Sad Mag loves The Sunday Service: we’ve previously featured A Beautiful Podcast on these internet pages, and interviews with members such as Emmett Hall, Caitlin Howden and Kevin Lee. When we’re really lucky, members will perform in our Sad Comedy shows. Mayor Gregor Robertson is a fan too- he even declared November 18th, 2011, to be Sunday Service Day.

But now, there is proof the comedy aficionados across the country love them too: they’ve been nominated for 6 Canadian Comedy Awards- more than any other improv group in the country!

Last year was a big one for Vancouver’s longest-running independent improv comedy show, with a first-place win last summer in Edmonton-based Rapid Fire Theatre’s Improvaganza TheatreSports Tournament and the group’s participation in the viral electoral sensation Shit Harper Did.

Supporters can vote for The Sunday Service in the categories of Best Podcast (The Sunday Service Presents: A Beautiful Podcast) and Best Webclip (Acting Real) online at the Canadian Comedy Awards website!

We’re getting into the green spirit at Sad Mag in anticipation of our next issue, VANIMAUX (#10), which is all about our local culture around food and the environment. So what better event to celebrate than a Carrotmob at the Cascade Room?

For those who don’t know, a Carrotmob is a “reverse consumer boycott,” supporting businesses to make positive changes for the environment. All the money spent at the Cascade Room on Wednesday, June 27th, will be used to:

– purchase new ENERGY STAR low?flow dishwashers
– install a VITO oil filtration system to reduce oil used for deepfrying
– implement a “ask for water” policy
– to expand their waste diversion to include composting

As event coordinator Joshua Schmidt puts it, “Carrotmob not only demonstrates to business the value of going green, it supports them to do so in a positive way where everybody wins; business, society, and the planet. Everyone is invited to join the mob this Wednesday June 27th, enjoy some great food and drink, save the planet, and of course have fun!” Plus the Cascade Room has a killer cocktail menu, and polenta fries, and it’s a rare opportunity to consume those and feel benevolent for it!

Check the event page on Facebook for details about the music and festivities, and bring your pals out on Wednesday!

Cascade Room (2616 Main)
June 27, 12-2PM (reservations only) or 5PM-late
Live entertainment + door prizes
RSVP on Facebook

Eadweard Muybridge, "Famous Horses"It’s a sunny Spring evening. I’m in the warehouse that houses the office and work space of the Electric Company in East Van to interview its Artistic Director, Kevin Kerr. I’m here mostly to talk about Kerr’s 2006 play, Studies in Motion, based on the life and work of the revolutionary photographer-scientist Eadweard Muybridge, whose photographic studies of human and animal locomotion stand at the dividing line between still photography and film. The conversation ends up roving far and wide across theatre, art and truth.

While he speaks, though, my eye keeps being drawn to two items on the overstuffed shelves behind his head: a book entitled Lucid Dreaming, and a box for the game Twister. There’s something about these two artifacts that sum up what Electric Company is. Dreams. Memory. Pure physical energy.

Muybridge was, as Kerr puts it, ‘an enigmatic character’—landscape photographer turned scientist, his photographs were produced using a series of cameras shooting in sequence. He produced approximately 100,000 images between 1883 and 1886. This body of work (of which 20,000 images were published in plates available to subscribers) revolutionized the way that physical locomotion was understood.

But, though this was what Kerr stumbled upon originally—in the form of a series of VHS cassettes containing strung-together animations of the plates—it was Eadweard Muybridge the man that drew his attention to the ‘theatrical possibilities’ of his story. As Kerr watched the cassettes, he felt that ‘a sense of obsession began to emanate from’ them, which he initially put down to some kind of Walt Whitman-esque fascination with the human body. What he found couldn’t have been further from that impression. He discovered an awkward, intensely serious man with a failed marriage who had murdered his wife’s lover (an act followed by an acquittal on the basis of justifiable homicide)—‘It just felt like melodrama,’ says Kerr.

He goes on to describe his fascination with ‘this interesting duality between these motion studies which seemed to be very clinical…everything stripped away from the actions. Everything’s sort of— All sorts of indicators of intention are stripped away… They seemed to be very anti-narrative. They were just actions, raw.’

At this point Kerr seems lost in the world of the ideas for a moment. ”There’s this curious sort of choice of actions’—action that, in the human studies, contain substantial themes of ‘sensuality, eroticism, humor, and violence’. Kerr realized that the ‘photos felt like a metaphoric attempt to atomize life’—actions that weren’t ‘corrupted by emotions’. An attempt to get to some kind of unadulterated truth about the violence in Muybridge’s past by fragmenting the complexities of similar motions until each moment could be studied individually: ‘rearranged and assembled to suit yourself’.

