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This weekend at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre, Ballet BC welcomes Miami City Ballet for their Vancouver debut, Balanchine, a collection of three works by dance legend George Balanchine. Widely regarded as one of the most influential choreographers of the 20th Century, Balanchine is not only revered for his artistic skill, but also for the breadth of his oeuvre. This weekend’s triple bill was selected to highlight both of these features. Indeed, aside from their masterful choreography and expert execution, the three pieces chosen for Balanchine are about as different as you can get.

The first ballet, Ballo della Regina, was performed by a male principal and an all-female corps. The piece is challenging and fast paced—so challenging, in fact, that Miami City Ballet is one of the few dance companies in the world granted the right to perform it. A tale of a fisherman in search of the perfect pearl, Ballo della Regina is vibrant and dynamic, replete with high jumps and complex footwork. Despite the demanding nature of the piece, however, The Miami City ballerinas made it seem almost effortless. Quick and light-footed, they seemed to flutter across the stage.

Second on the program was Symphony in Three Movements, a plotless, large-ensemble work, first choreographed by Balanchine for the opening night of the New York City Ballet’s Stravinsky Festival in 1972. Over 40 years later, it is still impressive. Edgy and contemporary, this invigorating ballet pairs a flair for drama with a subtle sense of humour. The dancers’ high kicks, angular movements, and unexpected twists gave the piece a jazzy feel, reminiscent of West Side Story.

Concluding the evening was one of Balentine’s masterpieces, Serenade. Although meant to be plotless, it is almost impossible not to imagine a narrative in the sorrowful swells of Tchaikovsky’s Serenada in C Major for String Orchestra to which the ballet is set. Lit by a bluish glow, sixteen dancers formed a long, graceful curve across the stage, dancing in synch. The ballerinas’ slow, languid movements resembled waves upon a quiet sea, their intertwined bodies like the vertebrae of some giant beached whale. In the foreground, two female dancers vied daringly for the attention of a single male companion. The pair mirrored and inverted each other’s movements, each woman becoming the imperfect shadow of her counterpart, until the two were almost indistinguishable. Concluding with a startling finale, Serenade was an eerie, but beautiful, finish to an exceptional evening.balanchine2


Ballet BC Presents Miami City Ballet in BALANCHINE

Queen Elizabeth Theatre (649 Cambie)
February 19 – 21, 2015 • Performances at 8:00 pm
February 21, 2015 • Performance at 2:00pm

 Visit BalletBC for tickets and information.

The Cat Issue, launching February 21st at Make Gallery (257 East 7th Ave)
The Cat Issue, launching February 21st at Make Gallery (257 East 7th Ave

Come celebrate SAD Mag’s latest release: the Cat issue (no. 18), dedicated to our feline friends (somebody had to do it)!

WHEN: Saturday February 21, 2014 from 7:00pm – 10:00pm
WHERE: Make Gallery (257 East 7th Ave)


A 48-page full-colour stunner filled with original art, photography, and stories by Kristin Cheung, Dina Del Bucchia, Ola Volo, and more!

We’ll be kicking things off with a feline-inspired fashion show, curated by Blim and Keiko Boxall, at 9PM. Then we’ll knock your cat-themed socks off with a dance number by the infamous Light Twerkerz dancers ft. MC AutoKrat and DJ Rich Nines. 

Party hosted by Cynara Geissler: writer, editor, book publicist, and fierce defender of the selfie. Cynara is a print enthusiast (in both reading material and frocks) and her closet houses a litter of cat dresses. She co-hosts Fatties on Ice, an independent feminist podcast on pop culture, film, and new media.

Sweet beats by Philip Intile of Mode Moderne
Banner illustrations by Portia Boehm
Poster design by Pamela Rounis
Photography by Lily Ditchburn

 

CatWalk Banner

Come early to see the magazine & check out the art show (by Ola Volo), stay late for tunes and drinks. This magazine was created through the generous contributions of countless Vancouver artists, writers, photographers, and cat enthusiasts including:

 

Contributing Writers

Kristin Cheung

Dina Del Bucchia

Alice Fleerackers

Jackie Hoffart

Megan Jenkins

Adrienne Matei

Kaitlin McNabb

Genevieve Anne Michaels

Nina Paula Morenas

Pamela Rounis

Rebecca Slaven

Farah Tozy

Jennifer Truong

Daryn Wright

 

Contributing Photographers

 

Jackie Dives

Angela Fama

Robyn Humphreys

Shane Oosterhoff

Sarah Race

Gilly Russell

Rob Seebacher

Katie Stewart

Jennifer Truong

 

