Pride In Art Visual Art Show

From the roots of the queer arts Festival, this open visual art show exhibits artists from our communities and honours our founder Robbie Hong. Artists: Katherine Atkins Kate Braun Jackson Photographix Jeff Gibson Kelly Haydon Donal Hebner Trish Holowcznek Dzee Louise Noemi Molitor Nisha Platzer Rosamond Norbury SD Holman   Plus! an Excerpt from Photovoice: THE TRANS, TWO-SPIRIT & GENDER NONCONFORMING COMMUNITY SAFETY & WELL-BEING PHOTOVOICE PROJECT Project Coordinator Cindy Holmes Artists: Daniel Bon Fabian Abby Hipolito Elizabeth ‘Raven’ James Wade Janzen Sandy Lambert Chase Willier Nirkwuscin Cherese Reemaul Velvet Steele Ann Travers Stefan de Villiers About PhotoVoice Project CoordinatorCindy Holmes is a Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research Postdoctoral Fellow at Simon Fraser University with over 35 years of experience in community-based health and social work. She is a white queer cisgender femme who was raised on the traditional territory of the Attawandaron people in Guelph Ontario, and is currently a visitor on the traditional and unceded territories of the Musquem, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh people in the city known as Vancouver BC. Cindy is also a proud parent of a gender creative teenager and a partner of a gender non-conforming/masculine woman.

Youth Curator Tour

In partnership with Directions Youth Services and Broadway Youth Resource Centre.

Jonathan D. Katz, curator of QAF’s visual art exhibition Drama Queer: Seducing social change, leads a tour of the exhibition for street-involved queer youth.

A meal will be provided onsite after the tour by Directions Youth Services. Need help getting to the Roundhouse? Contact BYRC for transit tickets.

Free of charge. No Registration required.

This event is reserved for youth ages 15-24. If you are no longer a youth, please respect this space and attend the Curator Panel instead on June 22 at 7pm

Click HERE for more youth events.

Queerotica

ASL interpretation has been booked for this event.

A soirée of erotic literary readings to tantalize and titillate. This year’s edition of Queerotica is curated by Dagger Editions, Caitlin Press’s new imprint dedicated to writing by queer women (those who identify as queer women, including trans women, or include this in their personal history).

About the featured writers:

Nacho Rodriguez is a former journalist and the author of two self-published collections of poetry Hidden/A Escondidas and Distant Object of Desire as well as a collection of short stories White Lies. Born in Caracas, Venezuela, he now lives in Victoria, BC.

Sara Graefe is a Vancouver playwright and screenwriter who also writes hot little stories to make her partner wet. Sara has published erotica in Hot & Bothered IV and With A Rough Tongue: Femmes Write Porn. Her other queer-themed writing has appeared in anthologies such as A Family By Any Other Name: Exploring Queer Relationships, Outspoken: A Canadian Collection of Lesbian Scenes and Monologues, and Boobs: Women Explore What it Means to Have Breasts.

Jane Byers lives with her wife and two children in Nelson, British Columbia. She writes about human resilience in the context of raising children, lesbian and gay issues, and sexuality. Her poems, essays and short fiction have been published in a variety of books and literary magazines in Canada, the US and the UK, including Grain, Rattle, Descant, the Antigonish Review, the Canadian Journal of Hockey Literature, Our Times, Poetry in Transit and Best Canadian Poetry 2014. Her second book of poetry, Acquired Community is both a collection of narrative poems about seminal moments in North American lesbian and gay history, and a series of first-person poems comparing the narrator’s coming out experience within the larger context of the gay liberation movement.

Hasan Namir was born in Iraq in 1987 and came to Canada at a young age. He graduated from Simon Fraser University with a BA in English. Hasan considers himself to be a very sexual being and his work focuses on sexuality. He loves to write stories that are rich in sexual nature. His first novel, God in Pink, was published by Arsenal Pulp Press in fall 2015.

Lucas Crawford is the author of Sideshow Concessions (Invisible Publishing, 2015), which won the Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry. Lucas is also the author of a book of scholarship entitled Transgender Architectonics (Routledge 2016). Lucas has taught Gender Studies at SFU for the past three years and is looking forward to beginning a new adventure as Assistant Professor of English at the University of New Brunswick this fall. Lucas is both thrilled and honoured to give one last Vancouver reading here at such a great festival. Lucas is originally from rural Nova Scotia.

