Showcasing clothing from local designers, challenging up and coming designers, and providing tips on sustainability, Eco Fashion Week has become a well-known event in Vancouver, from bloggers to socialites attending the three-day events. It kicked off on April 27th with seminars, and then ended on April 29th.  Our fashion writer Farah Tozy was invited for a special media event in part one, the Thrift Chic Challenge in part two, and the 68lb challenge in part three. Read on Sad fashion lovers. 

photo 1
Farah and her fashion pals at Value Village.

PART I:

A week before Eco Fashion Week, five journalists and I were invited to Black 2 Blond salon for a La Biosthetique pampering party. This eco-friendly hair salon not only uses natural products, it also promotes sustainability by ensuring that even the packaging for hair care, skin care, and makeup products are made from recycled materials. The European company was founded by Marcel Contier in 1950s Paris, where he blended natural ingredients with high quality products to create La Biosthetique. Siegfried Weiser, president of La Biosthetique, has kept the focus on the environment by using only natural, high quality, raw materials. With the strictest and best quality practices, La Biosthetique brings their European style to Vancouver. They have been the backbone in EcoFashion Week for many seasons, providing full makeup and hair for all the models. Feeling like an ordinary Cindy Crawford, I sipped on my coffee while receiving an aromatic scalp massage, hair treatment, hair styling and make up touch ups. It was hands down one of the best salon experiences I’ve had.

After we got dolled up, we travelled with the Eco Fashion team to the newest Value Village in Coquitlam. Thanks to Value Village, we were given gift cards to thrift together an outfit for Eco Fashion Week. Not only was I learning the tricks of the trade from none other then the eco-stylist herself Myriam Laroche, the founder of Eco Fashion Week, I was getting hooked up with an outfit for the event!

PART II:

Let’s recall the thrift chic challenge: from seasons past: three stylists receive a $500 gift card to spend at Value Village, and are required to create a collection of clothing. The looks can be for any season or occasion. Various local designers have put together amazing looks but I have to say that this seasons participants were extremely impressive.

Fancy fashions. (R-L, Man Up, Jerome, Hey Jude)
Fancy fashions. (R-L, Man Up, Jerome, Hey Jude)

First up was MAN UP by one1one magazine’s Ghazal Elhaei. With an emphasis on work attire, Ghazal stunned the audience with her pieces. Included in most of her looks were sleek button-ups,  vintage blazers, fitted pants, fun socks, shoes and best of all, scarves or glasses as an accessory. Her pieces supported each other very well, and the collection as a whole was stunning. For all the office men out there, I recommend you take note of these looks; they’re stylish and affordable!

Next up was Label Deficiency’s Jerome Onsario. This collection featured various clothing for spring and summer. His pieces ranged from dresses to pants to shorts, with casual tops and button-ups, in addition to an assortment of chunky jewelry. He decided to keep a neutral color scheme throughout the line with pops of coral. When asked how he was able to find so many coral items, he told me he was shopping at Value Village everyday for the last month to find the perfect coral colours. This is definitely not the last time you’ll hear about this newcomer.

Last, but never the least, were the stylings of Lauren Clark and Lyndsey Chow from Hey Jude. The two had a specific colour palette of pastels, whites and off-whites. Blending together socks, sandals, jumpsuits, furs, satins, silks, and patterns, all the ensembles fit so perfectly together. The talented ladies featured women’s and men’s wear with a spunky twist by having the La Biosthetique team create mysterious, dark eyes and the indescribable “I woke up like this” hair. Everything was so chic and unique that I, already being a HUGE Hey Jude fan, fell back in love.

PART III:

68lbs is on average how much clothing a person tosses in the wasteland. Instead of throwing it away, a designer rummages through Value Village stores across the lower mainland to find fabric they can manipulate into a collection of clothing effectively eliminating an addition 68lbs from being thrown away.  This years 68lb challenge candidate was Tammy Joe from Young Oak. With a simplistic, light colour palette, Tammy Joe blew away the audience. First of all, her show started off with an interpretive dance featuring 68lbs of clothing stretching across the runway. Dancers formed different shapes with their combined bodies, clinging onto each other as a trumpet player played a melodic tune.  Following the dance, the show began. Moving towards different shades and patterns, Tammy Joe focused her line on spring/summer clothing. What really impressed me was her diverse collection featuring skirts, dresses, shorts, pants and even a trench coat. My favourite piece was a sleeveless jacket that had a quilt-like material on the side. Not only was it extremely unique, it looked so comfortable! All the pieces were wearable and will be seen in my future closet.