Contributing Artists

 

Portia Boehm

Kamila Charters-Gabanek * (not placed)

Kristin Cheung

Shannon Hemmett * (not placed)

Andrea Hooge

Roselina Hung

Pascale Laviolette

Coreena Lewis

Jessie McNeil * (not placed)

Aili Meutzner

Sherwin Sullivan Tija

Ola Volo

Carrie Walker

 

Contributing Stylists

 

Leigh Eldridge, Makeup Artist

Jenny-Lynn of Oh Hey Style, Hair Stylist

Monika Koch Waber, Stylist

 

Contributors to SadMag.ca

 

Alexandra Bogren

Cianda Bourrel

Alice Fleerackers

Kyla Jamieson

Megan Jenkins

Shmuel Marmorstein

Lise Monique

Cole Nowicki

Shannon Waters

 

SADCAST: The SAD Mag Podcast

Jackie Hoffart, Producer, Host, Editor

Stu Popp, Co-Host

 

Board of Directors

Sean Cranbury

Megan Lau

Mac Lugay
Amanda McCuaig

Amanda Lee Smith

Pamela Sheppard

Daniel Zomparelli

 

Thank yous

The Cobalt

Lily Ditchburn

Rommy Ghaly

Yuriko Iga of BLIM

Lizzy Karp & Rain City Chronicles

MAKE

Madeleine Michaels + Luna the Cat

Mr. Diva

Patrick Winkler

Teresa Watling + Enoki the Cat

VOKRA

Bijou, Nico, Frankie, Mr. Darren Lovenstuff, Indy & Eliot

 

We are now well into the winter months but the phrase “Winter is coming” (not just a pop culture reference!) is one that haunts us Canadians even on the balmiest summer days. Love it or hate it, we can’t avoid having some kind of relationship with the winter.

Brie Neilson and Ian Moar are local artists and musicians who recently collaborated on a show exploring the connections we have with our longest season. The exhibit ran from November 20–December 19 at the Lookout Gallery. These two are worth keeping on the radar—it’s always a pleasure to see what they’ll be up to next.

Catch Brie’s solo music project on February 6 at Skinny Fat Jack’s on Main Street. 

Brie photo

SadMag: What was your process for coming up with inspiration for this exhibit?

Brie Neilson:After moving back from Montreal last year, I was over for a visit at Ian and Tracy’s (Ian’s wife). We were talking about project goals and Tracy said, “Hey you two should do a painting show together!” We were lightly brainstorming different themes and someone jokingly blurted out something Game of Thrones related and we ended up settling on ‘Winter is Coming’.

Ian Moar:We instantly started getting cool winter images, so we decided to go with that theme.

SM: Do you feel that there’s something about the experience of winter that is quintessential to a Canadian artist’s identity?

BN:When I lived in Montreal and winter was especially long and cold, it was very important to get out into it. To embrace it and use it—go skating and skiing and walking, and not hide inside. It was the only way to get through it. Many of my childhood winter memories growing up in BC were from our cabin at Whistler where we were always outside. Going back in was so nice, so cozy. I guess I like the contrast, the extremes.

IMG_9800Because we experience true winter here in Canada, I think it can make us more active people. And maybe more creative, because having seasons provides boundaries and limitations. Summer is wide open, while winter binds us—having the flow from one to the other is interesting and inspiring and provides momentum.

IM:Winter in Vancouver is such a different experience than the rest of Canada (with the biblical rains here) but I think winter shapes all Canadians, and the colder harsher places can turn out great artists because you’re not sitting around sunbathing on the beach, you’re escaping winter via music or painting or whatever.

SM: You each took a unique perspective on the winter theme. How has your relationship with winter shaped your pieces?

BN: I have a very positive relationship with winter. My paintings are all inspired by family photos: old and current and from all of my ‘homes’: Vancouver, Whistler, Montreal and Nova Scotia (where my husband is from). I went with a more literal interpretation of winter and ended up painting snowy landscapes and cabin scenes, my parents on the ski hill and friends in fur coats. I was hoping to evoke in the viewer the kinds of feelings I get when I think of winter.

IM: Winter for me has a bleak, dark vibe. Aside from skiing I could really do without it altogether. My pieces have a bit of that moodiness and darkness. I tried to combat my natural inclination to paint only ruins, graveyards and the like with some things a little more life-giving as well.

photo 4photo 3 (1)    

SM: Did this particular exhibit present any new challenges for you as artists?