Monica Meneghetti is a multilingual language professional and writer with a penchant for cross-disciplinary collaboration.  Monica’s poetry and creative nonfiction have appeared in literary journals and musical scores, as well on stage and online. She’s taught and mentored both youth and adults, offering custom-designed workshops at Fernie Writer’s Conference, Camp fYrefly, and independently. Monica has been publishing since 1989, but began exploring sexuality in her writing in 2010. She is a contributor to Plenitude magazine and her memoir More then a Mouthful will be published by Dagger Editions in 2017.

Generously sponsored by Kathleen Speakman and Lesiie Uyeda

Entry to all QAF events requires membership to the Pride in Art Society. Memberships are available for $2 online, or a $1-$5 slide scale at the door. Please allow a few extra minutes at your first event to obtain your new card.

Salon

Salon with artists and Daily Xtra’s Robin Perelle. Bring your open minds and hearts to reflect on the curated exhibition.

After years of swinging in and out of fashion, the art world’s appreciation of art for social change may once again be on upswing. But queer artists have always known that art is a lubricant to change the world.

In the past, queer artists have been blocked, blacklisted or simply gone unrecognized for their social-change-focused creations. Now, the rest of the art world may be catching up. But where does that leave our community? Is there room and recognition for queer artists for social change in Vancouver’s art world today? Or do our artists still have to leave this conservative city to express themselves?

What needs to change in Vancouver to support — and even celebrate — edgy queer art for social change?

The Pink Line

Produced by the frank theatre company.

ASL interpretation has been booked for this event.

What’s it like being a person of colour and being queer in a community where whiteness and queerness are synonymous? Where do you fit when your black hair and brown body mark you out as alone in a sea of fairer limbs and blonde undercuts? What does chosen family look like, when no one in your chosen family looks like you, or can’t speak your language, or cook your food? How do you love when who you love is kinda… racist?

The Pink Line is a funny and probing new performance exploring racism in Vancouver’s queer community, collectively created by Jotika Chaudhary, Jahanzeb Kazi, Dora Ng, Anoushka Ratnarajah and Johnny Wu, guided by Fay Nass and C. E. Gatchalian. We will explore notions of home, feelings of isolation, and delve into our heartfelt and hilarious stories about our families as queer folks of colour. Prepare yourself for honesty, laughter and theatrical magic.

Created and performed by Jotika Chaudhary, Jahanzeb Kazi, Dora Ng, Anoushka Ratnarajah and Johnny Wu
Facilitated by Fay Nass and C. E. Gatchalian
Directed by Fay Nass
Creative Consultant: Jonathan Seinen

Entry to all QAF events requires membership to the Pride in Art Society. Memberships are available for $2 online, or a $1-$5 slide scale at the door. Please allow a few extra minutes at your first event to obtain your new card.   Brown Paper Tickets Ticket Widget Loading… Click Here to visit the Brown Paper Tickets event page.

The Launch of Dagger Editions

Dagger Editions, an imprint of Caitlin Press, publishes literary fiction, non-fiction and poetry by and about queer women (those who identify as queer women, including trans women, or include this in their personal history).

We celebrate the launch of Dagger’s first, Oscar of Between: A Memoir of Identity and Ideas, by Betsy Warland and Flight Instructions for the Commitment Impaired, by Nicola Harwood.

Click HERE for more information and to reserve tickets.

It would be our pleasure to see you on April 2nd, from 7 PM until midnight at Lost + Found Cafe, where we will have the following readings:

