CBC’s opening night

I’ve been spending far too much time working at the computer with PhotoShop, developing images for a series of prints combining inkjet and collagraph prints in layers. I’ve been in the printmaking studio printing proofs, and back to the “drawing board”, aka my Mac. Tonight I was too tired to even blog, so decided on some rare TV watching.

I was lucky that CBC’s Opening Night was on, for this season’s premiere. Featured was I, Claudia – “Based on the hit Tarragon Theatre play by Kristen Thomson, this extraordinary one-woman acting tour-de-force explores the pre-teen world of Claudia, as she struggles with the divorce of her parents, her father’s remarriage and puberty.” As it happens, Chandrasutra has written a great review of this unique play.

The second half was Vienna, City of My Dreams – “The irrepressible Canadian tenor Michael Schade has been the toast of Vienna since his debut there in 1992. For this Viennese tribute he is joined by his wife, mezzo-soprano Norine Burgess, in a program of operetta favourites.” This lovely romantic music lifted my spirits and energy so much that I was able to do a bit more work in preparation for some more proofing in the studio tomorrow and finish with a quick blog. Good night!

Canadian Thanksgiving

This is a three-day long weekend in which many families get together for a big dinner centered usually around a big roast turkey, traditionally as a thanks for the harvest, right? Well, I decided to search some of the history behind this North American tradition, which is a much bigger occasion in the USA near the end of November.

The Canadian Encyclopedia gives a short and dry report, while Wikipedia is more interesting with their usual abundance of links to explore.

Then Mirabilis led me to an article in the Globe and Mail “Giving thanks with chilies and basmati”. It is about today’s multicultural Canadians adapting Thanksgiving to their own cultures’ special foods, but still with an emphasis on family and often giving thanks for their blessings in a “new world”. It has made me recall my own childhood as a new immigrant, my mother adapting her Finnish cooking by adopting the turkey or sometimes a wild goose brought home by an uncle from a hunting trip. We had a large extended family of aunts, uncles and cousins together in tiny homes, sharing and thankful for the abundant food that had not been so plentiful right after the “war” in the “old country”.

I was surprised to learn that our present date of the second Monday in October was only set in 1957, after many different ones had been tried over centuries, since that very first North American Thanksgiving celebrated by Martin Frobisher in Newfoundland in 1578. So, Happy Thanksgiving, Canada!

Lord of the Rings musical

Helsingin Sanomat* has a story that really tickles my Finnish funnybone as it makes the intriguing connection between Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings and Finland.

The makers of London’s West End musical Lord of the Rings (Flash webpage) have gone to Finland for inspiration. Finnish culture is going to be present in the musical on several levels, particularly the music of folk group Värttinä, and inspiration even from old Finnish jewelry and handicrafts.

But the producers had a surprise in store – Tolkien had got here first, by at least half a century. ‘It was not until we had decided to invite Värttinä into the project that we discovered that the Finnish language had been a source of inspiration for Tolkien himself. It felt then as though we had instinctively come to the right place’, says co-producer Kevin Wallace enthusiastically. Read about this connection in an earlier post.

Don’t miss the many links at the bottom of the HS article, about the production and about some Finnish cultural sites.

And, here’s a fun post about Tolkien’s Elvish language.

* Updated 27.08.2015 – expired links removed

Vancouver’s Art Patrons

In today’s Straight, Robin Laurence writes about Vancouver’s “Patron Saints” of the arts: painter Joe Plaskett and real-estate developer Michael Audain. Along with the VIVA (Vancouver Institute for the Visual Arts) awards funded by the Jack and Doris Shadbolt Foundation, now “emerging, mid-career, and senior artists all benefit from cash awards created by extraordinary British Columbians. It’s the best of giving in the visual arts.”

The stories about these new patrons are interesting and inspiring and set an example of giving to the arts and culture in BC.

You may be interested in also reading about the late Shadbolts, who contributed greatly to BC’s art scene: painter Jack Shadbolt, and curator Doris Shadbolt.

And, the Lt. Governor’s speech at the 2004 VIVA Awards and Audain Prize presentation.

Karen Kain: Chair, Canada Council for Arts

CBC Arts News reports that Karen Kain, one of the most celebrated ballerinas in Canadian history, will be the new chair of the Canada Council for the Arts. I think she will be a great advocate for artists and the arts!

new native museum

National Geographic News has some interesting pages about the new National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C. Native by design, it incorporated suggestions from Native Americans throughout North, Central, and South America. Most people said they wanted the museum to have an organic and handcrafted quality to it, and for its forms to be inspired by nature and set in native landscaping. For example, the east face features an overhang that evokes rock formations of the U.S. Southwest. This newest of the Smithsonian Institution’s eighteen museums opens next Tuesday.