BN:Timing was an issue! We thought we had so much time when we planned the show, but we both ended up cramming which is challenging and exciting, and almost always inevitable. Also, it was an interesting approach to plan the show and then make the work. Usually a show comes out of work, I think.

IM: I really have not painted much since I finished my fine arts degree in the late ’80s, so it took a bit to get my groove on. Hopefully this will kickstart me into painting on a regular basis as I really enjoyed the process of creating pieces for this show.

SM: Do you have any projects lined up next?

BN: I’ll be back to focusing on my music again. I have a gig coming up on February 6 with Arnt Arntzen at Skinny Fat Jack’s on Main Street.

IM:Not right now, but I want to keep the momentum up and try to get a show together in the not too distant future.

photo 1 (1)photo 5

"i still dream about you" by Roselina Hung
“i still dream about you” by Roselina Hung

For the month of February, all new subscribers to Sad Mag will be entered to win an exclusive print of “i still dream about you” by Roselina Hung. Each subscription counts for 2 entires! 

SUBSCRIBE NOW

 

Local artist Roselina Hung still dreams about her last cat Ari, and isn’t afraid to talk—or draw—about it. In her latest piece, i still dream about you, she incorporates these feline reveries into a poster-sized collage print, piecing together a series of hand-drawn portraits her own and others’ past cats. For ex-pet owners, Hung writes on her blog, the print might capture feelings of love, loss and obsession; but “for anyone who hasn’t owned a cat before,” she warns, “the image can propagate the idea of the ‘crazy cat lady’ ”. 

For the sake of all our self-proclaimed crazy cat readers out there, we couldn’t let this opportunity pass us by. Sad Mag sat down with Hung for the scoop on all things art, feminism, and of course…cats.

 

SM: So lets start with the basics. Where are you from? How did you get into all of this?

RH: I’m from Vancouver. I grew up here and did my undergrad at UBC in fine arts. After I finished there, I moved to London, England and I did my masters there at Saint Martins. I was there for about 3 years and then I moved back at the end of 2006.

 

SM: How did you originally get into art?

RH: I think I’ve kind of always been doing it. There was never really any doubt in my mind that this was what I was going to do. When I was growing up, I’d tell myself that I was going to do something else—you know, like a more “practical” job. But I always just kind of ended up going back to art. I just always knew.

 

SM: You’ve done some residences in some amazing places—Banff, Paris, Reykjavik—has any one place stuck with you in particular?

RH: Each one was so different. I got something different out of all of them. When I went to Paris, that was the first time I moved away from home…and the first time I moved somewhere where I didn’t speak the language. I had a studio there just off the Seine and across from the Louvre, so that was a very romantic idea of being an artist. [The residency] in Michigan was kind of like summer camp. Off in the woods, we were in cabins and there was a lagoon. We’d all come together for home-cooked meals. And the Reykjavik one was an even smaller group, and the environment there was so unlike anywhere else—almost no trees, everything’s low bush, shrubbery. Parts of it look like the moon!

 

SM: Can you tell me a little about the cat print?

RH: While I was [in Michigan] I found some fabric with all these animal heads on it. Something about it was so tacky and gross, but it also really attracted me. So I made some mock-ups with different fabrics I found—a cat one, dogs, horses.

 

SM: How did you find the cats you used?

RH: I wanted to find images with people’s pets that they didn’t have anymore—that had passed away or been given away, so I was asking people for pet photos. Not many people sent anything to me actually…I think dog people would send more. I even had people write me and say, “let me know when you do a dog one.”

 

SM: What about cats attracted you?

RH: I’ve always just liked cats, and I had a cat for a while. And my cat still comes up in my dreams—you know, every once in a while. Once you’ve had a pet and it passes away, you just always miss it.

RoselinaHung-pbkm-print
http://roselinahung.com/

 

SM: Is that the same idea behind your pretty boys kill me collection?

RH: There’s a bit of a parallel. But with the pretty boys, I guess it’s a different kind of desire and love…

 

SM: I hope so!

RH: (Laughing) A different kind. I’ve done a couple now with different [themes].

 

SM: Where do the titles come from?

RH: They’re from text messages and chats that I’ve had.

 

SM: Really? How do those pretty boys feel about it?

RH: I don’t know…I haven’t talked to any of them. In some ways, they’re so generic—anyone could say them with how people text and chat. I don’t even know that they’d know it was from them.

 

SM: It seems so much of our communication is like that these days—generic. And that we build so much of our identity through these almost anonymous texts and chats. Did you think about that while you were working on the pieces?

RH: I was interested in the way that we were communicating desire and love through these little snippets of text. There’s only so much that you can put into [them]. They aren’t even original; we’re just repeating things that we’ve seen or heard somewhere before. Kind of like lyrics from songs—clichéd and repeated.