Younh Oak shows structural flare.
Younh Oak shows structural flare.

Be sure to check out Eco Fashion Week  to learn about their upcoming events. The amazing team at Eco Fashion always puts their heart and soul into everything, making sure every event is better then the last. If you’re interested in being a part of the action, apply! They’ll love to hear about your Eco Fashion endeavors. Itching to see more photos? Head to Eco Fashion Week’s Facebook page!

selfiedanakearley
Before there were selfies, there were self-portraits

As a child, Dana Kearley remembers an obsession with deep sea and prehistoric animals.

“I love horror and gore, and I think that came from those creatures,” says the Vancouver-based illustrator. “I love the feeling of being grossed out by something. I would look at books, be grossed out, close the book and then open it again.”

Today, her illustrations aim to give viewers the same uncomfortable feeling of both wanting to look and wanting to look away through ambiguous interactions between humans, animals and hybrid creatures.

“Sometimes I’m like, ‘Why am I drawing blood?’,” she says. “I don’t know. I kind of want to make people uncomfortable. It’s so gross, but also cool—and it can be cute too, kind of funny in a different way.”

bearddanakearley

Kearley finds inspiration in the work of Marcel Dzama, a Canadian multidisciplinary artist who is best know for drawings that seem like children’s book illustrations at first glance, but are full of surreal interactions and strange details upon closer inspection.

“He’s in his own little world, and that’s how my work is too,” Kearley explains. “It’s hard to get what’s going on in my head into words, but it’s not hard to get it into images.”

Kearley is studying part-time towards a BFA at Emily Carr University of Art and Design, majoring in Illustration and Drawing. In addition to her coursework, she has recently completed the album artwork for a split seven inch EP for Sightlines and Crystal Swells.

She also volunteers for Discorder Magazine, creating a monthly illustration for the CiTR-published music magazine.

Discorderillodanakearley

“I like doing it because it doesn’t have to be completely literal. I listen to the bands first and then go from there,” Kearley explains, saying she’s done illustrations for some of her favourite bands: The Courtneys, Cool and most recently, Skinny Kids.

“I’m really happy with the illustration in this month’s magazine, so I’m going to continue with that idea [little human-ish creatures in leotards and masks, dangling from a hairy arm], but with different body parts,” she says.

“I really like Pussy Riot with their masks,” she continues, pointing out the many characters in her illustrations who also wear masks. “You don’t know who’s under there.”

7''spitdanakearleyKearley’s work can be found in this month’s Discorder magazine, and on her website: danakearley.tumblr.com.

skye promo photo

Skye Wallace is a national treasure. Her third studio album “Living II Parts” is a melodic, raw and orchestral beauty that tells an untold narrative about the vast Canadian landscape. Skye has the ability to reel you in for story time, paint portraits of barren vistas and give the illusion that all things are dead.  Her music and performance elicit power and beauty, coupled with vulnerability. She’s currently traveling the country but we caught up with Skye to ask her SadMag Local Musics Q’s:

If life weren’t filled with music it would still be filled with stories and art, some way or another.

A good show means heat and heart and soul and barely remembering what it is that you’ve done—not due to any kind of intoxication, but due to being lost in what you’re creating.

Your backing band is a very talented bunch. Devon Kroeger is my right hand (wo)man. She’s been there through thick and thin. The release show is an excellent example of what the ideal setup tends to be: myself on vocals and guitar, Devon on violin, Alex Hauka on cello, Stevie Beddall on drums, Wynston Minckler on bass, Owen Connell on keys, and Ben Doerksen on electric guitar.

Bedtime is nice, if it comes naturally.

My daily rituals include definitely brushing my teeth twice a day.

Touring is hella enjoyable; having moved around a lot when I was younger, I have certainly practiced detachment when it comes to things and homes. I don’t find it difficult to shed domestic comforts.

Best city to eat in while on the road: Burrito Jax in Halifax makes this answer Halifax

The musician to make babies with would be: Tom Waits. I like to think we’d get each other.