What does all this say to a modern theatre audience looking for a meaningful experience? Kerr observes this moment in history as ‘a point in the ongoing birth of a really visually oriented culture… We’re pretty skeptical about our physical perception of the world as being a source for our understanding of our total truth. Or the idea of truth being outside of us, I guess—it’s the contemporary kind of thing—you separate the human subjective experience from the notion of truth. And Muybridge’s work was one big part of an ongoing series of events that convinced us that truth was not available to us except through science and technology. So that there are things that we can’t—we’re not afforded the ability to see without some sort of mechanism or medium that will lift the veil off of nature and give us insight, and so today we are all about the things that we use to negotiate our world and that we turn to, to give us truth, like MRIs or some Google algorithm.’ Or a photograph. Evidence.

I ask him, ‘As an artist, are you creating something that replaces people’s ways of processing events for themselves?’ This is not a new question for Kevin Kerr, or for Electric Company. He counters: ‘Art can be one of those agents that installs itself into your being’—‘art that sedates us and assures us… On the other hand, the other version of art is the art that shocks and stimulates us; that tears that membrane open and allows us to see the world in a new way…’

Kerr articulates for himself and for us that ‘art is experiential at its core’. The vibrant, image-rich, site-specific theatre for which Electric Company is well-known demonstrates this concept to its fullest. The upcoming ‘You are Very Star’ at the H.R. MacMillan Planetarium, following last year’s (now touring) ‘Tear the Curtain’ devised around Vancouver’s historic Stanley Theatre, promises an opportunity to enter a lucid dream with Electric Company. Let’s just hope that Twister stays up on the shelf behind Kevin Kerr’s head.

written by Ralph Bingham.

Local institution Burcu’s Angels re-opened as a pop-up shop on Main & 17th on April 13th, filled with furs and fabulousness to the delight of vintage lovers everywhere! Now Burcu and her pals are throwing a closing party on June 17th!

June 17th just so happens to be Car-Free Day, so you can check out all the fun outside on Main St before coming inside for performances by your favourite drag queens Isolde N Barron and Peach Cobblah! Throw on your mama’s fur coat and your highest heels. Open to everyone!

Burcu’s Angels Pop-Up Shop (Main & 17th)
7PM-11PM
Live music!
Drag!
$10 Tarot readings
Free box of vintage goodies

 

 

Pinhole photo by Judith Hoffman

On June 20th, from 4-6pm, Sad Mag will be hosting a pinhole photography workshop with youth from Qmunity at the Vancouver Aquarium!

Youth will use pinhole cameras, made by Sad Mag volunteers from 100% recycled materials, to photograph sea creatures in the educational wet lab. Thanks to the generous support from our pals at The Lab, we’ll be able to develop, scan and share the images, which will be posted online in a Sad Mag photo gallery. Some will also appear in the Vanimaux issue (#10).

This is an awesome opportunity for youth to learn about the arts and the environment around them, as well as share their finished work with an audience.

We’re so excited about this collaboration and the event that we want to open it up to as many youth as possible. Sad Mag is a non-profit that is able to host events and create magazines thanks to our subscribers, as well as donations from community sponsors such as The Lab. To support this event, we are donating the proceeds from subscriptions between now and June 20th to sponsor youth to attend our workshop!

The cost of attendance for one participant is just $12, the same as a year-long Sad Mag subscription. Buy one for yourself or as a gift (a magazine subscription keeps on giving all year round!) and feel the glow that comes from not only supporting your local arts scene but also the work of the Vancouver Aquarium and fledgling queer photographers.

Order your subscription today!

Turning the tables on our usual Q&A, Liisa Hannus from Vancouver Is Awesome chatted with our fearless leader Katie Stewart about the transition to film photography and illustration. While we love the magic and possibility of digital photography and technology, all of our issues in 2012 will feature only analog art, including illustration and painting. Issue 9 (the Transplant issue, on stands now!) was the first to feature only print photography. It’s a decision worth explaining to our pals and readers, so read on for our rationale:

Liisa Hannus: What prompted you to go all analog for the photography and illustrations in this issue? Is there a connection to the theme?

Katie Stewart: Absolutely. The Transplant issue is about transition, in more ways than you might think. We’re not only looking at people who have transplanted from East to West and vice-versa, but lateral transitions across continuums of gender, sexuality, geography, and in this case, technology. In all of these movements, there is a sense of rawness and vulnerability. So we decided it would be really fitting to look at a lateral transition in artistic medium. From digital–which can be modified, enhanced, and photoshopped into something radically different–back to film and polaroid. This means you’re getting the raw deal. It may seem a little rough around the edges, but it is beautiful in its imperfection–just like Sad Mag really.

Katie Stewart, fearless leader

LH: With the prevalence of software like Instragram that gives people the instant ability to apply a “film” look to digital images, do you think Sad Mag’s readers will notice any difference? Or was it mainly as a challenge for yourselves, to add a challenge to what you do?

KS: Instagram is an amazing little tool, and frankly, I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t horribly addicted. I like that people are attracted to some of the traditional aesthetic qualities of film, but something I’ve also noticed is the prevalence of #nofilter images that come up on the feed. There is a certain reverence for images that are untouched. So will you be able to tell that the photographic images in the Transplant Issue of Sad Mag are film and Polaroid only? I think so–just look at the grain, not the pixels–and overall, the image quality is totally different. The photographers for this issue shot with 35mm, medium format (check out the double exposures by Angela Fama), old-school polaroid, Fuji Instax, and even shot with disposable plastic cameras. Was it a challenge? Hell yes.