 

SM: I also noticed that you opted for male instead of the traditional female muse for this collection. What was your intention with that?

RH: I was thinking about that a lot, actually. They had “pretty boys” in art history. A lot of times they’d be the angels or the gods—all quite young and angelic looking. But it was always men painting them. I just kind of wanted to see a woman do it.

 

SM: So, the women in your paintings, are they supposed to be you?

RH: Kind of…kind of not. They don’t look like me, but the stories are all ones that I identify with, events that have happened in my life. I put a bit of myself into it, but my identity is hidden behind those women.

 

SM: Is it hard to put so much of yourself into your work?

RH: Before, I was doing more self-portraits—I was putting way more of myself into the work. Now I can just put the work out there and stand back. It’s still personal, but not so personal that I’m…you know…taking everything personally.

 

SM: Alright, one last question for the cat aficionados out there: Do you have a favourite cat story?

RH: My cat was an indoor cat, because I used to live near the driving license place and I was afraid of letting him out. He was actually pretty big, almost 20 lbs. or so, and my bed was small. I couldn’t sleep sometimes, so every night I would close my bedroom door. For a small period of a couple months or so, I would hear my cat running around the house as soon as I went to bed. I guess he’d been chasing a necklace of mine that I had dropped on the floor, [because] in the morning, he left it at my door. A couple weeks later, he left this little artificial rose, and then the third time he left me a little teddy bear. You know how cats leave gifts for they’re owners? They’re usually dead animals. I had the best cat—he gave me romantic gifts!

 

 

The annual Blim Holiday Market is back! Join us and 48 local vendors at the Fox Cabaret on Saturday December 20th from 12 – 5pm for shopping, snacks, and Santa Garfield.

 

The Blim holiday market is the place to be, even if you’ve managed to finish your holiday shopping in November like a champ – it’s a cozy, intimate gathering of some of Vancouver’s most thoughtful and talented creators and collectors. You can expect handmade accessories, jewelry, vintage clothes and knick knacks, cards, gifts, and sweets to be abound amidst the glorious glow of the Santa Garfield photobooth.

 

There’ll be hot food prepared in-house by Japanese cook Open Sesame, and two free raffle draws at 2pm and 4pm. We’ll also be there selling back issue magazines, subscriptions, and gift packs at a discount! Feel free to swing by for a hang out or a high five.

 

As per usual, our vendors are going to be on top of their game. Here’s three to peruse:

Sleepless Mindz
Sleepless Mindz

Sleepless Mindz will be selling short- and long-sleeve T-shirts, denim jackets, denim shorts, and bandanas. Some of them are reversible, some of them are patched, and all of them are awesome.

 

Rachel Rainbow will be attending, selling accessories and jewelry! Shrink-plastic geometric unicorn earrings, tassels, and necklaces. Rachel Rainbow is grounded in whimsy, nostalgia, and fanciful colours, and as described by Rachel, is created for pretending.

 

Aomori Workshop will be on site with natural body soaps, shampoo bars, chapsticks and more. From ginger to australian coral, these handmade goods are perfect to check off the rest of the friends on your gift list. Everything is reasonably priced and smells delicious. Aomori also takes orders for bridal showers, weddings, and other events.

 

To find out more about the Blim Holiday Market, follow @blimblimblim and hashtag #blimmarket on Twitter. Admission is by donation.

blimposter

 

Mandy-Lyn photo  http://www.mandy-lyn.com/sons-and-daughters
Mandy-Lyn photo

Presented by Visual College of Art and Design (VCAD) fashion marketing students, Tara Jean McTavish, Stephanie Martin, Eugenia To, and Jaspreet Johal–Showcasing Sons + Daughters Eyewear–CITY KIDS will be held at Make Studios on Saturday, October 25from 12-6PM. Make will be transformed into a mini, child-friendly NYC (cotton-candy included). Food and drinks will be available, as well as entertainment from a live Lady Liberty statue. The students have created installations that will probably blow your mind, so we naturally wanted to chat with their creative team about their process.

 

Who is involved in the project?

Tara Jean McTavish: The four of us [Tara Jean McTavish, Stephanie Martin, Eugenia To, and Jaspreet Johal], Natasha Campbell, Calvin Yu and Shiva Shabani, the Sons + Daughters team, Kari Gundersen, Fentimans, VCAD, Arts Umbrella, PetitePuf, and Parallel 49.

 

What can people expect to see when they come to Make?

