The Man, Gordon Smith. Illustration by Kristina Fiedrich
The Man, Gordon Smith. Illustration by Kristina Fiedrich

Sad Mag brings you sneak peeks into issue three, launching Friday, March 19 at the ANZA Club.

“There’s lots of music I don’t understand, there’s a lot of writing I don’t understand, but I try to. It’s my lack.”

This humility fires his curiosity, as he maintains innumerable correspondences, attends art exhibitions all around the world, and paints in his studio every day. KEEP FRESH: EVERY DAY IS A NEW BEGINNING is written in spidery capitals on his calendar.”

—Lauren Schachter, quote Gordon Smith

Spring 2010, ISSUE THREE

http://www.sadmag.ca/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/thumb.jpgWinter 2009, ISSUE TWO

robforweb
Rob Taylor. Photograph by Tanya Goehring

Sad Mag launches issue two on December 17. Until then, we’re releasing sneak peeks from the new issue.

“In Ghana, there are many more poets who are just throwing politics at you without apology. Here, if we do that, we apologize a lot or we cloud it with some artifice. There, they’ll just say right in the middle of the poem, ‘and the President is a really lousy guy.’ We don’t get that.”

— Rob Taylor, as told to Deanne Beattie

Winter 2009, ISSUE TWO

Former Victoria resident Zan Comerford defends her hometown from the lashing so eloquently delivered in  “Cascadia Defied” by Racan Souiedan, in Sad Mag issue one.

Yes, Vancouver, we know. You’re all grown up now. oldvictoria

Your music scene is good, and you have dozens of independent art spaces. East Van holds its own in the art world, and the city brims with gorgeous, fit, stylish types on beat up bikes with passions for good espresso.

Vancouver can even claim to possess the one true criterion of any progressive West Coast city: it has more freelance graphic designers / writers / artists than one would care to shake a stick at, all of them drinking lattes in the afternoon with their dogs.

But, c’mon Vancouver, let’s not get cruel. Racan Souiedan’s article “Cascadia Defied” in the Autumn 2009 issue of Sad Mag would have us believe that there is hardly another Canadian city that comes close to your brilliance.

Victoria may be small, awkward and kind of annoying. Sure, it’s the runt of the litter, but as a city, it has something to offer too. It offers you things that none of its littermates can—only the best of those things that make life worth living: dating, art, and partying.

Let’s start where it all starts, really: sex. Victoria’s dating pool is the Don Perignon of getting it on. With a liberal university, hundreds of hospitality jobs, and thriving art and music scenes, Victoria is a destination for attractive, educated, and artistic twenty-somethings. And it gets better. Because of a phenomenon commonly known by Islanders as “The Velvet Rut,” Victoria is so comfortable that all of these eligible beauties stick around long enough to give everyone—and I mean everyone—a shot. Long known as “The Land of Ladies,” Victoria boasts three women to every man. Beyond doing wonders for one’s odds from a merely statistical standpoint, it also does wonders for your chances of “Nailing a Ten!” as they say on the street.

Strolling hand-in-hand with a good dating scene is, of course, a good nightlife. Victoria has more restaurants, pubs and bars per capita than New York, not to mention a handful of organic microbreweries that give Red Truck a run for its money.

Victoria’s music scene is longstanding, and contrary to Mr. Souiedan’s article, the well-worn music scene makes the local shows anything but boring. From grungy basement bars to scenester havens, Victoria’s music venues are attuned to exactly what makes the Island lifestyle so attractive: good beer, and good friends. Walking into a local show is to see arms thrown around shoulders, as 250 of the band’s closest friends belt out the songs to lyrics they never get tired of hearing.

Should big name acts forge the treacherous Strait of Georgia (which they do with surprising regularity) they are delighted to find a young, willing and eager audience that get just enough entertainment to keep them ravenous for a good time. Audiences rather satiated from regular snacking on live shows are tougher, blander crowds in larger metropolitan cities.

Victoria’s enthusiasm means we can hold our own among the big boys of Vancouver, Portland and Seattle in terms of art and culture. The very quality that finds Victoria being compared to these cultural havens is exactly what sets it apart.

Victoria isn’t trying to be something it’s not.

Instead of lining up to see expensive international film festivals, Victorians flock to abandoned warehouses, where guys with dreadlocks are stringing up a stolen projector. Instead of art openings with wine, cheese and pretension, groups like Panikon Deima are setting up guerrilla art installations in the creakiest fire escapes and oldest alleys in the city.

Above all, Victoria isn’t trying to compete with Vancouver, doesn’t want to be like Portland, and couldn’t care less just what Seattle would say about its coffee (as delicious and well crafted as it may be).

Victoria is too busy doing just what its inhabitants have always been doing: hanging out, relaxing, and enjoying itself.

— Zan Comerford

Sad Mag is looking for a Web Editor to join our team! If you have an interest in online publishing and a desire to gain experience with an exciting new project, consider applying for this volunteer position.

Job Requirements

  • + Direct and maintain Sad Mag‘s presence on the web, online at sadmag.ca and on social networking websites
  • + Create and direct the creation of online content (written, visual, audio, and video) for the website in collaboration with volunteer writers and artists
  • + Set publishing schedules and editorial deadlines
  • + Edit and carefully proofread all online content
  • + Grow the position and Sad Mag‘s online presence to reflect the growth and maturation of the magazine
  • + Meet with Sad Mag‘s editorial staff on a monthly basis

Qualifications

  • + Professional or hobby experience creating and moderating websites
  • + Working knowledge of HTML, CSS, and WordPress or a desire to learn
  • + Working knowledge of social networking platforms, particularly Facebook and Twitter, or a desire to learn
  • + Working knowledge or experience producing podcasts and online video or a desire to learn
  • + Professional or volunteer experience working in an editorial position or in a publishing environment
  • + A demonstrated interest in writing, editing, and publishing
  • + A demonstrated interest in art and culture in Vancouver

If you would like to be considered for this position, please email us with an introductory letter and resume to info [at] sadmag [dot] ca before October 31, 2009.