  • Betsy Warland, reading from Oscar of Between Betsy Warland has published 12 books of creative nonfiction, poetry and lyric prose. A creative writing teacher, mentor and editor, her 2010 book of essays on writing, Breathing the Page—Reading the Act of Writing was a bestseller. In 2013, Warland created a new template: an interactive website salon. It features excerpts from her Oscar of Between, Guest Writers’ and artist’s work, and comments from readers. In the spring of 2016, it has become Oscar of Between – A Memoir of Identity and Ideas, making it one of two books launching Caitlin Press’ Dagger Editions.
  • Nicola Harwood, reading from Flight Instructions for the Commitment Impaired Nicola Harwood is a writer, theatre and interdisciplinary artist. Her plays and projects have been produced in Canada, the US and Europe and are often concerned with the hidden histories of places, women and queers. She loves to work with communities, other artists and sometimes just her own self to create beauty, oddness and non-sequiturs in the world. Nicola currently lives in Vancouver and teaches Creative Writing at Kwantlen Polytechnic University. For full details see www.nicolaharwood.com
  • Jane Eaton Hamilton, reading from Weekend Jane Eaton Hamilton is the author of eight previous books. Her memoir Mondays are Yellow, Sundays are Grey was a Sunday Times bestseller, and her story collection Hunger was a Ferro Grumley Award finalist. Her work has been published in the New York Times andSalon.  Her new novel Weekend is forthcoming from Arsenal Pulp Press in May 2016.
  • Shelagh Plunkett, reading from an original short story Shelagh Plunkett is an award-winning writer and journalist. Her work has been published in various Canadian and American journals including The Walrus, enRoute Magazine, Geist, The Vancouver Sun and The Globe and Mail. In 2007 she won the CBC Literary Award for creative non-fiction and her memoir of growing up in Guyana and on Timor, Indonesia, The Water Here is Never Blue, was short listed for the Mavis Gallant Prize for Non-Fiction and the Concordia University First Book Prize. She has just returned south after three months in Dawson City, Yukon as the Writers’ Trust Berton House writer in residence.
  • Ali Blythe, reading from “Twoism” Ali Blythe completed a residency at the Banff Centre and a writing degree at the University of Victoria, receiving a scholarship from the Lambda Foundation for excellence in writing and support of the queer community. Poems from Twoism, a debut collection, have been published in literary journals and anthologies in Canada and Germany. This year, Blythe is the judge and workshop facilitator for the University of Victoria’s Diversity Writing Contests. He is also a featured poet at the Moving Trans History Forward 2016 Conference, and will be co-presented by the English Department’s FYI For Your Ideas Forum. Blythe lives in Vancouver’s West End.

This event will be both an intimate reading with the authors as well as a social gathering to mingle with likeminded folks. Books and subscriptions to Room will be available for purchase and authors will be available for signing.

Tickets to the Queer Arts Festival will also be available for purchase.

Due to limited capacity, we will hold your reserved spot until 7:30pm, after which, we will accept all attendance on a first-come, first-serve basis.

Caitlin Press and the Queer Arts Festival present the Launch of Dagger Editions in association with Room Magazine, Plenitude, the Vancouver Queer Film Festival, QMUNITY, and the Hastings Crossing Business Improvement Association. We thank them for their support in our shared mandate for inclusiveness and expression for queer women voices.

Vancouver’s Queer Arts Festival 2016 to explore emotion in art and activism

by Craig Takeuchi, Georgia Straight, March 15th, 2016

Vancouver’s Queer Arts Festival continues its dedication to LGBT art and social progress with the theme of the 2016 edition of the festival. That commitment is further underscored by the change of its dates this year from August to the Stonewall season in June.

This year’s QAF visual art exhibition will explore what role emotion plays in queer art as political activism.

Drama Queer: Seducing Social Change will be curated by New York–based queer studies scholar Jonathan D. Katz.

The exhibition will centre around three paintings by Vancouver artist Attila Richard Lukacs, and will include work by international artists, including Angela Grossman, Bill Jacobson, Vika Kirchenbauer, Alice O’Malley, Del LaGrace Volcano, and more.

Australian composer Lyle Chan’s An AIDS Activist’s Memoir will be performed at the 2016 Queer Arts Festival.

Another politically charged festival highlight is An AIDS Activist’s Memoir, performed by the Acacia Quartet and narrated by Australian composer Chan, who conceived of the work during the height of the epidemic.

Art and social politics will be further explored in Buddies in Bad Times and frank theatre production The Pink Line, a new play about the history of art, activism, and racism.

Queer Noise will offer an evening of short film, video, and media art performances by artists such as Kami Chisholm, Rémy Huberdeau, Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers, Larose S. Larose, Blaire Fukumura, Scott Fitzpatrick, Elisha Lim, and more.

Toronto ensemble Contact, with composter Allison Cameron will present A Gossamer Bit, a fusion of avant-garde jazz, Charles Ives, and hypnotic music.

This year’s festival runs from June 21 to 30 at the Roundhouse Community Centre (181 Roundhouse Mews). The new dates reference and pay tribute to the Stonewall Riots, which began on June 28, 1969, in New York City. The Stonewall Riots are credited with the formation of the modern queer-rights movement. VIEW ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Image Credit: 7 Devils Dead is one of three paintings by Vancouver artist Attila Richard Lukacs that the Queer Arts Festival’s 2016 visual arts exhibition will centre around.