TJM: A big city for kids, which they can play in and they can engage with.

Eugenia To: Lots of interactions, fun times, activities for both parents and kids, so it’s really a fun family event.

 

How did the idea for CITY KIDS come about?

TJM: It’s a project for our Fashion Promotion class. Stephanie had the idea, she researched that September was a month for kids’ and it was a month to recognize this and donate money. So she was researching charities that we could donate to, and make a kid-based event.

 

Can you describe the process of creating the event?

TJM: First we started coming up with ideas of how we could make it work, and then we started thinking of companies we could involve with this, specifically companies that work with kids. Natasha [Campbell] came up with the idea that we could work with Sons + Daughters Eyewear (http://wearesonsanddaughters.com/), then a person in our class had the idea that we could do a gallery type setting. We then started thinking about the clientele that Sons + Daughters is based around, and that New York and kind of a city-kid event would be more suiting towards their target customer.

 

Which sections of NYC did you choose to focus on? And why did you choose them?

TJM: The first one you will see when you walk in is Time Square, and we also have Brooklyn, which has a graffiti wall that kids get to express their creativity and paint on it in any way that they want. Then next to that we will have Central Park, which is based off of the John Lennon memorial that is painted in chalk paint, so kids can actually be on the ground in the “grass” surrounding, and they can play with chalk on the memorial. Then it is Soho, that will have steps up to it, kind of an art space that is full of bricks, with a door that opens to a mural that kids can take photos in front of. This will also have a “tickle trunk”, provided by Arts Umbrella, so they can wear different things for the pictures. Then there is the Upper East Side, which has more of a Gossip Girl feel, with dress up items for both boys and girls. And lastly, there is going to be a live statue of the Statue of Liberty to engage with the kids and a live video playing clips of Sons + Daughters and some NYC imagery. Oh and free balloons for the kids!

 

Have you run into ay challenges?

TJM: Well the installations are just very large, so making them takes a very long time, it’s just time consuming and there is a lot of space that is needed. So getting the boxes, making sure that everything is where it should be, and getting everything done on time. Its more waiting for the paint to dry that takes a long time, there’s like eighteen layers of paint on these things to be honest.

 

Lastly, what was the best thing about putting together CITY KIDS?

ET: I think just experiencing this as a group, doing team work and just planning everything and coming together with ideas. Painting together, gathering at TJ’s place, and just relaxing but also working hard together.

TJM: Yeah, nice team bonding! We all work well together. I’m also just excited for the creativity, I love arts and crafts, so it’s just fun to be making it on a grand scale. People actually will get to look at it and enjoy it! Also, I love kids so it’s nice that we get to work with them one on one during the event. I also love Sons + Daughters, I think their eyewear is just so gorgeous. I want my kids wearing it.

ET: And on the other side, were making connections. Obviously we wouldn’t have any reasons to reach out to these people if it wasn’t for this project.

 

All in all, a mini NYC sounds like a nice Saturday afternoon to us. If you’re interested in a quick vacation this weekend, head down to Make this weekend, details can be found on the event page here.

Interview by Cianda Bourrel

Sons+Daughters

You know we love books, you know we love art, so it only makes sense that we’re hosting the official after party for the Vancouver Art/Book Fair this October. Coinciding with the launch of our Suburbia issue, come on out to Make. Studios on October 4th from 7-10pm. There will be music, there will be beer, there will be beautiful people, and there will most definitely be a stylish double issue of Sad Mag. Oh, and celebrations too.

 

Art + books = match made in Sad Mag Heaven.
Art + books = match made in Sad Mag Heaven.

What’s this Art/Book Fair all about?

Free and open to the public, the Vancouver Art/Book Fair is the only international art book fair in Canada and one of only two on the West Coast. In 2014 the event launches with a Members Preview on October 3 from 6–8pm and takes place on October 4 and 5 from 12pm to 5pm. It is anticipated to attract over 1,500 visitors from across the Greater Vancouver Area and beyond.

Who organized this supreme sounding event?

Presented by Project Space, VA/BF is a two-day festival of artists’ publishing featuring nearly one hundred local, national and international publishers, as well as a diverse line-up of programs, performances and installations. Featured artists travel to Vancouver from across Canada and the globe, and produce everything from books, magazines, zines and printed ephemera to digital, performative or other experimental forms of publication.

Details of the issue launch are as follows—

  • What: Suburbia (double) issue launch + Vancouver/Art Book Fair after party
  • Where: Make Studios, 257 East 7th Ave., Vancouver
  • When: October 4, 2014 from 7-10pm
  • Why: Art, books, magazine, beauty
  • Who: You, duh.
  • RSVP: Of course, right here

Enjoy the Fair and then, of course, enjoy the party with us Sad Maggers! More details can be found on our Facebook page, so invite all y’all friends and join us for an autumnal (no festive gourds guaranteed).

