In collaboration with the Vancouver Aquarium School Programs and Qmunity’s Youth Project, Sad Mag hosted The Sea Legs pinhole photography workshop  on June 20, 2012, in an effort to con­nect queer youth with Van­cou­ver artists in a safe space. The ocean composes most of the earth’s surface and the majority of life on the planet. We often anthromorphize animals, talking about genders and reproduction calling a barnacle he or she, but we must remind ourselves that these animals are beautiful without visible gender. We can’t normalize the ocean based on human assumptions. These animals are diverse, successful and most of them have no visible difference between male and female or no gender at all. The theme of the work­shop was focused on the education/preservation of local sea life and of tra­di­tional pho­tog­ra­phy as a fine art form.

Using old boxes from the gift shop, juice bot­tle lids, pop cans, expired film, and used film can­is­ters, par­tic­i­pants con­structed pin­hole cam­eras to pho­to­graph sea crea­tures in the edu­ca­tional wet lab.  Aquar­ium vol­un­teers provided education on the  var­i­ous spec­i­mens native to the Van­cou­ver shore­line, while par­tic­i­pants had a chance to han­dle some of the sea crea­tures before photographing them. Sad Mag’s Edi­tor in Chief, Cre­ative Direc­tor, Designer, and Pho­tog­ra­phers worked with par­tic­i­pants at photo-sta­tions (which were pro­fes­sion­ally lit by the amaz­ing Jonathan Wong). Select images from the work­shop have been pub­lished in the VANIMAUX issue and many more will be dis­played at the issue launch exhi­bi­tion, Van­i­maux II,  opening on August 2, 2012 at 7:00pm at the Gam Gallery (110 E.Hastings St). The images range from pur­ple ten­ta­cles, to abstract inter­pre­ta­tions of her­mit crabs, urchins, and anemones. Intensely colored, soft and dreamy, these are experimental 35 mm film photographs by:

William Flett
Kiesha Janvier
Theodore Lake
Esther Lemieux
Calvin Ling
Vinson Ng
Jaedyn Starr

Check out a few of their amaz­ing images below:

 

 

 

Sad Mag has a big ol crush on Christine McAvoy. Not only does she frequently adorn our release parties and bacchanals with her charming photobooths, capturing Sad Mag party-goers and performers alike (so you can never forget your best Vanimal costume), but she also contributed her analog photography skills to Issue 10– the first time she has been featured in our print pages! She’s also a megababe who knows the best things to eat and drink in the city, which might be the most valuable quality a person can possess. Here’s our Q&A so you can get to know her better:

Sad Mag: Who are you?

Christine McAvoy: I’m Christine and I’m a photographer… of many things!

SM: What did you photograph for Sad Mag #10?

CM: Some of Sad Mag’s favourite Drag Kings and Queens wearing eco-friendly costumes, doing an eco-friendly activity [for the Green Queens feature]! It was a lot of fun.

SM: What’s your favourite location in Vancouver for a shoot?<

CM: Any any of Vancouver’s best restaurants, does that count? Hmm, or maybe the Vogue Theatre or Biltmore for live music… Other than that, there are very few natural landscapes in Vancouver that aren’t ideal to shoot at…this place is beautiful.

SM: What was your first camera?

CM: A Mickey Mouse camera that I got in Disney World in 1994. My brother and I were allowed to choose one souvenir, and that’s what I got… It took 110mm film and I loved it.

I still have it, and I’m sure it would still work if I knew where to get 110 film (and where to have it developed). I still remember sending the film away at Shoppers Drug Mart. And now I feel old, thanks.

SM: Who are your other favourite Vancouver photographers?

CM: You mean my competition? Just kidding… There are so many talented people in this city (and all of my friends from Ryerson that I left in Toronto). My #2 and go-to will always be . The list of other photogs would be too long and I’d be afraid to leave someone out. That’s like asking me my favourite Vancouver band!

SM: Best drink for summer?

CM: Right now I’m on a Parallel 49 Brewing – Seedspitter Watermelon Wit kick…it’s AWESOME on a patio in the hot sun. Steamwhistle and Phillips Blue Buck are always my go-to beers. So ‘cold beer’ would be my answer.

SM: Favourite summer beach?

CM: Kits on a weekday when it’s not as busy. With raspberries, a hidden beer, and a book.

SM: Where can we find more of your work?

