The latest news on BC's arts, culture and heritage sector.

remix, vancouver

The Alliance for Arts & Culture's Artists' Legal Outreach program and the Open Education Conference present:

remix, vancouver

a creative copyright conversation CCC

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Kicking Horse Culture launches new "put a face to the arts" campaign

A new initiative launched by Kicking Horse Culture in Golden, BC has caught our attention and we thought you should see it.  Take a look at this slideshow of their "put a face to the arts" campaign. 

Here's their press release:

Provincial Funding Cuts to Nonprofit Volunteer Organizations

As you have heard on the news, non-profit volunteer organizations have had their provincial
funding support cut to drastic levels.

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Alliance Arts Advocacy Toolkit Now Available

Your Alliance has spent the past few weeks creating an Advocacy Toolkit for organizations and individuals across the cultural sector to use in responding to the recent cuts in arts funding. This Toolkit is now available on our website, under "Advocacy" in our navigation bar. This continues to be a work-in-progress, and we look forward to your suggestions for improvements. 

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Four New Cultural Grant Opportunities

City of Vancouver Cultural Services has announced details of four opportunities to access or participate in the City's cultural grant process.

1.  New deadline for Cultural Grants Program
November 2nd, 2009
Please note: there will only be ONE funding deadline for 2010.

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Literary clearcut prompts quick response

 
B.C.’s beleaguered literary organizations are forming the Coalition for the Defence of Writing and
Publishing in British Columbia one day after the Arts & Culture branch of the Ministry of Tourism,
Culture & the Arts (Hon. Kevin Krueger) simultaneously removed all funding from the Association
of Book Publishers of British Columbia ($45,000), BC BookWorld newspaper ($31,000) and B.C.
Association of Magazine Publishers ($20,000) via phone calls from its executive director Andrea
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Alliance for Arts and Culture Advocacy Initiatives

Here is a roundup of the advocacy work we've been doing in the last few weeks.

Last Wednesday, our Executive Director, Amir Ali Alibhai, made a presentation to the BCACG (British Columbia Association for Charitable Gaming).

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INTERNATIONAL CENTRE OF ART FOR SOCIAL CHANGE hosts Arlene Goldbard Sunday October 18th, 2-5pm

A SPECIAL INVITATION FROM THE INTERNATIONAL CENTRE OF ART FOR SOCIAL CHANGE

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The situation and needs of Canadian senior artists

Monday, October 5: 7 PM – 9 PM at Scotiabank Dance Centre, Faris Family Studio, 677 Davie Street 

Tuesday, October 6: 2 PM – 4 PM at PAL Vancouver, Cardero and Georgia Streets

If you are an artist and 60 or over, please participate in this action-oriented research project about artists in all disciplines.

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An Open Letter to Gordon Campbell from Alma Lee

Founder, Vancouver Writers & Readers Festival

Dear Premier Campbell,

What are you thinking?

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Making A Scene

Making A Scene

Early Bird Registration Deadline October 10th / Save $25

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SCHOOL BOARD ANNOUNCES IT HAS NO INTENTION OF PRESERVING 60 YEAR OLD CULTURAL GEM

At the School District 40 Board meeting on September 29, 2009, an Engineer’s report was presented to the Board of Trustees detailing the potential cost of improvements to the Massey Theatre at a price tag of $18,000,000.  The replacement cost of the busy 1260 seat, largely self-funded theatre is estimated at $100,000,000. 

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The Dance Centre announces the recipients of the Isadora Awards

Vancouver – The achievements of BC’s dance artists were honoured as The Dance Centre announced Rosario Ancer, Natalie LeFebvre-Gnam and Barbara Bourget as recipients of the Isadora Awards for Excellence in Choreography, Excellence in Performance and Excellent in Teaching respectively.

 

The annual Isadora Awards, named after the great dance pioneer Isadora Duncan (1878-1927), were instituted by The Dance Centre in 1999 to recognize and celebrate the achievements of the dance profession in British Columbia. Members of the dance community are invited to nominate artists for the award, and an independent jury of professionals working in the field selects recipients based on specific criteria.

Rosario Ancer’s award for Excellence in Choreography is for her work Mis Hermanas: Thicker Than Water, My Sisters and I, an autobiographically-based piece created for her company Flamenco Rosario, which premiered at the Roundhouse in 2008 to critical acclaim and sold out houses.  Natalie LeFebvre-Gnam receives the award for Excellence in Performance for her work in endORPHIN, a full length work choreographed by her husband James Gnam with whom she jointly founded the plastic orchid factory in 2006.  Barbara Bourget, Artistic Director of Kokoro Dance, receives the award for Excellence in Teaching in recognition of over 34 years of teaching contemporary dance.

Each artist receives an Isadora Award – a sculpture specially created by the eminent glass artist Mary Filer – and fully subsidized rehearsal space at Scotiabank Dance Centre to the value of $1000. Previous Isadora recipients have included Susan Elliott, Kathleen McDonagh, Anne Cooper, Peter Bingham, Chick Snipper, Crystal Pite, Joe Laughlin, Jai Govinda, Ron Stewart, Wen Wei Wang, Judith Garay, Alison Denham, Noam Gagnon and Lola MacLaughlin.