Finger guns are a key aspect of Kim's creative process.
Finger guns are a key aspect of Kim’s creative process.

So you want to live a more passion-filled, purposeful and creative life . . . riiiight after you watch that Seinfeld re-run, organize your Tupperware drawer, talk to your cat Professor Snuggles, and water your cactus plant. Sound familiar? The anxiety over starting a creative project and making it perfect can be so overwhelming at times that we’d rather do almost anything else. Solution? Do it—and make it ugly. In fact, Make it Mighty Ugly says Kim Piper Werker, the author behind the motivating handbook for vanquishing creative demons.

Sad Mag: Tell us a little bit about yourself:

Kim Piper Werker: I’m a writer and editor in Vancouver. I’ve worked for the last decade in the crafts industry, editing magazines and writing books. In 2010, I started a project to address some of the issues I kept bumping into personally and professionally—it involves making something ugly. On purpose. Personally, this addressed a nagging habit I had of feeling very concerned that people would discover I wasn’t actually very crafty. I was so plagued by this feeling that I’d often sabotage my own projects. If something was going really well, I’d sort of intentionally mess it up, to save myself from feeling the pressure to keep it going well. Nuts, I know. But that self-doubt (or, maybe, that certainty that I wasn’t talented or creative or skilled enough to make something great), fear of failure and perfectionism are pretty much universal – everyone feels some of all of that at some point or another (or all the time). Anyway, the ugly thing really stuck with me, and it’s been my primary focus for the last few years.

More personally, I was born in Brooklyn, New York, and moved to Vancouver twelve years ago. I love to read books, chill with my family, and I’ve gotten a little obsessed lately with making soap.

SM: I admit that I’m a little envious of your New York roots. What was growing up in Brooklyn like? What drew you to Vancouver? 

KPW: I grew up in a lower-middle-class neighbourhood of Brooklyn called Canarsie—probably one you haven’t heard of, eh? My family lived on the top floor of a post-war three-story walk-up, and I really and truly had that childhood where I played in the street with the neighbour’s kids and my mom would yell out the window for me to come inside for lunch. I walked to school by myself from the time I was six, and I was heartbroken when my family moved to a suburb of another city in New York State when I was ten. I was a city kid, man. The suburbs seemed like another planet to me.

At the same time, I really loved the open space of living closer to the country, and because I spent my summers in day camps or overnight camps way out in the middle of nowhere, that love of nature created some confusion for me and my simultaneous love of the city. So when I was in university, I decided, without ever having been there, that San Francisco was my obvious goal. I’d move there and have both city and a slower pace and some nearby open spaces.

Then, when I was in grad school when I was twenty-three, I met a guy I ended up marrying, and he had grown up in Vancouver. He’s the only person I’d ever known who couldn’t wait to move back to his hometown, and when he brought me to Vancouver for the first time to visit, I discovered that it had everything I’d wanted out of the mythical San Francisco, and I fell in love with Canada, too. So after we got married, we moved here, and though I find the city a little slow for my taste sometimes, and a little lacking of the gruffness and openness of urban life I really value as a New Yorker, I love it here.

SM: What inspired you to write Make it Mighty Ugly?

KPW: I’d been doing Mighty Ugly workshops for a couple of years when I had the idea of writing a book inspired by it. In my workshops, I walk people through making an ugly creature that’s intentionally hideous. It’s a great challenge for a lot of people, and very liberating for others. Every time I’d lead a workshop, I’d have at least one utterly fascinating conversation with someone about the exercise. One day I decided I wanted to explore the idea in-depth—how and why it’s important to me, how and why I think it can help people address their own creative demons, etc.

SM: Why make something “mighty ugly?” How does this process liberate the artist within?

KPW: It’s just something we’re never, ever asked to do. Which makes it a very different sort of exercise, and difference – and the discomfort that comes with it – can be tremendously liberating. Making something ugly on purpose forces us to be aware of how we consider beauty/aesthetics/marketability/appeal in ways we usually just take for granted when we make things. And for people who don’t consider themselves creative, who may not focus on beauty/aesthetics/marketability/appeal in the course of their daily lives, making something ugly on purpose removes the pressure they feel (for surely they feel it, whether they realize it or not) to make something that possesses those qualities, something they’re inclined to say off the bat that they can’t do.