CM: A VAST majority of my work is on Vancouver Is Awesome, my portfolio is here (but it needs to be updated badly.)

“A dog,” reads the familiar saying, “ is man’s best friend.” We favour these animals for their unwavering loyalty, devotion, and the inherent desire to protect their ‘owner’ in all situations, often regardless of the impact on their own well being. In return (presumably), they demand little from us and despite our questionable treatment of them within certain industries, remain consistently faithful. While the relationship between humans and animals is a vast one, it is our longstanding relationship with the dog, specifically, that is addressed in Facing The Animal, curated by UBC CCST Masters’ candidate, Tarah Hogue. Showing at the Or Gallery from May 29 to June 29, the exhibit features the work of Julie Andreyev, Mary Anne Barkhouse, and Bill Burns, three artists who are dissimilar in their preferred mediums, but similar in their collective inclusion of a central subject: the dog.

Julie Andreyev is a Vancouver-based artist, who collaborates regularly with her dogs, Tom and Sugi. Boasting both their own website and Twitter account, Tom and Sugi have become indispensable allies in Andreyev’s on-going exploration of animal consciousness. Employing primarily installation and video pieces, Andreyev gives the viewer the opportunity to comprehend the personalities of both Tom and Sugi. Shit Dogs Say(2012), Dog Walking Dog (2012) and Dog Dreams (2012) are all featured pieces in the exhibit, offering us a chance to directly observe the unique traits of each animal.

Mary-Ann Barkhouse encourages discourse on environmental issues and indigenous culture through the regular use of animal imagery, one of her regular appearing creatures being the wolf (an early predecessor of what we refer to as the domestic dog.) Barkhouse works within a wide range of media, ranging from sculupture and photography to jewelry. Red Rover (2012), a new piece featured in Facing The Animal, is an installation comprised of foam play mats, and two “teams” of wooden toys. Wolves stand on one side of the playing field, and directly face their opponents- the poodles. An image of the proposed Enbridge Pipeline decorates the playmats and sits directly underneath the animals.

Bill Burns explores the relationship between dogs and industry in Dogs, Boats and Airplanes (2003-2010), a photographic series that the artist compiled throughout many international journeys. Throughout the series, we observe the dog in a number of global settings and major cities. Each is embedded in a different location within a wide range of social, cultural and economic contexts, thus making for a drastically different reading of the canine in every photograph.

The North American dog industry is a multi-faceted one, especially when we consider it in relation to its domestic partner-in-crime; the feline. Modern dog “culture” includes specific breeding strategizes to produce designer dogs, a selection of culinary options and meal plans for our furry friends, dog hotels, boutiques, and furniture conventions, and an objectification of the animal that forces us to reflect on whether or not we are, in fact, still treating the dog as mans’ best friend. Each artist in Hogue’s exhibition invites us to reconsider this relationship in different ways, by presenting the dog with three drastically different representations.

Interspecies collaboration, such as that practiced by Andreyev, may be rare in practice, but is effective and directly addresses our common practice of rigidly separating the relationship lines between human and animal. In not only using the image of the dog in her work, but incorporating them directly into the creation of it, Andreyev breaks down the somewhat-challenging notion of appropriating the animal image/body for use in contemporary art. The notion of the Other is challenged, and the species is genuinely regarded as companion, by Andreyev’s equalization and value of her contributors’ position.

Barkhouse’s Red Rover is immediately visually stimulating, given both its central position in the gallery, and the effective use of hot pink, soft pink and black base colours. On one side, we have a pack of wolves, directly opposing what one could deem their polar opposites- a small group of poodles. Though all of the animals are “leashed”, the wolves are assembled in a pack form, and the poodles align themselves in a perfect line formation. The stereotypes that the viewer immediately assigns to both reveal themselves almost immediately, especially given that these creatures are standing on opposed sides of the Enbridge Pipeline. Traditionally, the game of Red Rover requires a certain degree of risk and determination. Both sides engage in the game knowing the outcome is unknown. There is a strange irony in the prospect of a group of wolves opposing a group of poodles, in our assumption that the wolves would clearly be the victor. These stereotypes, and the specific use of such two opposing animals, call to mind conversations of nature, animal culture, and the human imposition into a natural habitat.

