday, November 8, 2008

on palimpsests and the inter-web

After I had the great fortune to attend five or so days of VIWF (Vancouver International Writers & Readers Festival) 2008 and blog about it, I began to have serious literary blogging withdrawal.


But then I thought, I have a blog. I go to stuff. I've got a shitty Canon PowerShot A530 digi-cam. Why not write about the readings and launches I attend? Wow! I thought. Why didn't I think of that before?

Ergo:

feria launch
Front Row, l to r: Betsy Warland, Peter Quartermain, Roy Miki
Second Row, l to r: Pauline Butling, Fred Wah


On October 28th at the Helen Pitt Art Gallery, Oana Avasilichioaei launched feria: a poempark, with readings by Jeff Derksen, Meredith Quartermain and Jen Currin.

feria: a poempark uses Vancouver’s Hastings Park as its palimpsest. Park and book coincide, layering landscape, history, architecture, exploring what is natural, what is language and whose voices are we listening to.


This evening was palimpsest upon palimpsest, which included the screening of a short film by Thierry Collins (view here) and a performance by the evening's host/curator Michael Turner. Turner enacted a palimpsest on Oana's last name by writing the topography of Vancouver over it, a delicious and appropriate moment.

Palimpsest

Turner also invited the audience to win a prize by naming another landmark palimpsest in Vancouver, which seems to be his wont. The Woodwards Building is of course the most obvious, but a clever woman several rows back mentioned the Bomax sign (once the biggest neon sign in North America, now partially obscured by a Toys"R"Us sign) on Broadway.

If I'd been on the ball, I might have mentioned a further palimpsest of the Bomax sign in Vancouver band Young & Sexy's song "The City You Live in is Ugly," (lyric: They covered up the Bomax sign/With Toys R Us you didn't make a fuss/But now you're regretting it) which incidentally is the first tune I'd heard that exactly mirrored my own ambivalence towards this godforsaken port town that I'd willingly moved to.....



I digress, I digress.

Good city poems by Jeff Derksen

Jeff Derksen

Jen Currin

Jen Currin

Meredith Quartermain


Meredith Quartermain

and of course Ms. Oana Avasilichioaei

Oana Avasilichioaei

I really enjoyed feria, but can't speak to it more here, as I've already lent it to CBC media archivist extraordinaire / Vancouver history afficionado Colin Preston. You may be able to track him down at the Heart of the City festival to ask him what he thinks.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Writing & Reading at the 21st Vancouver International Writers & Readers Festival


I've had the great fortune the past several days to participate in the Vancouver International Writers & Readers Festival as one of six Festival bloggers.

It's been great fun to attend the events and also to meet and read the other bloggers. In fact, it doesn't quite seem like work. And if I could quit my job tomorrow and find someone to pay me to attend literary festivals and write about them, well --

My blog post on the opening event of the Festival has also been posted on CBC's Words at Large.

For a great aural taste of the festival, check out my friend and colleague Anu Sahota's blog. She's posted one audio post of the Festival so far, and will be adding more in the next few days.

Monday, October 6, 2008

Artistic truths by Drew Hayden Taylor

When I heard Stephen Harper's comments about the elitist lifestyle we artists lead, and how little we have in common with regular Canadians, I just about choked on my Kraft Dinner. Keep reading on CBCNews...

Friday, September 19, 2008

An open letter to Prime Minister Harper

(I received this open letter to Prime Minister Harper in this week's instant coffee national newsletter. I have re-printed it as received, but the emphasis (bold/italic) in the following is mine.)

From Wajdi Mouawad, Governor General Award-winning Canadian playwright; Knight of the Ordre National des Arts et des Lettres, France; Artistic Director of French Theatre, The National Arts Centre of Canada

Monsieur le premier ministre,

We are neighbours. We work across the street from one another. You are Prime Minister of the Parliament of Canada and I, across the way, am a writer, theatre director and Artistic Director of the French Theatre at the National Arts Centre (NAC). So, like you, I am an employee of the state, working for the Federal Government; in other words, we are colleagues.

Let me take advantage of this unique position, as one functionary to another, to chat with you about the elimination of some federal grants in the field of culture, something that your government recently undertook. Indeed, having followed this matter closely, I have arrived at a few conclusions that I would like to publicly share with you since, as I’m sure you will agree, this debate has become one of public interest.

The Symbolism

Firstly, it seems that you might benefit by surrounding yourself with counsellors who will be attentive to the symbolic aspects of your Government’s actions. I am sure you know this but there is no harm in reminding ourselves that every public action denotes not only what it is but what it symbolises.