This little cover is anything but ugly.
This little cover is anything but ugly.

SM: Why do you suppose fear of failure is the ultimate enemy of creativity?

KPW: That assertion was pretty much marketing copy. I think perfectionism is no less powerful an enemy of creativity. But fear of failing is a fabulous excuse to give up on an idea before you even try it out. So I suppose maybe it really is the ultimate enemy of creativity, because we use that fear as a reason not to even try.

SM: How do you make time for creative projects? Do you follow a schedule or are you more spontaneous?

KPW: No schedule for me. I’m doing a project this year called #yearofmaking, for which I’ve committed to making something—anything—every day. Sometimes it’s spaghetti and sauce from a jar for dinner. Sometimes it’s starting an art journal or knitting a few rows on a scarf. Sometimes it’s making a batch of cold-process soap. So for at least a few minutes every day, I make something. 

SM: How do you set the mood for creativity?

KPW: I don’t. I just make stuff or write stuff. If I get really into it, I allow myself to push other things aside so I can follow it through, but I don’t think creativity is some divine sort of thing that requires a particular mood. As author/artist Austin Kleon wisely says, creativity is a tool. I make sure I use it frequently.

SM: What music are you listening to right now? What book is by your bed?

KPW: I’m not! I have a timer ticking in the background to help me focus (go Pomodoro Technique!), and my dog’s barking at someone walking by outside. The book by my bed is The Faraway Nearby, by Rebecca Solnit.

SM: What advice do you give aspiring creatives?

KPW: Stop aspiring, start creating.

Kim will be joining two authors, Leanne Prain (author of Strange Material: Storytelling through Textile) and Betsy Greer (author of Craftivism) – on a book tour in October. Details can be found online.

Also, check out her blog, and the Mighty Ugly website (with a book-group guide and more info about the book, etc.). Other online stuff: kpwerker on Twitter, Instagram and Pinterest.

 

fama_bio_pic_bw.largeAngela Fama is no stranger to Sad Mag. Her images have been featured in several issues, most notably the (unprecedented) 10-page fashion spread in the Suburbia issue launching this fall. We love her. This love and admiration is not limited to an affection for her work alone–we relish in sitting down with Fama on a semi-monthly basis to hear about her new fixations and the new projects+ideas she is sizzling over.

During our most recent brain-sizzle, she described a photography project that will take her across North America in a pop-up photo studio to capture micro-expressions elicited by subtle questioning about the nature of love. As Fama outlines, “What Is Love will reveal through comparative photography the strength and beauty of vulnerability that can be found within all adults, regardless of age, nationality, income, sexual orientation or gender.” 

It’s about community. We’re into that.

With our Movement issue on the horizon for this winter, we want to throw the weight of our summer carb-intake behind a project we believe in, and encourage you to do the same. Want to help an extremely talented local photographer create a body of work that explores a universal human emotion? We thought so. Check out her kickstarter campaign here and stayed tuned for updates on her progress. If you’re independently wealthy and want to be featured in Fama’s book, you can pledge $1500 and receive a 2-hour “What is Love” session for your friends and family. Your face might just end up in a book. Just sayin’.

www.angelafama.com
http://www.wabisabibutterfly.com/

What is Love

Taken shamelessly from Fama’s project page:

ANSWERS TO A FEW Q’S YOU MIGHT HAVE

Q: WHY SHOULD YOU FUND THIS PROJECT?
A: My Kickstarter goal is researched and set for how much is needed for the motorhome/pop-up studio itself and including funder’s rewards.

The rest of the costs and other expenses (gas, camera, equipment, food, emergency) are covered through hopefully some grant funding and definitely through personal savings I have been building this past year and will continue to build this coming year.

I have to ask YOU, my community, to help me build this project, it cannot happen any other way. The collaboration begins here!

Q: WHY SO LONG A WAIT?
A: I have to prepare. If the funding goal is met, I will purchase a Class-C  “pre-loved” Motorhome and create the pop-up studio.

I have PR, marketing and conversations to continue creating with social media, radio stations, magazines, national and local newspapers, locations, events, festivals and volunteers.

Q: WHY MAY?
May is Sexual Assault Awareness month, the perfect date to officially begin this adventure. It is also the beginning of the two months both Joel and I have committed solely to this project.

Q: HOW CAN I LEARN ABOUT THE JOURNEY AS YOU GO?
A: I can be abundantly found on InstagramFacebookTwitterLinkedin and/or my blog. Once the project “officially” begins, I will update these daily with stories, thoughts and/or images.