The dogs that we encounter in Dogs, Boats and Airplanes, as aforementioned, are varied. Some of them are visibly more healthy than others, and in some we are able to more easily identify breeds. The human form may be visible in one image, and not in another. Some of the dogs sport outfits, or accessories. In particular, Burns is effective in reinforcing the different classes of the canine, which are ultimately determined by their human-centric societies.

The viewer is asked to look at the dog in three different ways in Facing the Animal. Andreyev asks us to reconsider the line of relationships between human and animal. Barkhouse directly gives us a glimpse of our involvement (and possible destruction) of both the natural environment and pre-established interspecies relationships within in. Last but not least, Burns offers us an international portrait of the dog, the canine, and the extreme variances within the images.

“Dogs”, reads another familiar saying, “are our link to paradise. They don’t know evil or jealousy or discontent. To sit with a dog on a hillside on a glorious afternoon is to be back in Eden, where doing nothing was not boring–it was peace.” (Kundera). Perhaps this is why the mysterious individual first said that dog is man’s best friend. The canines in Facing The Animal give us the opportunity, at many times, to both reflect and re-connect upon this familiar paradise. For those of us who have not yet had the privilege of living with a dog, we can experience it for the first time. Ultimately, Hogue’s curatorial union of these three artists prompts this: it is skilled, strategic, and directly invites us to face the animal(s).

Written by Zoe Peled
Originally published in whitehot magazine (here).
Image: Mary-Ann Barkhouse, Red Rover, 2012. 

Posted in Art.

Clement has a portfolio case full of bits and pieces, old woodprint scraps, and ink and paint swatches as a kind of storehouse of materials. “I like the idea that bits of discarded pieces of paper can regain value and take on a new role. I love the thrill of finding exactly the right piece. It is through this layering process that my drawings come to life. The anatomically correct beetle escapes the mundane realm of ‘textbook drawing,’ and escapes the flat surface of the paper too. Through my flowing lines and vibrant colours, I hope to give my beetle, bird or tree, personality.”

Sarah Clement, interviewed by Carmen Mathes for Sad Mag #10

Get your issue at our release party, August 2nd, 2012!

On August 2nd, join Sad Mag at the Gam & Remington Galleries (located side-by-side at 110 E Hastings @ Columbia) for an incredible group show to celebrate the release of Sad Mag #10, VANIMAUX. 

The theme of the issue (“Food. Fur. Foraging.”) was inspired by the first Vanimaux show, held in October 2009 at the AMS Art Gallery.

The exhibition includes photographs, illustrations, and installations by local artists: Jeneen Frei Njootli, Jeff Dywelska, Sarah Clement, Julie Andreyev, Angela Fama, David Ellingsen, Monika Koch, Rachelle Simoneau, Cody Brown, Lenkyn Ostapovich, Everything Co. and others.

Come drink local brew, see the latest issue, and take a look at our examination of Food, Fur, and Foraging in Vancouver.

Vancouver. Animals. VANIMAUX.

VANIMAUX II
Gam Gallery & Remington Gallery (110 E Hastings)
7:00PM-11:00PM
RSVP on Facebook
Official Afterparty: The Pride Ball at the Cobalt (917 Main St)

Poster by Pamela Rounis

WATER includes professional and emerging artists with or without developmental, physical, or mental health issues, gender or language challenges.

Directed by Susanna Uchatius & James Coomber with puppetry by Tim Gosley (Puppeteer Master of The Muppets fame). WATER tells the story of one river-the gods that fought, the fish that swam, the fishermen that fished, the water-carriers that fetched and water buyers who bought; all deeply affecting the very life and soul of the river’s flow.  With songs, dance, celebrations, large puppetry, raging passions, and live music- the rivers journey in WATER is a microcosm of civilization’s greatest and most precious element on this planet.

Katie Stewart: What is your involvement in WATER?

James Coomber: I’m a co-director, composer, and musician.  Over the past year, Susanna and I have incorporated mythological, environmental, and theatrical ideas and facts and woven them together to create the play.

KS: As a site-specific play in East Van, WATER intentionally extends open invitation for people just walking by to come into the audience to observe the play. What has been the response so far to the production?

JC: We definitely have people who come specifically for the show… some who have been with Theatre Terrific for a good while, and others who are new to knowing the company.  But we also have a wide range of people who wander through the park, or hear the music nearby, and just stop by to see what exactly is going on.  Some of my favourite moments have been when a stranger stumbles into the audience, sees the big fish puppet, and has a great big smile on their face.