For example, a Prime Minister who chooses not attend the opening ceremonies of the Olympics, claiming his schedule does not permit it, in no way reduces the symbolism which says that his absence might signify something else. This might signify that he wishes to denote that Canada supports the claims of Tibet. Or it might serve as a sign of protest over the way in which Beijing deals with human rights. If the Prime Minister insists that his absence is really just a matter of timing, whether he likes it or not, this will take on symbolic meaning that commits the entire country. The symbolism of a public gesture will always outweigh the technical explanations.

Declaration of war

Last week, your government reaffirmed its manner of governing unilaterally, this time on a domestic issue, in bringing about reductions in granting programs destined for the cultural sector. A mere matter of budgeting, you say, but one which sends shock waves throughout the cultural milieu –rightly or wrongly, as we shall see- for being seen as an expression of your contempt for that sector. The confusion with which your Ministers tried to justify those reductions and their refusal to make public the reports on the eliminated programs, only served to confirm the symbolic significance of that contempt. You have just declared war on the artists.

Now, as one functionary to another, this is the second thing that I wanted to tell you: no government, in showing contempt for artists, has ever been able to survive. Not one. One can, of course, ignore them, corrupt them, seduce them, buy them, censor them, kill them, send them to camps, spy on them, but hold them in contempt, no. That is akin to rupturing the strange pact, made millennia ago, between art and politics.

Contempt

Art and politics both hate and envy one another; since time immemorial, they detest each other and they are mutually attracted, and it’s through this dynamic that many a political idea has been born; it is in this dynamic that sometimes, great works of art see the light of day. Your cultural politics, it must be said, provoke only a profound consternation. Neither hate nor detestation, not envy nor attraction, nothing but numbness before the oppressive vacuum that drives your policies.

This vacuum which lies between you and the artists of Canada, from a symbolic point of view, signifies that your government, for however long it lasts, will not witness either the birth of a political idea or a masterwork, so firm is your apparent belief in the unworthiness of that for which you show contempt. Contempt is a subterranean sentiment, being a mix of unassimilated jealousy and fear towards that which we despise. Such governments have existed, but not lasted because even the most detestable of governments cannot endure if it hasn’t the courage to affirm what it
actually is.

Why is this?

What are the reasons behind these reductions, which are cut from the same cloth as those made last year on the majority of Canadian embassies, who saw their cultural programming reduced, if not eliminated? The economies that you have made are ridiculously small and the votes you might win with them have already been won. For what reason, then, are you so bent on hurting the artists by denying them some of their tools? What are you seeking to extinguish and to gain?

Your silence and your actions make one fear the worst for, in the end, we are quite struck by the belief that this contempt, made eloquent by your budget cuts, is very real and that you feel nothing but disgust for these people, these artists, who spend their time by wasting it and in spending the good taxpayers money, he who, rather than doing uplifting work, can only toil.

And yet, I still cannot fathom your reasoning. Plenty of politicians, for the past fifty years, have done all they could to depoliticise art, to strip it of its symbolic import. They try the impossible, to untie that knot which binds art to politics. And they almost succeed! Whereas you, in the space of one week, have undone this work of chloroforming, by awakening the cultural milieu, Francophone and Anglophone, and from coast to coast. Even if politically speaking they are marginal and negligible, one must never underestimate intellectuals, never underestimate artists; don’t underestimate their ability to do you harm.

A grain of sand is all-powerful

I believe, my dear colleague, that you yourself have just planted the grain of sand that could derail the entire machine of your electoral campaign. Culture is, in fact, nothing but a grain of sand, but therein lays its power, in its silent front. It operates in the dark. That is its legitimate strength.

It is full of people who are incomprehensible but very adept with words. They have voices. They know how to write, to paint, to dance, to sculpt, to sing, and they won’t let up on you. Democratically speaking, they seek to annihilate your policies. They will not give up. How could they?

You must understand them: they have not had a clear and common purpose for a very long time, for such a long time that they have no common cause to defend. In one week, by not controlling the symbolic importance of your actions, you have just given them passion, anger, rage.

In the dark

The resistance that will begin today, and to which my letter is added, is but a first manifestation of a movement that you yourself have set in motion: an incalculable number of texts, speeches, acts, assemblies, marches, will now be making themselves heard. They will not be exhausted.

Some of these will, perhaps, following my letter, be weakened but within each word, there will be a spark of rage, relit, and it is precisely the addition of these tiny instances of fire that will shape the grain of sand that you will never be able to shake. This will not settle down, the pressure will not be diminished.

Monsieur le premier ministre, we are neighbours. We work across the street from one another. There is nothing but the Cenotaph between our offices, and this is as it should be because politics and art have always mirrored one another, each on its own shore, each seeing itself in the other, separated by that river where life and death are weighed at every moment.

