Event Listings

BOLD 125 Celebration

Date: September 11, November 26, December 15
Location: September 11: VanCity International Theatre, November 26: The Western Front, December 15: Rhizome Cafe
Website: www.boldfest.com

The BOLD 125 Celebration celebrates the culture, heritage, and achievements of older lesbian women in Vancouver. These include the political activism, theoretical analyses, and cultural contributions that have emerged from a period of great change for women, for seniors, and for queers, in terms of rights, legislation, and societal attitudes. As Vancouver celebrates this important birthday, we look forward not only to joining the party, but to enhancing and expanding it through a special series of unique and exciting events. Please click here for more information.

FORBIDDEN LOVE: A Retrospective
Sunday September 11, 2 pm, Doors, 1:30 pm
Featuring a screening of Director Aerlyn Weissman’s film Forbidden Love: The Unashamed Stories of Lesbian Lives, Lesbian Pulp Fiction “Queen” Ann Bannon plus Amanda White and Reva Hutkin, 2 of the women interviewed and in this classic, award-winning film.
VanCity International Theatre, 1181 Seymour Street
Tickets: $10 at Little Sisters, 1238 Davie Street

Art Against the Grain: By, For, and About Queer, Lesbian Women Artists
Saturday November 26th, 7:30- 10:30 pm, doors at 7pm
The Western Front, 303 East 8th Avenue
Tickets $10 -$20 sliding scale available at Little Sisters 1238 Davie St or online, http://www.boldfest.com/bold-125-celebration.php

Lesbians in Politics
December 15
Rhizome Cafe, 317 East Broadway
More information TBA

With support from the City of Vancouver’s 125th Anniversary Grants Program and the participation of the Government of Canada.

Artists Walking Home

Date: June – December, 2011; upcoming walk on Sunday, November 13, 2011,  Saturday, December 3, 2011
Location: Downtown Eastside
Website: artistswalkinghome.ca and www.walkinghomeprojects.com

Artists Walking Home is a year-long collaboration between Walking Home Projects and 221A Artist Run Centre comprised of a series of walks guided by local artists, designers, and architects that will invite public participants to learn about the complex historical and social conditions of Vancouver through the embodied experience of the cities cultural producers. Participants will experience a direct connection to the city’s immediate environment – both natural and constructed – and to gain an understanding of how ideas and intention become policy, resulting in action and infrastructure which shape our social and lived experiences in public spaces.

Join Artists Walking Home for upcoming walks in November and December:

Tacit Past: Marks of Vancouver’s History
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Presenter: Samantha Knopp
http://artistswalkinghome.ca/tacit-past

“I think, therefore I am.” Is it right to privilege the mind over the body?

In this walk, Artists Walking Home invites you to experience the alternative and embrace embodied learning. By going into the heart of Vancouver’s beginnings (Gastown, Chinatown and the Downtown East Side), Samantha Knopp will highlight the tangible layers of history and the contestations that surround their physicality. Drawing upon her interests in three-dimensional representation, the walk will invite viewers to share their experiences as they interact with the marks of the past, present and future.

Walk Information
Arrive at: 1:45pm
Walk Starts: 2:00pm (2 hours max, no latecomers)
Rain or Shine, Dress Weather Appropriate
Limited Capacity: 20
Cost: $21

Maraya
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Presenter: M. Simon Levin
http://artistswalkinghome.ca/maraya

Maraya comes from the Arabic word for reflection; image, mirror – mirage; it is meant to make you wonder. Like Narcissus’s deep wondrous gaze, Maraya asks us to reflect, to look again at our own civic mirroring – at what it is that makes here special. It asks, how is here any different from there? The Maraya Project is a dialogue between a network of weary travellers, local pundits, aspiring artists, curators, public intellectuals, writers, photographers, academics, conversationalists, programmers, bloggers, silent walkers, anarchists, and urban planners. We need you to help us reflect on how cities move, how the ground beneath our feet is in constant motion. In an age when the material city has become thoroughly enmeshed in virtual representations, the singularity of place is occluded by a multiplicity of mass-mediated images.

Join M. Simon Levin on False Creek for a walk that both reflects and distorts the Vancouver seawall, and gives us pause to see ourselves. Please bring a camera or an image capturing device—we’ll provide the reflection.

Walk Information
Arrive at: 10:45am
Walk Starts: 11:00am (2 hours max, No late-comers)
Rain or Shine, Dress Weather Appropriate
Limited Capacity: 20
Cost: $21
Walk starting point: Davie at Pacific Boulevard

The starting point for the walk will be emailed to participants after pre-registration.

For registration inquiries visit artistswalkinghome.ca/tacit-past or email hello@artistswalkinghome.ca.

With support from the City of Vancouver’s 125th Anniversary Grants Program and the participation of the Government of Canada.

125 Vancouver Stories – Digital Stories from our Vancouver Communities


Date: Stories will be recorded from May to September 2011. Community screenings on August 28, October 18, October 19 and October 22, 2011.
Location: Sunset Community Centre, West End Community Centre, Britannia Community Centre
Website: vancouverstories125.blogspot.com

Community Screenings
Sunday, August 28th, 2011
Noon – 5pm
Artful Sundays at Britannia Community Centre

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011
7:30pm
West Point Grey Community Centre

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011
6:30pm
Sunset Community Centre

Saturday, October 22nd, 2011
4:00pm
Britannia Community Centre

As part of the City’s 125th anniversary celebrations, the Vancouver Park Board is hosting a team of digital media artists at community centres. With 125 Vancouver Stories, artists will be gathering stories and images to capture the oral histories and memories of local residents.

These digital stories mark the history and create a legacy of our diverse communities. The collected digital stories will be archived online and will be amalgamated on a DVD to be shown on large TV screens in community centre living rooms. This project will present a new communal focus for community members to see themselves reflected in their story montages and will re-animate the community living rooms. The stories will also be seen in celebration screenings throughout the city.

Be part of this unique project by coming out and sharing your stories. Digital storytelling is the use of accessible digital tools to let everyday people tell their own personal stories. Digital stories are: short, simple videos that use recorded voice as well as photographs, animation, sound, music and limited live action. The stories are captured by artist and filmmaker Lisa g Nielsen and her team: Brian Lye, Suzanne Ahearne, Odessa Shuquaya and Lisa Walker. The team will be collecting stories from May until September and will work out of (but not limited to) three Vancouver Park Board community centres: Britannia, Sunset and West Point Grey.

Contact the team at vancouverstories125@gmail.com or call 604.257.8149 and leave a message. Check out the stories here: vancouverstories125.blogspot.com

View the story of Musqueam carver Doug Baker as he revisits the place by the Fraser River where his life found new meaning.