Favourite music video as a teenager: Sun 41 – Fat Lip/Pain For Pleasure

Favourite much music VJ: George Stromboulopoulos

Name of your favourite pet: Gummybear. A funny anecdote regarding pet names: I saw a chain email once saying your stripper name is your first dog’s name and then your first street name. This lands me at Willy Putsey. Not very sexy.

Skye is headed to Toronto to release “Living Parts” at the Horseshoe Tavern on June 4, 2014. Listen to her new album on Soundcloud and escape into the beauty that is skyewallace.com.

Cage: an amazingly complex anatomical drawing.
Cage: an amazingly complex anatomical drawing.

One moody April morning, Sophia Ahamed met with Sad Mag writer Maddie Reddon at Gene Café on Main Street. Ahamed’s work has been featured in a variety of hip publications like Juxtapoz, Color Magazine, Semi-Permanent, Design is Kinky, and (of course, yours truly) Sad Mag. But this year her work has also been up blowing up all over Vancouver in many local galleries and art shows. You might already be familiar with some of them: Hot One Inch Action, Post Up, the Postcard Show VII, and the Primacy of Consciousness. With much more work set to delight-and-disturb Vancouver in the next coming months, Ahamed spared some her time to chat with us over coffee.

Sad Mag: Who are you?

Sophia Ahamed: [Laughs.] That’s a really scary question. I guess in terms of a career, I’m a graphic designer and a visual artist. As for who I am as a person, I’m still searching for that girl. We’ll see who I think I am, like maybe in the next couple years, when I become Zen.

SM:  [Laughs.] I’ve been looking up some of your work online and I’d like to talk about some of the pieces I saw of yours in the Postcard Show. Would you like to give me a little context and tell me a little about the show?

SA: It’s a really good show put on by a friend of mine, the curator Paulina Glass. She conducts a show with about forty to fifty contemporary artists, local and international, and what they do is they create original artwork that is printed on a postcard. Usually, it’s one night, or sometimes two or three night show, where you go in and you can meet some of the artists, buy these postcards, bid on them, the bidding starts at five bucks and it goes up in increments of five. It gives everybody a chance to have a good night and come home with some art that they can afford, that’s still an original piece of artwork. It’s a really beautiful concept.

SM: I thought it went really well with your work… I thought that the phantasmatic feel of some of your illustrations, their haunting quality, really fit for me with the medium of the postcard. The postcard is so ephemeral, something that’s so transitory, sometimes it doesn’t get to its destination, there’s missed communication… Could you speak a little more on how your work fits into that medium?

SA: Yeah, I mean kind of what you said! It really is something that makes you think, it hints to what it means to be alive… to send information back and forth to different countries, the postcard might get lost it. The person you’re sending it to might not be someone who you really like, it could be an ex or an ex-friend or something. It could be any one of those things. With my work, I always try to make people feel without trying to tell them what to feel. A lot of my anatomy stuff, a lot of the body work, comes from a certain place within myself that, when I put it out there, the people who look at it pick up different messages. Usually it’s a personal one.  When they look at it ‘oh this reminds me of this time of my life when blah-blah happened,’ or it reminds them of a person, or it gives them a feeling or an emotion. It’s weird because it connects you, even though the stories are different, it connects you on an emotional level. I’ve felt these emotions too. It may not be the same people or the same situations but I think that is kind of what brings you closer to your audience, “Oh I understand what this artist was feeling maybe, I kind of feel that too, even though if that’s not it exactly.” They have no idea whether it’s true or not but it kind of brings you together on a… I want to say psychic… but maybe on a mental level, which I think is very important.

From the same series: Heart of Glass.
From the same series: Heart of Glass.

SM: So even if the level that you two are on is incommensurate, it’s still nice to have a connection.

SA: Yes, I think that is true of humans, of our species anyways. We’re all connected emotionally. It doesn’t matter what your background is. I think that if we all sat down and talked about relationships, something like a common subject, all our emotions, even our experiences would be different, and the outcome different, but the emotional baggage that comes with it, happy or sad, connects us all. I think that is what really connects us as human beings.

SM: Our emotional baggage connects us! I like that… I’ve seen some of the pieces from your most recent gallery, “Milk – an abstract exploration of anatomy,” would you mind describing some of the work from this exhibit?