 

 

Sad Magazine launched to an enthusiastic crowd on Thursday, September 17 at the ANZA club. We received the following communique from our friend Lindsay in the aftermath:

Additional evidence that the sad mag launch was awesome was discovered only when I got home and into a well lit room:

  • + there were a bunch of sad faces drawn all over my arms in permanent marker
  • + I was wearing a home made dirty dancing pin that said ‘no one puts baby in a corner’ in sharpie
  • + there was a 4 foot trail of fishing line and ribbon trailing behind me, attached to one of my boots

We had a great time!

Sounds like a fantastic time was had by all! Thank you to everyone who attended our event, cramming the ANZA club well beyond capacity, and helping us to raise money for this exciting project. 

Thanks especially to:

  • + Paul Beja, our event planner, for creating the best balloon trees of our lives, as well as the volunteers who helped us to set up the party.
  • + The volunteers who managed the bar and the front door in every manner of dressed and barely dressed.
  • + The eternally fabulous Isolde N. Barron and her support crew, for blowing our heads off with a performance of “Baby, I’m a star!” Baby, you are a star.
  • + Our DJs Jef Lepard, Ryan and Rohit, who kept us dancing all night long. 
  • + And, of course, the very talented contributors who dedicated their best work to our first issue. 

Enjoy our peek-a-boo slideshow above for folks who couldn’t make it, or those who want to relive the magic.

RIP Patrick Swayze.
RIP Patrick Swayze.

We just got a message from DJ Jef Leppard:

“THIS JUST IN. To commemorate Patrick Swayze (RIP)… I’m going to mix in songs from the movie Dirty Dancing, and we will all dance to them. For real. See you soon!!!”

Sad Mag is getting ready for Thursday. We are sad that Patrick Swayze is gone but we will dance in his honour. We will see you on the 17th, at the Anza Club. Come early, see the magazine and stay late and dance.

Sad Magazine makes its smashing debut on Thursday, September 17 at the ANZA club in Vancouver, BC. Join us for a night of drag, great music, and cheap drinks!

Thursday, September 17, 2009
ANZA Club, #3 West 8th Avenue (@Ontario)
8:00 p.m. to late!
$5—$10 suggested donation

Magic. Photography by Julie Jones.
Magic. Photography by Julie Jones.

 

As the Sad Mag family excitedly moves closer to our launch date on September 17, we’ll be giving sadmag.ca visitors exclusive sneak peeks into our premier issue. Check back in the coming weeks as we preview original content right here.

“With my second child I was in labour at bingo,” she recounts. “I had contractions. I was among other mothers who were breathing with me. They were all yelling at the caller, ‘She’s gonna have a baby for fuck’s sake! B8!’”

— Burcu Ozdemir, as told by Stephanie Orford
FALL 2009, ISSUE ONE

     Paper as Laura sees it. Photography by Laura Nguyen
Paper as Laura sees it. Photography by Laura Nguyen

My first insight into the visual team of Sad Mag‘s first issue is Laura Nguyen. Laura spent a morning in Molo’s Design studio in Gastown and photographed the team working away. Her photos can be found accompanying Stacey McLachlan’s interview with the Molo group in issue one of the magazine. Her clean and simple aesthetic makes her one of Vancouver’s up-and-coming food photographers. She is also and amazing cook, and can score you the best Vietnamese food in the city. I urge you to check out her commercial portfolio online: www.lnphoto.ca

Laura photographed some web exclusive photos for sadmag.ca and I sat down with her and chatted about her work, Sad Mag and how her summer went.

Pauline Kong's sculpture. Photography by Laura Nguyen
Pauline Kong's sculpture. Photography by Laura Nguyen

Sad Mag: Why do you photograph still life?

Laura Nguyen:I shoot still life because the combination works. I enjoy making ordinary objects beautiful. My mind just sees and understands how to manipulate and shoot still life more than any other subject. Plus, it’s fun!

Sad: What drew you to Sad Mag?

LN: Sad Mag is the perfect showcase for introducing the new crop of amazing artists and writers the city has to offer. There are so many talented people here that need an outlet like Sad Mag to introduce themselves and their work.

Sad: What do you think of food photography today?

LN:That it is taking over the world. It definitely has grown and gained popularity with the success of things like food blogs and flickr. It also has become a separate category of photography itself, not just merged in with commercial photography. Visually it has evolved from mostly simple clean high key images to having more variety with bold, sexy colours or moody, contrast lighting.

Sad: Who are some of your favourite visual artists?

LN: I admit I usually don’t pay as much attention to the artist as the art itself. However I do follow the works of John Kernick, Matt Armendariz, Lara Ferroni, and Tracy Kusiewicz.

Sad: Any show or gallery that you enjoyed going to in the past summer?

LN:I will shamefully admit I didn’t attend any shows this summer. [Brandon: No shame, Laura, no shame.)

Sad: Summer has escaped us. Highlights of the summer summer? If not one thing you regret missing this summer? Or something that you feel was lacking from your summer?

LN: My summer was pretty fantastic. Highlights being my first completed new years resolution ever which was to create my new website (it took 8 months but it still counts!) and learning how to swim. The water and I didn’t start off great together but seriously, now I think it’s the best thing ever.

Follow Laura on Flickr and check out her new work.

-Brandon