AIDS crisis changed society, politics — and art as well

By On The Coast, CBC News Posted: Nov 28, 2015

Artists at the time had to be discreet when exploring the new disease in art, a curator says

When AIDS first emerged in 1981 it profoundly affected lives, politics and society, but few people considered the impact the syndrome would have on art.

Jonathan Katz, curator for next summer’s Queer Arts Festival, was in Vancouver on Thursday for a lecture called How AIDS Changed American Art.

He says American art would not be what it is today had AIDS not existed, because the epidemic was the defining force in American art through the 1980s and ’90s.

“The artists working at this time had to negotiate a political and social context that was virulently homophobic,” he told On The Coast guest host Gloria Macarenko.

“In 1987 a Neanderthal senator by the name of Jesse Helms actually passed a rule that said that any federal funding that mentioned homosexuality or intravenous drug use was illegal. Most museums received at least some federal funding, so that meant there was a virtual silence on any AIDS or gay-related art.”

Katz is also the co-curator of a new exhibition called Art/AIDS/America at the Tacoma Museum of Art.

At that exhibit, he is exhibiting what is thought to be the first work of art about AIDS, an abstract piece made by Israeli-born artist Izhar Patkin in 1981.

“I was actually quite suspicious of it when I first encountered it, because it seemed to me impossible that the first work of art about AIDS would antedate the first press reports and published reports about a new disease,” he said. “But Patkin told a wonderful story about sitting in his dermatologist’s office and recognizing as early as 1981 that the people around him all shared the same symptoms.”

Art works about AIDS could not look like they were about AIDS

That work was Unveiling of Modern Chastity, a painting that Katz says “erupts in lesions.”

Katz says artists working at this time had to “throw their voice.” He says that most works about AIDS at that time didn’t look like they were about AIDS.

He says that while sensitive viewers were often aware of these works’ true meanings, there was a subtlety that obscured the artists’ true intentions.

Things only began to change for artists tackling AIDS once drug cocktails and treatments were developed that made the disease a chronic, but livable condition.

“But one of the sad things about that is that people understand AIDS as a thing of the past, whereas that is simply not true. People are dying every day,” he said.

AIDS brought humanity back into art

But 30 years after the AIDS epidemic first emerged, Katz believes the crisis still is affecting the creativity of artists.

“Before AIDS presented, the international standard for art was stuff like minimalism. Cold, geometric, intellectual,” he said.

“The traditional values of art making, those expressive and emotional values, AIDS brought them back.”

VIEW ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Westender: Best of the City 2016

By Robert Mangelsdorf, Managing Editor, Westender • Published Feb. 14, 2016

It’s no secret that Vancouver is best place to live in the world. Heck, we know it, that’s why we live here! Vancouver has a lot going for it: there’s the majestic mountains, the ocean, the beaches, the parks, and the untamed wilderness at our doorstep.

But what makes Vancouver a truly great city is more than good looks and fortuitous geography. It’s the people who make this multicultural metropolis what it is today. It’s our friends, our families, our neighbours that make Vancouver the best place on Earth.

So for the 19th year in a row, Westender has asked you, the people of Vancouver, our readers, to tell us what makes this city so special. This year a record number of people took part in the online poll, proving once again that Vancouverites love their city, and they’re not afraid to say so.

Congrats to all of our winners, and thanks to everyone who participated in our online poll!

Robert Mangelsdorf, Managing Editor

Drama Queer: seducing social change, curated visual art exhibition

Visual art exhibition curated by Jonathan D. Katz and Conor Moynihan.

At the centre of this year’s festival is Drama Queer: seducing social change, a visual art exhibition curated by Jonathan D. Katz. This exhibition explores the role of emotion in contemporary queer art as a form of political practice. As a mechanism to coalesce feelings and direct them with activist intent, emotion is increasingly central to much contemporary work. This exhibition places the queer use of emotion into a historical frame, arguing that the solicitation of an emotional response has been of central import at least since the 1960s, as underscored by critics from Frank O’Hara to Jill Johnston to Gene Swenson.

While much of the art world foregrounded formal innovation, leaving the nakedly emotional unacknowledged, even unseen, queers have long championed the emotional in contradistinction to the formal. A means to challenge the dominant formal values so often elevated by critics, while undercutting anti-expressive postmodernist tenets, emotion had the added value of returning the field of art-making to the socio-political present. With the advent of AIDS, this emotional undercurrent grew in force and power, challenging the equanimity of dominant culture in the face of holocaust. Nakedly manipulative, this earlier queer art sought to move the viewer into action.