Have a look at the photo gallery and visit the many links. Another NG article, concerning the exhibits, Artifacts Are “Alive” has more interesting reading and also has some more photos.

And this sounds very exciting: 20,000 American Indians are planning a march to the opening.

(This museum reminds me of the Museum of Anthropology in Vancouver, BC, which was inspired by the Northwest Coast native longhouses.)

Canadian Arts news

CBC Arts News is on my daily blog visit list for Canadian arts news. I have linked to their articles several times in my postings. (If you’d like to see these, search my site for ‘CBC’). Besides current news in the arts, there are features on a variety of arts subjects on the right side, with additional links to related sites, so check it out.

Some items from this week’s news:
Tom Thomson exhibition at the Hermitage*
Marc Mayer, new director of Montreal’s Museum of Contemporary Art*
First Emily Carr scholar presents new $25,000 art prize*

*expired links removed

Bill Reid’s art on $20 bill

For the first time ever, the work of an artist is featured on a Canadian currency note. The new twenty-dollar bill with anti-counterfeiting features, still has the Queen on one side, and the other illustrates the art of Bill Reid, the late Canadian artist who revitalized the West Coast Haida culture of his mother.

Most prominent of the four works represented are the monumental sculpture The Spirit of Haida Gwaii, one of which is at the Canadian Embassy in Washington, and The raven and the first man, the Haida story of human creation, located at the The Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia. (I wrote about MOA recently.) The other two are Xhuwaji – Haida Grizzly Bear and Mythic messengers.

“Also on that side, in the country’s two official languages, is a poignant question from the late Canadian writer Gabrielle Roy : ‘Could we ever know each other in the slightest without the arts?'”

**From the article “Haida icon’s art on flip side of Queen” by Glenn Bohn, in yesterday’s
Vancouver Sun (Aug.26.04). Also the Globe and Mail (Aug.25.04)

(**Registration may be required for both newspapers, sorry, but try BugMeNot, recommended by mirabilis)

Printmaking and Granville Island

It’s now raining hard in Vancouver at long last after a hot dry summer and instead of outside work, I suddenly have some free time to blog.

Malaspina Printmakers is the subject of a review: Freedom Of The Press by Robin Laurence in the Straight. Laurence views the summer group show in the newly expanded gallery and also the printshop facilities. There are some interesting comments about the closure of the printmaking program at University of Victoria, but the rumoured closing at Emily Carr Institute is fortunately only rumour.

As you will have read in the review, Malaspina is an artist run printmakers’ workshop with a gallery space. Dundarave Print Workshop is another one, and both are located on Granville Island near downtown Vancouver. The “island” is a lively place with a colourful public market, numerous art and craft studios and shops, theatres, restaurants and the art school, Emily Carr Institute. Granville Island is a very popular tourist destination and is a wonderful example of how the arts, business and tourism can thrive together.

We took our European visitors there recently and they were quite enthusiastic also about the colourful and funky houseboats behind the art school, sailboats coming and going, the crowds feeding the seagulls while listening to buskers outside the market and eating takeout food from the variety of stands, all with the city’s sleek highrise condominiums in the background across the water glimmering in the sunshine.

Music in Finland

As a lover of opera and all things Finnish, I’m surprised and thrilled by today’s post on ionarts “Music in Finland”. Charles Downey writes about how active opera is in Finland today as well as its history: “It took the Finns a while to create their own national opera”, but now “Finland is probably the leading country for the production of new operas”.

I’m pleased also at the mention of Karita Mattila, a wonderful singer and actress, whom we were very fortunate to see in concert here in Vancouver about a year ago.

Charles Downey teaches music and art history in Washington, DC and his blog reflects his excellent knowledge and passionate interest in these subjects. My own music knowledge is spotty so there is a wealth of information here that I will be poring over.

Virtual Finland**, by the way, is an excellent site on everything about Finland, that I go back to frequently and have linked to before in certain posts.

PS. Note my comment on the Finnish language as being Finno-Ugrian not Magyar. See these pages in Virtual Finland**

** Virtual Finland sadly no longer exists and links have been removed.