KS: It what ways is it different from anything you’ve ever done before?

JC: Susanna and I have been honing in on our collaborative process, so much so that the music and the action become tangled in a beautiful web of action and reaction.  There are characters and scenes that have been developed from one specific sound, and other scenes where dialogue was formed from a person’s unique challenge with their voice.

KS: Tell us a bit about the exciting projects you have on the horizon?

JC: One project that is coming up in September is a 10 minute opera that I’ve been working on with Dave Deveau.  It’s called Unnatural, and it focuses on differences in LGBT rights for two strangers from different contenants.  It’s part of Tom Cone’s Opera Project, where Tom has paired 5 composers and 5 librettists to create 5 10-minute operas.  It’s going to be a great night!  I’ll also be working on Theatre Terrific’s Fringe show, titled Pantaloon’s Pawn Shop.  Expect something strange, quirky, surprising, and full of some more great music.

Water
2PM, July 7th & 8th
Andy Livingston Park (89 Expo Blvd @ Carrall St).
Wheelchair accessible. Bring a chair or blanket, and perhaps a picnic.
Suggested donation $10


SAD MAG// LOCAL MUSICS //JULY 2012

Summer is slowly coming in this year with June seeming like an extension of Fall and July/August distant in the fog. As the sun starts to toast the skin music becomes a part of the scenery as a soundtrack to the adventures to come. As this blog will focus on local music happening in Vancouver and its close surroundings, I have picked five recent local albums for cycling to 3rd beach, hosting friends on the front stoop, drinking beers in the park or canning preserves in the kitchen.

ALBUMS FOR THE SUMMER:

Apollo Ghosts – Landmark (You’ve Changed Records)

This album starts in all the right ways, a warm jangly riff, group vocals and Adrian Teachers quirky vocal lines. Most songs under the three minute mark bring a smooth car ride with windows down to mind and infinite joy. Go see this four piece live, it is truly a treat.

Brasstronaut – Mean Sun (Unfamiliar Records)

It’s hard not to think that Edo Van Breemen is one of Vancouver’s most beautiful songwriters along with his trumpeting contributor Bryan Davies. Mean Sun glows in maturity for the band that is known to fuse jazz & pop together. Mean Sun relishes in a more subtle journey and a fuller recording sound quality from their previous release Mount Chimaera.

Japandroids – Celebration Rock (Polyvinyl Record Co.)

At first I didn’t want to like these guys.With much hype and a recent 8.8 on pitchfork I realized that their nostalgic early 2000’s emo rock gave me some instant energy and blood flow. Considering there are only two of them, they play with vocal layers, steady drumming and riffing guitar so well. Super catchy shit too.

Needles//Pins – 12:34 LP (Mammot Cave Recording Co)

Vancouver loves its punk rock and these guys (and girl) bring the best of it with delectable song writing, clear vocal lines and well thought out pop structures. After watching them live I really appreciated the minimalism that transfers over to their recent recording 12:34.

White Lung – Sorry (Deranged Records)

I was listening to this album while eating some dinner and couldn’t sit still. These kids have had me since their first release Local Garbage. Super short, sweet and fuck yeah songs that you just want to get sweaty listening to. Sorry finds itself to be more melodic than previous releases while still keeping its hardcore punk energy alive and well.

VIDEO FOR THE SUMMER:

Nu Sensae – Swim

Trippy and colourful, like a summer vacation.

 

art work by Marc Johns

Sad Mag is delighted to feature several young artists and photographers in our upcoming VANIMAUX issue (#10) , including Rachelle Simoneau! Rachelle shot the Deyrolle Museum in Paris, featuring taxidermy, insect and shell exhibits.

We chatted with Rachelle from the other side of the world about cameras, European vs Canadian fashion, and her favourite local photographers.

Sad Mag: Who are you and what do you do?

Rachelle Simoneau: My name is Rachelle. I like taking photos.

SM: When did you first start taking photos? What attracted you to photography?

RS: I’ve always been drawn to photography, from the surprise of getting my film developed to going to The Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography in Ottawa every chance I got.

SM: Tell us about your first camera.

RS: My first camera was my dad’s old Canon FTb manual SLR that I still use almost everyday in Paris.

SM: How did you end up in Paris?