Drama Queer solicits a range of contemporary work towards understanding how feelings function in our political present, and the different facets of art and emotion — political emotion, erotic emotion etc. Centred around three never before exhibited monumental paintings by Attila Richard Lukacs, this exhibition will explore art that seeks to engender social change through making the viewer an accomplice, queering their perspective or seducing them into seeing the world from a dissident vantage point.

Visual artists: Del LaGrace Volcano, Angela Grossmann,Monica Majoli, Attila Richard Lukacs, Kent Monkman, Andreas Fuchs, Vika Kirchenbauer, Zanele Muholi, Zackary Drucker, Laura Aguilar,Cassils, Andrew Holmquist, Keijaun Thomas, Shan Kelley, Joey Terrill, Carl Pope, Vincent Tiley, Sean Fader, 2Fik, Laura Aguilar, Bill Jacobson, Rudy Lemcke, Jesse Finley Reed, George Steeves.

QAF is delighted to welcome Jonathan D. Katz and Conor Moynihan as curators for 2016’s visual art exhibition Drama Queer: seducing social change. Katz was the first full-time American academic to be tenured in the field of gay and lesbian studies, and his work as curator, scholar, and activist has had a profound impact on the understanding of queer art and artists in both academia and the larger world. He is best known for co-curating Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture at the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery in 2010, the first openly queer exhibition at a major US museum. He also founded the Harvey Milk Institute, the largest queer studies institute in the world. Katz currently directs the doctoral program in Visual Studies at the University at Buffalo and serves as the president of the Leslie Lohman Museum in New York City.

QAF needs you | Call for poets and composers

As 2015 comes to an end, I’d like to give a great big Thank You to all the amazing Queer Arts Family who have answered our 2015 fundraising call. It’s been an overwhelming outpouring of support in the past month, which has brought us to 92% of our $25,000 goal for the year.
Today, I am reaching out to you personally to ask your support. As a friend of QAF, you know how unique our festival is. But that uniqueness is precious and often makes it hard for us to raise funds traditionally. We are asking for your help by making a donation today, or if you’ve already given, to please share this final 2015 call.     This year is a critical turning point for the festival, as we change our dates to June 21-30, marking the Stonewall anniversary. Audiences have been asking for this for a very long time, and we are excited to be able to finally make the move. But change always comes with risk – and we have only 10 months between festivals to plan,  our most compressed festival schedule ever (packed into only 10 days!), and thousands of QAFeurs we need to tell to come a month early.     We are calling on you, our Queer Arts Family, to help us through this exciting but challenging transition. QAF is a charitable organization, and every last dollar goes back into the festival. Ticket prices only cover 5% of what it takes to put on the event. Your donation will help us to:bring queer art luminary Jonathan D. Katz to curate the 2016 visual arts exhibition. We are thrilled to bring his profound curatorial vision to Vancouver audiences, and to introduce him to new voices among out city’s tremendously talented artists.keep our festival financially accessible for all, and continue our pay what you can events, and free access to workshops for youthcontinue our practice of ASL translation or captioning for our language-based showsspread the word, making sure the festival faithful hear about the date change, and the rest of Vancouver hear about the creative capital of queer communitieskeep taking risks on challenging programming, exposing the voices of the full rage of queer artists, of diverse cultural backgrounds, varying abilities, all ages, emerging and established     When our federal funding was withdrawn in 2013, queers stood up and said loud and clear how important this festival is to our communities – YOU got that crucial grant restored. We needed your help then, and we need it again now.     It is up to all of us to make the festival possible. Thank you for being a part of QAF, for building with us an engaged, reflective and participatory creative queer community in Vancouver. Inspiration and dedication can only take us so far. Without you, we wouldn’t have what’s needed to realize this lovingly curated sensory experience, or bring our audience the fabulous queer space we all deserve.Wishing you and yours Happy Holigays and a Merry New Year,

SD Holman
QAF Artistic DirectorImage Credit: Bon and Monica take in Emilio Rojas’s “The Glory.” Photo by belle ancell photographyCall for Poets and ComposersQAF is thrilled to be presenting the 6th edition of the Art Song Lab program. #ASL2016 will be an amazing opportunity for emerging and established composers and poets to have their work rehearsed and developed by world class art-song performers, receive a world premiere (and archival recording) at QAF, attend workshops and receive mentorship with composer Jeffrey Ryan and poet Rachel Rose, and more!Application deadline is Jan. 15, 2016.

