Event Listings

Mapping the Everyday: Neighbourhood Claims for the Future


Date: Project commencing October, 2011 – Exhibition runs November 1st, 2011 – February 25, 2012
Location: The Audain Gallery, Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre and the Downtown Eastside community
Website: www.dewc.ca and sfuwoodwards.ca/index.php/audain

This process-oriented exhibition is a collaborative project between the Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre (DEWC), visiting artist Elke Krasny, the art collective desmedia, the collaboration red diva projects, the art collective Coupe, Out of Bounds Festival of Site-Specific Interventions, students from the School for the Contemporary Arts at Simon Fraser University, members of the community, and the Audain Gallery.

Presented as a text-based “horizon line” spanning the walls of the gallery, the exhibition offers a visual map of the demands and aspirations of the DEWC community. These demands, both current and historical, address issues of poverty, violence and insecurity, social exclusion, the deferral of rights, and the legacy of colonialism. Although describing specific challenges, these claims are also expressions of conviviality and solidarity. These expressions exist between women, between women and their neighbourhoods, and between the women of the Centre and their global context.

During the exhibition, the gallery will function as a platform and meeting ground for the production and exchange of different forms of knowledge. The “horizon line” will be a framing device and backdrop for a series of events, workshops, performances, and projects that aim to build neighbourhood constellations that go beyond familiar exchanges. They also provide opportunities for direct community participation and the fostering of critical dialogue, while also challenging the conventional expectation of what constitutes a gallery exhibition. As part of this series, women from the DEWC will teach a series of hands-on workshops, including instruction on cedar weaving and Japanese brush painting, to share their knowledge of traditional artistic practices.

Working closely with the women of the DEWC, Elke Krasny, and our other collaborators, Mapping the Everyday examines the possibilities for and consequences of community-based political activity as articulated in relationship with contemporary artistic and institutional practices.

Mapping the Everyday: Schedule of Events and workshops

Nov. 19, 2pm
How can we collaborate?
Talk with Elke Krasny, Cecily Nicholson, and Sabine Bitter

Nov. 22, 1pm
Workshop on Cedar Weaving
Lead by Stella August

Nov. 24, 1pm
Workshop on Japanese Brush Painting
Lead by Ari Tomita

Nov. 26, 2pm
Collective Futures in the Downtown Eastside
Panel discussion by the desmedia collective

Nov. 27, 7pm
Wednesday Night School: Introduction
Reading group developed by the art collective Coupe

Nov. 30, 7-9pm
Dalannah Gail Bowen
To compliment Mapping the Everyday, the Audain Gallery is pleased to host a live musical performance by jazz and blues singer Dalannah Gail Bowen. Bowen is an experienced, versatile, and dynamic performer with strong ties to the local community and has significant national recognition.

Dec. 18, 7pm
Wednesday Night School: Class Restoration
Reading group developed by the art collective Coupe

Jan. 19, 7pm
Discussing Out of Bounds
Student-lead panel discussion on the Out of Bounds: Festival of Site-Specific Interventions held in the DTES

Jan. 22, 7pm
Wednesday Night School: Marxism & Factography
Reading group developed by the art collective Coupe

Feb. 7, 7pm
Jesus Indian
Screening and discussion of a short film produced by red diva projects and Frog Girl Films

Feb. 10, 7pm
Jennifer Kreisberg
Performance and discussion

Feb. 14, 1pm
Annual February 14th Women’s Memorial March
Starts at Main and Hastings Street, all welcome

Feb. 24, 7pm
Wednesday Night School: How to Trace the Destruction of the Old World on Our Hands
Presentation and discussion by the art collective Coupe

Feb. 25, 7pm
red diva projects
Performance of workshops by Marie Clements, Michelle St. John, and women from the DEWC

Note: The workshops and the Wednesday Night School have limited availability only. Please contact the Audain Gallery for more information at info@audaingallery.ca

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

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.

Celebration to Launch Vancouver’s Interactive Building Permit Database

Date: Wednesday, November 23, 2011
Location: The City of Vancouver Archives, 1150 Chestnut Street at Kits Point, 7 pm to 9 pm, doors open at 6:30 pm
Website: www.heritagevancouver.org/database

Heritage Vancouver invites you to its 125th anniversary celebration, the launch of an interactive Vancouver Building Permit Database. The database will unlock the secrets of many thousands of Vancouver’s historic buildings and make this information publicly accessible – a permanent legacy of invaluable historical information.

Join Heritage Vancouver at the City of Vancouver Archives for a dynamic “go live event” and search your favourite historic building on the database. Vancouver historian Maurice Guibord will illustrate the usefulness of the database in his talk on “the ethnically diverse nature of early Vancouver.” As well, Heritage Vancouver will feature ten historic homes from a cross section of Vancouver’s early neighbourhoods, with information on the original homeowners from the diverse countries that made up early Vancouver.

There is free Wi-Fi at the Archives and you are encouraged to bring an electronic device to search the database.

Admission is free, but pre-registration is required through Eventbrite: hvs-permits.eventbrite.com

The Project: Transcription & Online Database
One of the most frequent questions at the City of Vancouver Archives is “How old is my house?” Until now, the early building permit information for Vancouver buildings has been locked away in chronological register books, not searchable in any way. Now – finally – this relatively inaccessible source of vital information will be made freely available through the release of a long-anticipated online searchable database of these invaluable historical records. In addition to the invaluable and accurate permit information this will supply to countless building owners and researchers, it will support many different types of research into Vancouver’s history, which could include statistical research, understanding the growth of individual neighbourhoods, support for genealogical research and other types of investigation that have not yet been considered.

Visit the Heritage Vancouver website to learn more about the genesis of the building permits database project and the transcription process. You can even volunteer to help out with data entry!

Nominate Your Favourite Heritage Home
Do you have a favourite heritage home in Vancouver that was built in one of the following years?

City of Vancouver: 1901 to 1904 and 1909 to 1919

Corporation of the District of South Vancouver: 1911 to 1921 (amalgamated with Vancouver in 1929)

Corporation of Point Grey: 1912 to 1921 (amalgamated with Vancouver in 1929)

If yes, Heritage Vancouver invites you to nominate your favourite home, send us the address, any information or stories you have about the house, why you like it, and your relationship to it.

Send your nominations to info@heritagevancouver.org by November 11th, 2011.

Heritage Vancouver will select ten houses from a cross section of Vancouver’s historic neighbourhoods. The ten houses will be featured at Heritage Vancouver’s 125th anniversary celebration, the launch of the Interactive Building Permit Database, November 23rd from 7pm to 9pm at the City of Vancouver Archives. After the launch the database, photos and stories about the ten houses will be featured on Heritage Vancouver’s website.