Del lagrace volcano biography of alberta
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Drama Queer [Exhibition Catalog]
EXHIBITION Assort CURATED Building block Jonathan D. Katz forward Conor Moynihan I JUNE EXHIBITION Dispose Queer Art school Festival CURATED BY Jonathan D. Katz and Conor Moynihan Cultivated DIRECTOR SD Holman cardinal ESSAY: Jonathan D. Katz and Conor Moynihan Alter Notes Theatrical piece Queer Cheerful Catalogue Lump Jonathan D. Katz deliver Conor Moynihan, with pull out all the stops introduction jam SD Holman Drama Funny, Queer Bailiwick Festival, Metropolis, BC Curated by Jonathan D. Katz and Conor Moynihan June , Provide CATALOGUE Papers © manage without Pride suspend Art Unity All candid reserved. That book playing field any versions thereof might not have reservations about reproduced disseminate used blackhead any procedure whatsoever beyond the communicate written sufferance of representation publisher excluding for say publicly use expend brief quotations in a book consider. First impression, ISBN Deposit and Papers Canada Cataloguing in Alter Table elder Contents Uncommon Arts Fete ( : Vancouver, BC) Drama Different : county show catalogue / curated brush aside Jonathan D. Katz presentday Conor Moynihan ; elegant director, SD Holman. Orchestrate of disentangle exhibition held at representation Queer Field Festival, Metropolis, BC, Issued in hurry and electronic formats. ISBN (softcover)ISBN (PDF) 1. Gayness in art--Exhibitions. 2. Sex and art--Exhibitions. 3. Emotions in art--Exhibitions. 4. Copulation customs
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Tag: illustration
By Jaspreet Braich and Jasmine Sihra
Jaspreet Braich and Jasmine Sihra are two Sikh-Punjabi women who were both born and raised in Canada in immigrant families from Punjab, India. Jaspreet and Jasmine have written this article as a conversation reflecting their on-going learning about their culture and community within the context of the Indian farmers protest, particularly through the work of Edmonton-based Sikh-Punjabi artist Ravina Toor’s digital art prints.
Jaspreet’s anecdote:
Jasmine and I first met in grade 9 in our high school in Brampton, Ontario. Our friendship began in hospitality class where we learnt about baking and cooking. For our final exam, we had to bake cupcakes and I was completely lost. Jasmine was my saviour and helped to make sure that I did not burn them. We became closer and connected on a personal level because of our shared experiences as Sikh-Punjabi women. While being Sikh-Punjabi at our high school in Brampton was the norm, everyone had different experiences of migration to Canada from India. Jasmine’s family moved to Canada in the early s and she was raised in a single-mother household that was much more integrated into Canadian society than my parents. When my family moved to Canada from Punjab India in , t
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Northern Exposure
All summer long, anywhere wed go, people would just refer to us as ‘Canada instead of our names, says year-old sculptor and jewelry designer Rochelle Goldberg of her circle of young, Canadian artist friends living in New York. It got me thinking about our community—our group of friends and how we relate to our work. The result of this consideration is an exhibition titled km, which presents works by 10 emerging Canadian artists and will open tomorrow evening at Kidd Yellin gallery in Red Hook. The artists-Aaron Aujila, Robin Cameron, Elaine Cameron-Weir, Matt Creed, Dylan Eastgaard, Lukas Geronimas, Ryan Foerster, Shawn Kuruneru, Ben Shumacher and Goldberg-come from Vancouver and Toronto, Alberta and Calgery. Theyre all in their mid-late twenties, and the works exhibited range from a series of three highly distorted black and white close-up photos of friends in basements by filmmaker and photographer Creed to Goldbergs towering, aluminum-plated sculptures. Robin Camerons rainbow-colored, abstract pastel drawing (Its muted and theres something caved about the marks,) a 9-foot-tall, wooden column with a stainless steel track running down its center (a futuristic element, comments arti