RS: I moved to Europe in 2010 and was shooting a lot in London. When it came time for a change, Paris was an easy decision to make. The process of getting here was a little more difficult, but it’s all good now.

SM: What’s it like working as a photographer in Europe vs in Canada? Is the culture around photography different?

RS: As a fashion photographer I notice styles and feel of photos change drastically from city to city. It’s been exciting for me to develop my own style in different major cultural centers.

SM: What do you miss about Vancouver?

RS: My friends, bike culture, seeing the mountains and ocean every day, sushi at Toshi’s, Wreck Beach.

SM: Who are your favourite Vancouver photographers?

RS: I love Candice Meyer‘s fashion work and Grant Harder‘s portraits around Vancouver.

SM:Do you have a favourite photograph of your own?

RS: The photo I keep coming back to is from a shoot in 2009. I was still living in Vancouver and assisting at a studio when I felt that fire to start shooting on my own. I called a couple of friends and we went to Lynn Valley. I see that photo as a departure point for my career and still love it.

SM: Where can we find more of your work?

RS: I post new work on my blog while I work on my new website.

See Rachelle’s photographs in our next issue, VANIMAUX (#10)! It’ll be on stands everywhere at the end of July. Look out!

Sad Mag is going digital-photography-free in 2012, so we asked Kevin Kerr to reflect on the value of film photography in the context of his study of photographer-scientist Ead­weard Muy­bridge. Read on for a discussion of authenticity, trust and the artist-audience relationship.

I think the transition back to film from digital is representative of the persistent desire for craftsmanship in the art we engage with and authenticity in our experiences. Photography was a profound innovation that moved the locus of where we drew our understanding of “truth” from within our selves to outside of ourselves. Muybridge’s instantaneous photography encouraged the belief that technology would reveal the secrets of nature that were kept from us by our own physical limitations. We became convinced that a photograph couldn’t lie and that it was a portal to an authentic moment in time and space.

Digital photography, for all of its advantages, has eroded that trust in the photograph as something inherently genuine and sincere. We look at photographs today, and instead of them being proof of the remarkable around us, they are instantly suspect and we question the photo-maker’s motives rather than focus on the subject being depicted in the picture.

With the advent of instantaneous photography, Muybridge moved away from the interpretive, subjective qualities of his landscape photography (which he frequently manipulated, making him an early pioneer of photoshop as well as cinema), in favour for a pursuit of objective, scientifically verifiable “truth”. He wanted to shed all artifice and lift the veil off of nature. But even so, when viewing his body of work in the animal locomotion series, it doesn’t take long to see the artist at work behind the science. The craftsmanship is there with his attention to not only the factual results, but an aesthetic experience as well.

A portion of the fascination comes from understanding the process undertaken to achieve the results. We’re astounded by the results knowing the limitations within the technique. I think a certain amount of satisfaction of knowing that Sad Mag is going to be returning to film is imagining the quality of the experience of not only the viewer, but of the photographer. We can imagine the required specificity of the artist’s intention when taking a picture, as she can’t cheaply fire off an unlimited number of quick images, but is restricted in the number of exposures by the length of celluloid.  There is a genuine connection to the materials, a basic understanding of the chemistry as the photographer becomes familiar with the interaction between light and shadow on the particular film stock. And we appreciate that there is required an added degree of intuition required in the making of the photo as there is no instant preview of the image in the digital display. The photographer must place all of her attention cleanly on the subject and trust her eye and her intimate relationship with the camera. And then simply wait and see, long after the subject is gone, the results of the intuition. There’s a sort of beauty in this pause — a chance to let the real moment complete and dissolve before its transformation into representation, media, simulacrum.

Words by Kevin Kerr. Illustration by Sarah Clement.

In anticipation of Issue #10: VANIMAUX comes a summer sizzla of a party from the minds of Sad Mag.

VANIMALS brings you a decade-blending dance tunes courtesy of DJ JEF LEPPARD and friends while babely photographers will be on hand with cameras to capture your animal spirit.

That’s right — it’s an ANIMAL-THEMED party, meaning whip out your best unicorn horn, tiger claws, skunk stripe, or just come dressed in head-to-toe leopard print and you’ll get in free.

For everyone else, cover is $5 at the door and includes a free issue of SAD MAG. Come support us and we’ll help get you drunk and primal.

Thursday, July 5th
The Cobalt (917 Main)
Doors at 8PM
$5 cover
RSVP on Facebook