We have many things in common, but an artist, contrary to a politician, has nothing to lose, because he or she does not make laws; and if it is prime ministers who change the world, it’s the artist who will show this to the world. So do not attempt, through your policies, to blind us, Monsieur le premier ministre; do not ignore that reflection on the opposite shore, do not plunge us further into the dark. Do not diminish us.

Wajdi Mouawad

(with thanks to John van Burek for the translation.)
http://www.thewreckingball.ca

Monday, September 8, 2008

Mark Wallace Reviews 8x8x7

Mark Wallace reviews Colin Smith's 8x8x7


Smith’s book, and his reading, certainly shared in the tenor of the conference, and in the traditions of Vancouver avant poetries, in a focus both on global power structures and the most immediate details of the here and now and how connections between the two might be traced. He shares a Vancouver poetics also in the biting, ironic wit and rapid fire politicized quips that mark so many (thought not all) of the male poets I admire from that region (the female poets share it too, although they’re more likely to risk sincerity or aestheticism without sacrificing a keen politicized edge). But Smith’s work is marked by personal and painful immediacy, one that can sometimes be difficult to include in a poetics interested in understanding and critiquing large scale economic realities. Which is to say that his work often details, very affectingly, the fact of how these economic realities really do hurt individuals, and how it feels to be hurt.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Vancouver, BC According to... Stephen Lyons!


CBC Radio 3's Vish Kanna interviews Stephen Lyons, local musician and impresario, who comments thoughtfully and articulately on the current state of our town's music scene.

My favourite bit:
Well, there is something exciting about going to an illegal venue created by people who want to showcase art and music and let people have fun. People want and need to interact with art and with each other, and people that run these venues take quite a risk in order to fulfill that fundamental human need, because it's not getting fulfilled in the mainstream culture. The frustration comes in waves, when these places send out their "we've been shut down" notices. There are a lot of obstacles to putting on shows, opening venues, etc, in Vancouver, and the bylaws and regulations can wear down the spirits of some of the most committed artists and presenters. Hence the exodus the arts community has seen over the past few years.


Read the rest here.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Lullaby Anthems!




Pitchfork reviews Azeda Booth's In Flesh Tones here

Monday, August 25, 2008

Saturday, August 23, 2008

the long hangover: a found poem

exhibit a: So what exactly are the arts good for?


exhibit b:


Ms Wicked Monton wrote:Posted 2008/08/20
at 8:33 PM ET



Public money should NOT be used to fund works of art, that in and of itself provide a monetary return - now or in the future - regardless of how small that return may seem, back to the artist.

Artists have made a conscious decision to dedicate their career to that of being an artist, instead of say being a plumber or lawyer. As a result they should be prepared to accept the monetary risks, both costs and return, of their artistic endeavor. There are countless struggling artists trying to make ends meet, but there are likely just as many, if not more, non-artist Canadians also struggling to make ends meet.

If corporations feel a need to enrich the productivity of their employees through the obvious mental benefits of art, those corporations should be prepared to fund that art through their own budgets. If artists feel a need to enrich the lives of others, they too should be prepared to fund their work. Public money should not be used to enhance the profitability of corporations nor professional artists.

Yes, Mr. Handler, "support must have a purpose". Public money is for OUR needs, not your wants. Good opening question, tho'.



Freedom35 wrote:Posted 2008/08/21
at 1:21 AM ET



Contending that there is a link between arts funding and innovation is absurd. The arts in Canada are responsible for marketing, at best. That's it. Insert Bill Hicks quote here.

Nigeria's cellphone network outpaces ours by nearly every measurable standard, Japan has completely eliminated dial-up internet, and if you want code written, you turn to India first. Those countries invest in actual innovation.

If you want to increase innovation, train more engineers. Increase funding for the sciences. And throw as much money as possible at investment in what is produced, to keep it Canadian.

Scientists and engineers make things. Artists decide what colour they should be, and prose on about how we should relate to them. The former create jobs. The latter....




St.John wrote:Posted 2008/08/21
at 10:03 AM ET



Greek art is art. Raphael's Sanzio is something for my higher intellectual center. Beethoven's classics are art for my higher emotional centers.

Canadians blathering on about their so called art, which is really mostly repugnant abominations of their sexless, fornicating uncreative minds, should be axed. They do not have any respect for the creative energy, so how can they be creative?

Not only that, but it's a poor alternative to the American garbage.

They axed the classical channel on CBC for more "favorable" music. Is this art? FALSE. This is garbage.

They go to art school to learn how to draw, etc etc and end up producing repugnancies. If they studied the old arts and tried to imitate that, which is ART WITH RELIGIOUS MEANING, that hides the truths and the clues, that would be worth viewing.

Instead the spew out whatever their insane minds concoct, which is just as crap as anything else coming out of everyones orifices, mouth ears nose ect. Good riddance.





