El Color Negro Reconceptualizes BLACK
/The 4-minute short film defines, redefines and reclaims the word Black.
Read MoreThe 4-minute short film defines, redefines and reclaims the word Black.
Read MoreThe inspiration for this month's playlist is “multisensory”: seeing, hearing, tasting, and touching. Within Horvath's photography, you can see the detailed layering with fabric, colours, textures, and light creating mesmerizing scenes. This playlist is an attempt to capture all these exquisite layers. 1We suggest closing your eyes and letting the beat guide you from this point.
Read MoreHaida and Nisga’a carver and artist Luke Parnell explores oral histories, reconciliation, and conceptual art in his latest exhibition at the Bill Reid Gallery. In what marks his first exhibition at the Bill Reid Gallery, Parnell features 7 unique conceptual art pieces, including a still image from his film Remediation, an ethnographic response to Bill Reid’s 1959 documentary about an expedition to salvage historic totem poles from a deserted village on Haida Gwaii.
Read MoreVancouver-based sculptural artist and ceramicist Josephine Lee showcases her latest piece /born ignorant in an abyss of light at the Burrard Arts Foundation (BAF). Located in the garage on the left side of BAF’s entrance, you’ll peep through a glass tile window to view the scintillating piece. Three medium-sized porcelain vessels are laid out on separate cubic blocks forming a triangle and attached to a transparent curvy glass tube. The tube contains a current of electricity that sparks in accordance with a grainy, archival video loop of a house repeatedly blowing up, then becoming whole again.
Read MoreTRANCE, a photography exhibition presented by locals Annie Forrest and Zac Cruz. Their show embodies the hedonistic joy of the dance floor in all its drug-induced glory. It is a difficult feeling to mimic with images alone, but Forrest and Cruz do so with ease.
Read MoreNestled underground in Vancouver’s Chinatown is Moniker Press, a small but mighty risograph print and publishing studio. Moniker quietly began 6 years ago when owner and operator Erica Wilk was helping out a studio mate with a book which they ambitiously decided to print themselves—all 400 copies. The next thing she knew she had a 300-pound risograph printer in her studio that she hadn’t yet learned how to use, and a whole lotta copies of a first edition that needed printing. It wasn’t until years later that Wilk developed a vision for the press, which has evolved into a collaborative project with other artists and writers to produce small editions of books, zines, and prints.
Read MoreGrowing up experimenting with different art forms and media has turned Horvath into the multi-disciplinary artist she is today. “As a generalist, you have to choose something and stick with it for a bit, and then once you’re like, I feel like I’ve mastered this…you’re like, okay let me try something else. Let me add on to the skillset I have. It’s building blocks. You have to start with something that you know that you can master.”
Read MoreArty Guava’s illustrations mirror her desire for a calm, tranquil, and joyful mindset. When your eyes fall on her imagery, it certainly brings a sense of calm. From the relaxing colours she chooses to the abstract body shapes she forms, it brings you back to the core of simple joy.
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