SA: It was a collection of all the anatomy work I’ve done and some new things. I tried to create that emotional connection by exposing the body, not by going through surrealism and nudity, which is a way that a lot of people express vulnerability. I tried to go beneath the surface and say, we all have our bodies and we all look a certain way but if you tear back the skin, and look underneath, you can see that there’s a lot of similarities. In fact, if everyone was inside out, there wouldn’t be a lot of gender and racial issues because we’d all be the same.

SM: But, also, the things that make us the same are kind of terrifying.

SA: Yeah, exactly. You start to see yourself more as an entity, more of an energy, rather than as someone who is in a body. So what I did with the show is I tried to go on a micro level. I started with a few pieces of the brain like cells, the abstract cellular, what’s going on in the inner body… Towards portraits and portraits of the body, looking at the anatomy within all that. I tried to show a process. But, at the same time, with the milk thing, I did it in an abstract way so that people don’t have to feel so committed to knowing exactly what each anatomy piece means. It’s not a biology class. You know what I mean? [Laughs.] You can kind of look at it and enjoy it and take whatever you want from it and kind of create your own ideas, emotions and feeling from it, without having to first say that this is the heart, this is the aorta…

SM: You don’t get caught up in classifications.

SA: You just get caught up in what it means to you and so that’s what I tried to do with the show.

Emanuel.
Emanuel.

SM: Why Milk?

SA: Because milk flows… It’s something that all of us grow up on, “drink milk, it’s good for your body.” And it is! I think that’s why I chose it because it’s free flowing… It flows through you. When I think about milk, I see white, I think about bones. I think about strong bones and I see it as a liquid, flowing throughout your body. It engulfs you, it strengthens each little part… So that’s what I thought about. I thought about having that kind of abstractness, how it strengthens the individual, again maybe not on a physical level, but on an emotional, mental, spiritual level.

SM: I’ve noticed that in several of your exhibits that you have a statement you use repeatedly that talks about the healing capacity of art. How do you see art as producing a healing? What kind of healing processes does your work seek to engage? Is it general? Do you have very specific ideas about healing?

SA: I like to leave that process open. I feel like it does. I think all art provides a healing process.

SM: But from what? The ills of society? From mental anguish?

SA: The mental and emotional. As kids we hear take care of your body and go to the gym and, that’s really important and all that, but there’s also the mental, emotional, spiritual health that people don’t touch on. It’s kind of looked as “oh whatever, just get over it,” you know when someone asks how you are doing you say good even though you feel like shit… What I mean is, art is an emotional healing process. When you stand there, look at the art, then you read the artist’s statement… Sometimes there’s this connection. That can happen with anybody’s work, anywhere. I really feel that. That makes sense to me.

SM: So sometimes art’s ability to identify a problem is what is healing.

SA: I think so. It’s one of those things. As an artist, you can paint your feelings. It’s kind of cliché… But as an artist you can paint your feelings, you can write or do poetry whatever, act out your feelings in this kind of contained way and you can share that with other people and I think that’s very powerful. Especially in today’s world when things are just getting more and more hectic. I leave it up to the person, you now, whichever way it brings them clarity, with whatever they are going through, even if it’s just run of the mill, like “I’m stressed out I need some sleep sort of thing,” it’s completely up to them. I’m just trying to invite them to be open.

SM: What’s coming up for you?

SA: A couple shows going on. A show with Jose Rivas at Hot Art/Wet City. It’s called Two Faced and it should be going up in August. I have a secondary solo show coming up at Kafka’s on Main for the Fall. So both shows will have new work. And Textbook Magazine, which launched April 24 at GWorks.

PSH.
PSH.

immixUNA1Michael Slobodian
immix by Montreal choreographer Giconda Barbuto (Michael Slobodian photo)

Appreciation for the arts should be a given. Still, we live in a world of uninspired internet quizzes (what kind of cheese are you?), and wealthy, bored women fighting on TV as entertainment. I was excited to see Ballet BC’s final production of the 2013/2014 season, UN/A, but was also nervous that, as someone who is not a frequent ballet attendee, I might not “get it.”