Shifty Calhoun wrote:Posted 2008/08/21
at 10:07 AM ET



C_Gene:

This is a nation of money obsessed capitalists who wouldn't know how to spell their way out of a paper bag.

You can hear the elitism dripping out of every syllable. Far better to be a starving artist and know the difference between past and past pluperfect tenses than to be a successful employee or employer who provides for his family (and starving artists through his tax dollars) but can't tell when to use "your" and when to use "you're", eh? Obviously you're morally superior through such knowledge.

Live Out Loud:

We fund sports and athletes and are happy to do so, especially in an Olympic year.

You may be happy to do so, but I'm not. I feel the same way about athletes as I do about artists...if you're good enough you'll find corporate sponsorship or market profit. If you're not good enough stop wasting your time and our money.


Shifty Calhoun wrote:Posted 2008/08/21
at 11:10 AM ET


alfred thompson:

For every percentage point that grants are reduced represents 50% more corporate money an organization or artist must try to find to continue their craft or art.

Let's do some basic math here...the government grants my transgendered ballet $100K a year. They then reduce that by $1K. That means I need to find $1K in corporate sponsorship, so corporate donations were about $665 compared to that $100K.

If I was the government I'd be tempted to see a business case, and have explained to me why the transgendered ballet should exist, if private participation and support is at such a low level.


Shifty Calhoun wrote:Posted 2008/08/21
at 1:06 PM ET


alfred thompson:

Where would you propose the ballet company begin their search for that funding in time for it to do any good, and who would you recommend for that task in a lean organization already working overtime?

Well, that cuts to the bone, doesn't it?

Arts organizations love public money because there's very little work involved in getting it, aside from the voluminous filling out of forms.

Trying to run an organization like a business, now that's real work. Having a business plan with realistic goals and fiscal responsibility, why that's tough stuff. Every small business that is created and run needs just that, and the failure rate is still high. Yet we continue to use tax dollars (otherwise known as our money) to bail out losing propositions because art is supposedly a nobler cause, and exempt from reality.

Again, if you can't run it without handouts, stop wasting your time and our money.



No, you infer that (not all of us capitalist types have a problem with paper bags), and I most certainly didn't imply it. If a transgendered ballet is talented and wanted within the community, then of course corporate sponsors will jump on the band wagon. If it's not, then why do we need to prop it up with government funds?


RatFree wrote:Posted 2008/08/21
at 2:09 PM ET


I chose my career with a great deal of thought as to what would most likely make me useful and make me employable. I chose one where I had a pretty good idea that I'd be employable and that I'd be paid fairly well. Having chosen as such, how is it now my responsibility to cover for those that chose differently?

As a taxpayer where I see huge chunks of my funding going to ridiculous places, I find it appalling to have people be able say "I'm an artist, pay me money" and I have no choice but to do so because the feds force me to pay them and then they turn around and hand it out in a vast number of stupid ways. This is an outrageous transfer of money that I've earned into the hands of artists that haven't.

If they can't make it on their own, like any other person, then let them find something more marketable to do with their time.



Shifty Calhoun wrote:Posted 2008/08/21
at 2:17 PM ET



cait50:

OK, you obviously have a bitterness towards much of the arts. Perhaps you hung around one-to-many pretentious has-been in your time close to an arts organization.

Caitlin, most arts organizations are pretentious...if you've ever had to wrangle actors/actresses or set up a painting exhibition you'll know exactly what I'm talking about. It certainly doesn't endear me to them, but it's not the problem...well, at least not in part.

Most arts organizations (read: the unsuccessful ones) live in a bubble similar to academia. They produce work incomprehensible to many, and unwanted by most. But they carry with themselves a sense and an air of entitlement, and this does not go down well with the general public, especially when we're called money obsessed capitalists who wouldn't know how to spell their way out of a paper bag or told that we'd prefer our tax dollars fund someone else's willfull [sic] ignorance.

Let's say that art organizations did a good job of promoting arts in communities. Would you then support the funding, given the arguments outlined below?

My bottom line is the bottom line. I'd be all for a system of grants, (interest free loans), used as seed money to create art which will pay for itself. We (taxpayers) would lose money on the interest free aspect, but would receive the principal back. I'm tired of shoveling millions of dollars into a black hole, never to be seen again.


Vince M wrote:Posted 2008/08/22
at 10:31 AM ET



I do not want to see a single cent spent on the "Arts" by government. All art should be supported by private groups and endowments.

The foolishness of seeing "elites" going to an opera or play subsidized by a taxpayer who barely makes ends meet and has trouble feeding the kids has just got to stop.


Mossad wrote:Posted 2008/08/22
at 12:02 AM ET




What are the arts good for?.....NOTHING!

Just another alternative to working for a living.