Chambar comes to MOA

This year MOA members are invited to a members-only reception on Friday, September 17th 2010, to honour WAM! Award Winners. One of the special features of this members-only event is the WAM! signature cocktail, which will be created by local Belgian restaurant, Chambar.

We are very excited to work with Chambar on this event and are even more excited to have our members and travelling artists experience the delicious cocktail creation from an award-winning Vancouver restaurant.

To become a member and enjoy benefits such as these, please visit our website for more information. If you are a member and would like to attend this event you will soon receive an invitation in the mail.

chambarstarred

125th Anniversary of Vancouver Chinatown

Curators Judy Maxwell and Emily Carr University’s instructor Sheila Hall are presenting an exhibit celebrating the 125th anniversary of Vancouver Chinatown.

There are two components to the exhibition:. The first is contemporary art interpretations by students of Emily Carr University of Art and Design, and the second component features images researched and presented as a timeline for understanding the cultural and historical roots of Chinatown and its inhabitants and the evolution that it experienced since its foundation in 1885.

Emily Carr University of Art and Design Foundation students participated in Creative Processes and Drawing assignments to

create works inspired by sixteen specific sites. The students researched visual images and written documentation at the Vancouver Archives, visited the sites, and  gathered local research based on their senses; seeing, smelling, tasting and touching the beauty, surprises, objects and issues relevant to the Chinatown environment.

There are only two weeks left of this exhibit celebrating the vibrant Chinese culture present in Vancouver Chinatown. The gallery is located at 163 Pender across the street from the Bank of Montreal on Pender St in Vancouver, BC.

Border Zones Updates

For news related to Border Zones: New Art Across Cultures, check out www.borderzones.ca. This  unique alternative to a printed exhibition catalogue is regularly updated by curator Karen Duffek and includes news and interviews regarding the exhibit. It also features reader responses to reviews and artist responses to reader’s questions.

What’s new this week:

Meditation and Alchemy: The Contemporary Practice of Laura Wee Láy Láq By Scott Watson.

Curator’s Blog: Karen Duffek writes from Berlin about Rebuilding Walls.

Video:

 Conversation between Hayati Mokhtar and Dain Iskandar Said

Conversation with John Wynne

Read visitor comments here.
Contribute to a conversation about art, and visit us often. Looking forward to hearing from you.

 borderzones

Finding monsters in Rosanna Raymond’s Cling to the Sea. Photo by Karen Duffek

Border Zones closes on September 12th, 2010. Be sure to come visit the exhibit and participate with the website before then!

Vishnu Procession at MOA

Vishnu3 (web)

At the Museum of Anthropology on Saturday, August 21st, at 11:00 am, there will be a public procession, or utsava, of a bronze Vishnu figure from MOA’s South Asia collection. It will be led by local Hindu priest Prabakar Visvanath, one of the twelve artists featured in the current exhibition Border Zones: New Art across Cultures.

Please join us in this collaborative event in which the museum “artifact” is reintegrated into ritual practice and reconnected with the living community.

For Border Zones, Mr. Visvanath participated with museum staff in a project that confronts the boundaries between the sacred and the secular, performance art and the performance of sacred text, and contemporary art and cultural practice. He conducted an abishekam ritual with the historical bronze, during which the figure—which had been in an inert state for a long time—was once again ritually bathed and dressed. Pouring a series of liquids over the figure meant suspending some central rules of conservation, and helps us to think about what it means to preserve the “life” of an object in addition to its physical form.

The bronze Vishnu figure was originally made to be a processional image, fitted with lugs and rings so that it can be periodically

taken out among the people. Like the abishekam, this is another aspect of the puja, or ritual act, by which the deity is invoked and honoured. On August 21st the priest will again prepare the image, and it will be set on a decorated ratha, or chariot, to be wheeled around the museum. There will be music, bells, flowers, and special foods to mark the celebration.

Free with museum admission. Everyone is invited!

Vishnu4 (web)

MOA Partners With Robson Reading Series

MOA Partners With Robson Reading Series

On Thursday September 30, the Robson Reading Series (co-sponsored by MOA) will feature Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas presenting RED: A Haida Manga.

All readings are free and will be held at Irving K. Barber Library at UBC. The Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas reading will be held September 30 at 1pm.

I’m very excited about MOA being a presenting partner in this series. This event will be posted on our online events

calendar (www.moa.ubc.ca/events) and you can check out the Robson Reading Series website for more information.