Winter Warmer: Fundraiser for QAF

Pride in Art invites you and yours to our Winter Warmer, a fundraiser for the Queer Arts FestivalBill Richardson MCs an evening of gaiety and merriment nibbles and libations with  Members of Cor Flammae (Canada’s first professional classical LGBT choir), MACHiNENOiSY Dance Society, Mark McGregor, flute and Rachel Iwaasa, piano Silent Auction items include paintings by Suzo Hickey and Patricia Atchison, tickets to Ballet BC, PuSh Festival, Vancouver Opera, and more! ___________________________________________________________ The Postat 750 110-750 Hamilton, Vancouver BC, in the old CBC building Friday, Dec. 4, 6pm – ’til late$25 Tickets include your first drink and canapés Generously sponsored by Stoneboat Vineyards, Off the Rail Brewing, and Pilart Catering.

​RSVP required. Either purchase online in advance, or if you you prefer to buy your ticket in person, please RSVP to communications@queerartsfestival.com 

Can’t party with us, but still want to help? Donate to QAF! It’s easy, and it’s tax-deductible.

___________________________________________________________ The Queer Arts Festival (QAF) is an annual artist-run multi-disciplinary summer arts festival at the Roundhouse in Vancouver, BC. Recognized as one of the top 5 festivals of its kind worldwide (Melbourne Sun Herald), QAF harnesses the visceral, transformative power of the arts to inspire recognition, respect, and visibility of people who transgress gender and sexual norms. Through the intimate act of sharing as artists and audiences, we bring diverse communities together to support artistic risk-taking, incite creative collaboration and experimentation, and celebrate the rich historic heritage of queer artists and art. Each year, the festival theme ties together a curated visual art exhibition, performing arts series, workshops for youth and adults, artist talks, panels, and media art screenings. ___________________________________________________________ Praise for the Queer Arts Festival: “Concise, brilliant and moving” — Georgia Straight “An out-and out cultural bonanza” — Vancouver Sun  “Some of the most adventurous programming of any local arts festival.” — The Province  “On the forefront of aesthetic and cultural dialogue today” — Xtra West ___________________________________________________________

Winter_warmer_snow

Lifedrawing with HIM

him

Life Drawing with HIM is an informal, drop-in drawing and sketching social group for men.

For one night only, Life Drawing with HIM is collaborating with the Queer Arts Festival to bring this popular drop-in session to the queer arts community. All skill levels, orientations, and genders welcome. This group is facilitated, but no formal instruction is offered.

Bring your sketchbook and favourite drawing materials (no ink or paint please). Workshop
starts promptly, so please arrive on time.

MACHiNENOiSY Dance Society is looking for performers for a performance project

PROX:IMITY RE:MIX is a 2 week process that offers skill building in dance, theatre and new media and highlights the unique identities and talents of local queer and allied youth (ages 15-24). No previous performance training is necessary. The content is created from a series of discussions with the youth group around issues of identity, trust, self-respect, self-confidence and touch. The youth will then participate in the creation of the performance along with MACHiNENOiSY artistic Directors Delia Brett & Daelik, and professional dancers.

PROX:IMITY RE:MIX establishes new dance as a positive tool for education and liberation. The youth participants needn’t be previously trained in dance or theatre. Participants will learn the skills they need in physical awareness, and communication through improvisational scores, peer-peer mentorship and by training in Contact Dance. The process engages young and developing queer and non-queer community in an exciting and informative physical dialogue on, performance, identity and collaboration.

Participants will need to be available to rehearse and perform July 20 – Aug 4, 2015
Participants will be paid an honorarium for their time

The performance will take place at the Roundhouse Community Centre as part of the Queer Arts Festival, on Aug 4, 2015. Click HERE for more details.

Vancity Buzz Summer Festival Guide

Published in Vancity Buzz

Ultimate guide to 74 Metro Vancouver Summer Festivals

This summer in Metro Vancouver, music festivals, night markets and more are the perfect way to let loose in the heat. Here is a collective list of all the events happening over the summer months to inspire you to step out of the house and celebrate the beautiful Vancouver summer ahead. VIEW ARTICLE HERE.

Share