Broken into three acts, UN/A premiered the original, distinct sequences of three individual choreographers:

Twenty Eight Thousand Waves, Cayetano Soto’s first work for Ballet BC, began with an ethereal, vocal harmony. The figureless dancers began to move in slow, almost stop-motion movements. With the men in muted grey and the women in nude, non-repetitive motions and fluid transitions slowly give way to a frantic burst. As the music becomes frenzied, the dancers move like molecules, kinetic with heat. The final seconds display more energy than all the time preceding. And then, as the music stills, the breathless dancers produce no sound other than the smudge of their shoes as they spin furiously and then come to a full stop.

The second act, Lost and Seek by Spanish-born Gustavo Ramirez Sansano, began with melodic piano and cool on-stage lighting. The dancers—androgynous and childlike—make long, willowy movements that are both deliberate and gravity-defying. The scene is playful, showing what appears to be children wrestling, laughing, and even chasing a giant wave—a perfect moment before inevitable change.

TwentyEightThousandWavesMichael Slobodian
Twenty Eight Thousand Waves by Cayetano Soto (Michael Slobodian photo)

And finally the third act, immix by Montreal choreographer Giconda Barbuto, begins. Opening with nothing but a thin stream of light that gleams across the audience, the intense music is the sole cue for tone. The dancers emerge to deliver forceful actions while stark lighting intensifies the twisting and running. It’s like watching the inside of a clock and the dancers are the cogs from within; their bodies serve as catalyst to each others’ movements, each limb acting as a lever propelling forth a powerful exchange.

By the conclusion, I find it almost unimaginable that we could give our time to such banality as reality TV. Instead, UN/A is a transfixing performance that demands focus while allowing the mind to wander to places great and vast. From fluid weightlessness, to uncomplicated delight, to industrial deliberation, UN/A delivers three diverse pieces that fit together effortlessly and make time race.

Mateelda
Mateelda Designs

Upon receiving an intriguing press release about up-and-coming Vancouver label Mateelda, I could not wait to learn more about Maryna Hrychana, the designer behind the gorgeous collection. I was not disappointed. In fact, the more Maryna and I corresponded, the more I realised we have this major thing in common: the belief that you can never be overdressed. With every question it became clearer to me that Maryna has valued style and beauty all her life. As someone who is frequently asked “You are wearing that? We’re just going for coffee?!” I completely understand Maryna’s desire to continually showcase her personal style, not only in how she presents herself, but in how she creates her collections.     

The Vancouver-based designer draws inspiration from her surroundings in order to create stunning clothing and custom made jewellery sure to make everyone in the presence of her designs feel gorgeous. Maryna’s personalized collections incorporate chic femininity alongside clean lines with a classic look, simultaneously showcasing inspiration from her Eastern European upbringing and Vancouver’s modern style.  

Sad Mag: How did Mateelda come to be?
Maryna Hrychana: Mateelda was a long-time dream. Growing up in Eastern Europe I realized how much effort most women put into looking fashionable every day. An imprint of my mother walking up the stairs in her high heels will always stay in my mind. After moving to Vancouver, I had an opportunity to attend a fashion show where someone randomly approached me with a question: “Are you a designer? We love your outfit!!” This question led me to a final decision with my career choice—to go into the fashion industry instead of the medical field. And that’s where it all began!  I made a promise to myself to follow my passion towards beauty and aesthetics, and through my designs, to help people feel beautiful.

SM: What is the meaning behind the name of your label, Mateelda?
MH: I have been asked so many times how I came up with not just the name for the company, but also the logo. When starting the brand I wanted the company name to reflect and define exactly what the brand is about—classy and strong lines with unique details. The meaning of the old English name “Matilda” is “might, strength.” Changing the spelling from “I” into “EE” added unique detail, together with 3 classic colours. It just made perfect sense.

SM: What is your favorite piece in the current collection?
MH: The beautiful, chic, classy and tailored white cotton dress “Aliana.” It has structured lines that highlight a feminine body shape with a small detail of black French lace that adds just enough of a twist to make it look modern.

SM: What was your biggest influence/inspiration when designing the collection?
MH: 
Designing each collection the foundation of my inspiration comes from architecture, as I always have been fascinated by structure, lines, proportions, and of course, textures. Final accents in each collection are influenced by various cultures, mythology and the grace of body movement.

SM: How much is the collection a reflection of your personal style?
MH:  It is funny, in the beginning one of my close friends commented that I design my own perfect wardrobe. I was always drawn to the elegant lines of the 50’s and the fun colours/patterns of the 60’s.  In design, especially in fashion, there is a very fine line between your personal taste (as a designer) and the client’s needs and preference. Yet saying that, your personal style is the “soul” and definition of your brand, which you carry throughout each collection. That is what makes your brand different from others and appealing to your clients.

