Posts Tagged ‘Roundhouse’

ALIVE Arts Winter Festival & Dialogue

Date: December 13-15, 2011, Aboriginal Artisan Tables: 11am- 9pm; Dialogue events: 12- 2pm
Location: W2 Media Cafe & Woodward’s Atrium
Website: www.creativetechnology.org and https://www.facebook.com/events/249155485147299/

ALIVE Arts Winter Festival & Dialogue is a cultural showcase with Aboriginal performing artists, an urban aboriginal artisan Christmas sale, children’s art program, traditional dancers, and community meals prepared by W2 Media Cafe.

Produced by W2 Community Media Arts Society in partnership with the Roundhouse Community Arts & Recreation Society, ALIVE (Aboriginal Life in Vancouver Enhancement Society), Lower Mainland United Way, Vancouver Indigenous Media Arts Festival, BCGEU, and RayCam Community Centre.

The series of cultural presentations and dialogues take place each lunch hour from 12-2:00 pm with discussions over healthy foods and then continue with evening cultural presentations. On Thursday, Dec 15, the Festival highlight is a dialogue and report back on the City’s Urban Aboriginal People’s Study/Vancouver 2011 with Ginger Gosnell and invited guests to hear back from members of the community.

HIGHLIGHTS
WINTER FILM NIGHT
Tuesday Dec 13, 6-9:30 featuring the NDN Classic ‘Smoke Signals’ directed by Chris Eyre. Presented by Vancouver Indigenous Media Arts Festival (VIMAF).

HIP HOP BINGO
Wednesday Dec 14, 6-9pm featuring $1000 in prizes with yer Hosts Ostwelve & JB The First Lady.

ABORIGINAL BLUES REVIEW
Thursday Dec 15, 6:00-9:00 featuring Wayne Lavallee, Murray Porter, Dalannah Gail Bowen and Russell Wallace.

ALIVE DIALOGUE CIRCLES
Tuesday-Thursday Dec 13-15, 12-2pm. A series of cultural presentations and dialogue circles take place each lunch hour with discussions over healthy foods and then continue with evening cultural presentations. With a focus on School Board, Park Board and City of Vancouver and enhancing our relations.

ALIVE ARTS
Bone game, traditional crafts, drumming, songs and storytelling

WINTER CELEBRATION
The main event on Thursday, 5-9pm with POWWOW DRUMMERS! On Thursday, Dec 15, the Festival highlight is an evening of Powwow drummers, community meal, and dialogue and report back on the City’s Urban Aboriginal People’s Study/Vancouver 2011, with Ginger Gosnell-Myers and City of Vancouver representatives to share within the circle with members of the community. Check out the traditional games, Blues Review, the Artisan tables and more!

And did we say this is all free or by donation?! See you at the W2 Media Cafe and Woodward’s Atrium! On the Hastings and Cordova bus routes, with parking in the Woodward’s Parkade (enter eastbound on Cordova east of Cambie).

Visit https://www.facebook.com/events/249155485147299/ for full schedule details.

Image credit: Jerry Whitehead, A family dance together, 1998, acrylic on concrete, previously located at the corner of Carrall Street and Hastings Street, Vancouver, BC.

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

Disappearing Vancouver: Vancouver’s History told through the voices of our elders.


Dates and locations: Premiere of the podcast online TBA. Premiere of the documentary at the Memory Festival, November 15th, 8pm at the Roundhouse Community Centre. Launch of Issue 5 of Lester’s Army on October 7th at the Main Street Heritage Hall.
Website: lestersarmy.com/disappearingvancouver/

Lester’s Army presents Disappearing Vancouver, the story of Vancouver’s cultural, architectural, and technological evolution as told by our oldest citizens. Presentations include a 15-minute psycho-geographical documentary, a series of print articles in the Lester’s Army Magazine and a podcast series to air online this fall. Each presentation will include interviews with seniors who have witnessed substantial changes in the physical and social history of Vancouver including WWII survivors, street artists, retired laypeople who worked in dead or dying industries and other regular individuals that make our city so extraordinary.

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

Collision

Date: July 14, 15, 16, 17, 2011, an off-site production of the Dancing on the Edge Festival
Location: The Roundhouse Community Arts and Recreation Centre
Website: www.kjdance.ca

Presented by Karen Jamieson Dance Society, Collision is an interdisciplinary dance production that centres on the Roundhouse as a symbol of cultural and creative collision. Currently a centre of creativity, the Roundhouse was once the western terminus of the Canadian Pacific Railway. This work will explore the historical, geographical and cultural history of the building and territory, including First Nations’ heritage and the various immigrant relationships to the railway and its construction. Collision will incorporate dance, photography, film, music, and First Nations cultural contributions. Join us on Facebook for regular updates www.facebook.com/kjdance.ca

Tickets available online at www.dancingontheedge.org or call the box office at 604.689.0926

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