Artist Biographies

Rosario Ancer Mexican-born Spanish-trained, Rosario launched her professional career in Spain when she joined Ballet Español Antonio del Castillo.  In 1981 she joined the prestigious Tablao Flamenco Arco de Cuchilleros in Madrid and later toured with the Paco Mundo and Maria Velasquez Dance Company.  In 1989, after moving to Vancouver, she established her school Centro Flamenco, the Vancouver International Flamenco Festival, and Flamenco Rosario.  In addition to creating and performing for her company, Rosario regularly appears with organizations such as the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra and Vancouver Opera and has been the focus of documentaries and television specials.  She has received choreography awards from the Canada Council for the Arts and the BC Arts Council and in 2000 she received a YWCA nomination for the Women of Distinction Award for Arts and Culture.  As a teacher, the “Matriarch of Flamenco in Vancouver” heads up Centro Flamenco and the Flamenco Rosario Professional Training Program and leads workshops across Canada and in Mexico. She has also mentored many local and national aspiring flamenco dancers. With her work, Rosario strives to honor her teachers and mentors:  Rosario Zambrano, Ciro and Maria Magdalena.

Natalie LeFebvre-Gnam was born in Prince George, BC. She received her early training with Judy Russell and later studied at L’Ecole Nationale de Danse Contemporaine. Since then, she has had the opportunity to work with Le Jeune Ballet du Quebec, Les Grands Ballets Canadiens de Montreal, dancersdancing and Coleman Lemieux & Co. In 2008, Natalie and husband James Gnam incorporated the Plastic Orchid Factory; the body of work the company seeks to create continually fuels and challenges her creative perspective. As a teacher and mentor to young dancers, Natalie has taught at Arts Umbrella, the Parksville Ballet School and The Richmond Academy of Dance, as well as having adjudicated at numerous festivals across BC. Currently, Natalie is a faculty member for the Anna Wyman School of Dance Arts, and a guest teacher with the Modus Operandi Training Program. She is also a certified Conditioning-with Imagery teacher.

Barbara Bourget was born in Port Alberni, BC. She studied ballet with Mara McBirney in Vancouver, and won a scholarship to the Royal Winnipeg Ballet School where she also performed with the RWB in works directed by Arnold Spohr for choreographers such as José Ferran and Agnes de Mille. Barbara subsequently performed with Les Grands Ballets Canadiens, Mountain Dance and the Paula Ross Dance Company. She also worked with Judith Marcuse in a project that included Peggy Baker, Sacha Belinsky, Ronnie Gilbert, James Kudelka, and Larry Lillo as well as with Karen Jamieson on her seminal work Coming Out of Chaos. In 1982, Barbara was a founding co-artistic director of  EDAM. Between 1981 and 1986, Barbara choreographed 25 dances for EDAM, Kamloops Dance Umbrella, UBC Danceworks, Touchstone Theatre, and Québec Été Danse. Since forming Kokoro Dance with Jay Hirabayashi in 1986, she has choreographed over one hundred dance works. Barbara received a Master of Arts degree in Interdisciplinary Studies from Simon Fraser University in 2003.  She has taught dance since 1975 for the Burnaby Arts Centre, Main Dance Place, Goh Ballet, Karen Jamieson Dance Company, Vancouver Moving Theatre, Simon Fraser University, Dancers' StudioWest (Calgary), Grant MacEwan College (Edmonton), University of Calgary, Kidco (Victoria), EDAM, Ballet BC, Harbour Dance, and Kokoro Dance.

The Dance Centre is BC’s resource centre for dance. It provides resources, information and support to the dance profession; runs performances and programs for artists and the public; and operates Scotiabank Dance Centre, Canada’s flagship dance facility, in downtown Vancouver.

 

International artists awarded major commissions for City’s Olympic and Paralympic Public Art Program

Five major public art commissions announced today by Mayor Gregor Robertson as part of the Olympic and Paralympic Public Art Program will enhance 2010 Games venues as well as some of the City’s most iconic landmarks.

“From LED light works to sculptural installations, this exciting public art initiative will enhance Vancouver’s cultural and physical landscape,” the Mayor said. “The selection of these artists will help us build a creative city, where dynamic public artworks are at the forefront.”

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Progress Lab 1422: New Cultural Hub Opens on Vancouver’s East Side

A consortium of four indie arts and culture organizations – Boca Del Lupo, Electric Company Theatre, 

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Union of BC Municipalities Conference to debate emergency resolution to restore gaming funds

Please forward this on to your contacts as a way of supporting this resolution.

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Submission to Vancouver City Council, September 24, 2009

The Alliance for Arts and Culture represents over 350 arts and cultural organizations and artists in Metro Vancouver and beyond.  We offer the following known facts and observations regarding our own sector and the latest iteration of the provincial budget.  Although this submission focuses on the arts and cultural sector, we stand in solidarity with all the sports, environmental, and other community organizations, which have also suffered drastic cuts.  Our social capital is threatened if current trends in provincial f

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Special GVPTA Meeting re Arts Cuts Friday, Sept. 25

 

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NORTHEAST FALSE CREEK STUDY - PUBLIC OPEN HOUSE TONIGHT AND TOMORROW

The following Open House events regarding the development of the Northeast False Creek area is part of the final phase of a long consultative process. The Alliance for Arts and Culture has a seat, on behalf of the arts community, on the Consultation Group that meets regularly with City of Vancouver staff on this issue.

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Ballet British Columbia announces Jay Rankin as new Executive Director

Vancouver, BC – Ballet British Columbia’s Board of Directors is delighted to announce the appointment of Jay Rankin as the Company’s new, permanent Executive Director, effective November 1, 2009. Rankin, a dedicated and proven leader who has served non-profit arts organizations for more than 30 years joins Ballet British Columbia following the company’s successful financial restructuring, which has enhanced the company’s stability. Rankin will lead the Company to a new era of strength and artistic prominence.

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Judith Marcuse awarded the Canada Council for the Arts Jacqueline Lemieux Prize

Vancouver artistic director, producer and choreographer Judith Marcuse awarded the Canada Council Jacqueline Lemieux Prize

 

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