Q: CAN I BE A PART OF IT?
A: Yes of course! Both here on Kickstarter and on www.wabisabibutterfly.com. I will have locations listed with corresponding dates, addresses and times.

??Q: DRIVE ACROSS NORTH AMERICA IN A MOTORHOME?!? EWWW! AREN’T YOU CONCERNED ABOUT THE ECO-FOOTPRINT YOU’LL BE LEAVING BEHIND??
A: YES! ?I intend to DIY the motorhome to be as eco-friendly as a “pre-loved” motorhome can be. In addition to solar paneling for the interior electricity that will recharge my photo gear between locations, I will be looking into rain harvesting, wind energy and composting toilets.

Daryn Wright heads out to Lake Errock, BC to chat with Suburbia Issue artist, Shelley Stefan. Check out Stefan’s up-coming exhibition at Make Creative on Thursday August 28, 2014: Multiplicity of Self, Queer Portraits. Read the full article in Sad Mag’s Suburbia Issue, out in Fall 2014. 

Shelley Stefan stokes the fire in her wood stove.

Her small studio is an artist’s dream: heavy wooden doors open up to a tiny room filled with tubes of oil paints, a cushy armchair, and various bric-a-brac—a seventies bear lamp, an American flag. The most striking element of the space, however, are the self-portraits that cover the walls from floor to ceiling. In black charcoal, images of Stefan look back like from a broken mirror—some look angry, some sad, some pensive.

Stefan's studio in Lake Errock, BC. Photo by Daryn Wright
Stefan’s studio in Lake Errock, BC. Photo by Daryn Wright

Stefan, whose work includes “The Lesbian Effigies” (2006) and “B is for Butch” (2010),  studied at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana and the Maine College of Art, and currently teaches in the Department of Fine Arts  at the University of the Fraser Valley. Growing up in Chicago, Stefan has lived in several urban centers but now calls Lake Errock  home. The rural setting, far from a stone’s throw from the city, seems at odds with the politics of identity, sexuality, and gender at work in her paintings.

Despite this, Stefan seems at home. Throughout the interview the 40-year-old painter kept the stove, whose masonry she laid herself, well-fed with the firewood she chops and stores just outside.

Shelley Stefan: Right now I’ve got about four series on the go. In the studio here there’s a series of self-portraits—I’m aiming to do hundreds of mirror-based [self-portraiture], kind of old-school, academic, kind of dialing it back to the traditional methods of introspection.

I find there’s something really neat when there’s the human form live, and you surrender a bit of accuracy, but what you get is kind of like raw imperfect humanness that I really like. I’m working with my own face for awhile, just to see if I do this 300 times, am I seeing different elements of myself? Some of them are off, some of them are moody, and some of them look like my ancestors.

They all seem different. They’re all me looking in a mirror at different times. It’s almost embarrassing, and I think that’s the point. I’m at the point in my career where I kind of want to allow myself to be vulnerable.

Sad Mag: Self-portraiture—particularly the kind you’re doing, with a mirror—is rooted in an old art form. There seems to be a connection between this practice and the rural space you reside in. Do you think they’re related in any way?

SS: I think that there’s a part of me that’s very raw and sublime. I think that comes first. I have Italian ancestors who were artists, and that can mean many things but what it means for me is there’s this intense passionate anchor. So having my studio in a rural space like this is a way to ground and isolate that kind of passionate energy in a way that ironically isn’t ego-based. It’s almost like it’s a laboratory and I’m trying to keep the dish clear. So I guess on some level as an artist, my choice of a rural studio feels like the best substrate to tease out the rawest and purest emotion in my work. I’m really influenced by my surroundings.

SM: Through the process, have you learned anything about yourself?

SS: I’m still discovering. Through my works in the past few years I’ve discovered a lot about interiority. When I’ve been working in portraiture, I’ve realized on some level, self-portraiture, if done properly, allows for uncovering different facets.

I feel completely connected to my Italian ancestors when I paint and draw. It’s crazy. There’s something about listening to Italian opera and being in here and being like, “They get me.” When I’m painting and I’m in the middle of it and there’s Italian opera on I’m like, “Those fuckers are crazy and so am I and it’s okay, because you’re human. You’re alive on this planet.”

You can see Stefan’s work up-close and personal at her upcoming solo exhibition at Make (257 East 7th Ave) on Thursday August 28th from 7– 10pm featuring Italian-themed beverages and the musical stylings of DJ Ruggedly Handsome.

Shelley Stefan
Multiplicity of Self – Queer Portraits
August 28 to September 22, 2014

OPENING RECEPTION:Thursday August 28, 2014 from 7– 10pm