SM:  How would you describe your personal style?
MH:  As you constantly grow as a person, you change and so does your lifestyle and personal style. I love versatility and trying to break down the collection to mix and match it. With such a busy world these days you want to have functional outfit that will take you through the day looking professional and comfortable, but can still gravitate to a classy dressed up look: tailored dresses, skirts, but also a pair of jeans paired with high heels.

SM:  Are you inspired by any other designers, or collections?
MH:  Most inspiration comes from the people around me, life itself, and the journey of your work as you go. But I do admire designers such as Alexander McQueen.  And of course Tom Ford is one of the most inspirational artists ever, in every field he works in.

SM:  How was Eco Fashion Week?
MH:  Participating in Eco Fashion Week was an amazing experience, as I met new colleagues and like-minded people! It is great to be a part of community where you can find beautiful art pieces designed with awareness towards the environment around us.

SM:  Where would you like to see Mateelda five or ten years down the road?
MH:  I’m a big believer that men and women are using fashion as a tool to express themselves to the world. I hope to see more people out on the street wearing Mateelda designs!

Mateelda designs are quickly spreading through Vancouver and being carried in boutiques such as Edward Chapman Woman on South Granville.  Customized designs can also be ordered from www.mateelda.ca

The last time I checked Stephen Harper didn’t drink scotch. But then again, he also hasn’t been found cavorting with young, salacious, female MPs, and he most definitely did not win that many seats in Quebec during the previous Federal election.
Who's that PM?
Who’s that PM?

Michael Healey’s play Proud is a wild retelling of the 2011 federal election—very, very wild. While our stoic leader Stephen Harper is an all too familiar presence in Canadian’s lives (what has he gone and done now?), as leader of the ultra conservative Conservatives he isn’t normally surrounded by so much overt femininity. This femininity is found in the play’s conflict inducing, foul-mouthed, incendiary force Jisbella, single mother and highly-inexperienced Quebec MP—unless, of course you consider managing a St. Hubert to be the only credible experience necessary to sit in the House of Commons.

While our fictitious and facetious PM struggles in new territory, Michael Healy situates the audience in hilariously perfect Canadiana. The play opens to a dark stage, when the familiar opening notes of the CBC’s The National denote the start of the audience’s descent into political madness. Only there’s no Peter Mansbridge to comment on Harper’s precarious situation this time. All of the signifiers of Canadian politics can be found here, both for comedic effect as well as to remind the audience of the ever-present comedy—or perhaps horror—that our political system elicits, even without the ridiculous reimagining of the current distribution of seats in the House.

If his hairpiece doesn’t convince you, Andrew Wheeler’s impeccably robotic reimagining of Harper certainly will. The stiff arm movements and stilted legalese that characterize his speech are dead on, hardly needing to be exaggerated to be comical. What’s nice about Wheeler’s performance is that he doesn’t attempt to be some carbon copy of the PM, but rather the perfect caricature, at once ridiculously unlikeable for his ruthless politics, and surprisingly sympathetic in his pathetic attempts to play the average human.

The uproariously unstoppable Jisbella, played by Emmelia Gordon, only makes Wheeler’s mannerisms all the more comical. Gordon is not only able to provide some serious comedic power; she brings a dose of humanity to the play as she struggles to balance the rigours of a politic life she is unprepared for with single-motherhood.

What’s so successful about Proud is that it doesn’t take the easy route. Healy could have taken some easy shots at the Conservatives recent misfortunes and run with it. Instead he took perhaps one of the most monolithic Prime Ministers of date and used him as a jumping off point to astutely examine politics as a whole in the country. The play was certainly humorously critical of many of the Conservative party’s downfalls and despite the ridiculously exaggerated plot and heightened amorality, it suggests that the situation that Harper finds himself in is in fact not so improbable for any of our political parties really; perhaps a sneak peak into what Canadian politics would be like if we were a little closer to our American counterparts. Luckily it’s still only just a play and not a reality, for now of course.

Catch Proud at the Firehall Arts Centre from now until April 26th . More info regarding tickets and talkback dates can be found here.