LH: Were the contributing photographers already used to working with film, or was this a new experience for them?

KS: Photographers such as Jeff Downer, Wayne Webb, and Ryan Walter Wagner shoot film regularly, so they were a really good fit for the issue. Other photographers, such as Leigh Righton–who is an extremely talented digital photographer (check out her shots of David Lynch)–had to put their favorite digital cameras away and source out film cameras specifically for the shoot.   Even Brandon Gaukel, Sad Mag’s founding creative director, did his shoot with a disposable camera–brave boy.

geneva.b shot by Katie Stewart for the Transplant issue.

LH: What kind of challenges did this approach present for the Sad team?

KS: Puns aside, with film you only get one shot. You can’t see your results immediately so you really have to rely on your mad skills and hope to hell that when your film comes back it looks good. There is also a limit to how many photos you can actually take. 12 exposures isn’t a lot. And polaroid film packs you get even less. There are obviously cost constraints. Film ain’t cheap. We were really lucky to have our developing and scanning provided by The Lab (www.thelabvancouver.com), otherwise, we wouldn’t have been able to make this issue look the way it does.

LH: How did it change the production process?

KS: Ironically, it made it really smooth in the production phase. It puts more responsibility/pressure on the artist to produce an image that, sans photoshop, can be published. So by the time we’re in production, there is really barely any editing to do, other than color balancing to the magazine proof, so when we print it, it looks like the original.

Shad, photographed by Leigh Righton for the Transplant Issue

LHYou mentioned that Kevin Kerr from Electric Company gave you some interesting feedback. How did that conversation happen and what did he have to say about this project?

KS: One of our writers, Ralph Bingham, sat down with Kerr and interviewed him in light of his play, Studies in Motion, which deals with the transition of film to motion picture. I guess you could say he has a vested interest in these types of transitions. Kerr is a brilliant playwright–we’re lucky to have him in Vancouver. Not surprisingly, he’s an eloquent speaker and writer. (Web editor’s note: We’ll be posting an interview with him on SadMag.ca later this week)

Iris and Diana Taborsky-Tasa, featured in the Transplant Issue. Photo by Angela Fama

LHNow that you’ve done it, do you think you’ll do another all-film issue again, or perhaps look to using a mix of film and digital art work in future issues?

KS: If we have any digital images we’d like to use, they go up on the Sad Mag website. Only film, polaroid, and illustration make it to print. As long as no one closes all the photo developing places in Vancouver, I want to do an entire year (4 issues) of film/Polaroid. Even just from looking at the Transplant issue, it has radically changed the caliber of images we print. Pick up an issue–tell us what you think.

On June 1st, queer voices are taking over the airwaves!

Tune in to CITR 101.9FM for a whole day of LGBTQ programming that starts at 6:00AM, including Barb Snelgrove, Ryan Clayton, David C. Jones, DJ Lisa Delux, Jennifer Breakspear, Miss Meow, Spencer Chandra Herbert, Kate Reid, Dean Nelson, not to mention your favourite unofficially-queer magazine Sad Mag!

QueerFM has been broadcasting on CITR for almost 20 years, making it one of the longest running queer radio programs in Canada. We caught up with Aedan Saint, QueerFM Broadcast Coordinator and Rainbow 24 organizer,  to ask him for the story behind this event. We are glad we caught him just before his departure to Hawaii, where he’ll be kicking off a new Hawaii edition of QueerFM!

“I took over for QueerFM founder Heather Kitching in 2010 as she went off to Ottawa while I was hosting Fruit Salad (30+ year LGBTQ radio show on Co-Op Radio 102.7FM) for 16 months during and after my year as Mr. Gay Vancouver XXX.  Juggling two radio shows on two stations was… interesting.

“I’ve been producing & hosting QueerFM since then… as well as creating the spinoff shows QueerFM Arts Xtra and QueerFM QMUNITY – AND coordinating the broadcasts of the closing of the Odyssey Nightclub in 2010, WinterPRIDE at Whistler 2011,  The 2011 OutGames and Rainbow 24: LGBTQ Voices 2012.”

“I saw an old flyer from the early 1990s on the CiTR Programmer’s office wall. I thought it odd that no one had produced such a marathon in all the intervening years.  As I planned to make my departure from CiTR and Canada in early June [for Hawaii], I thought…why not create a love letter to the LGBTQ community of Vancouver?  Rainbow 24 is a snapshot in time of our community and its many voices.

“Why June 1st? Simple. US President Bill Clinton first declared June PRIDE Month in the US on June 2nd, 2000 which was re-signed by US President Barack Obama in 2009. Being an American and leaving to go back home, I thought it a poignant way to express the FAMILY that both Canadian and American LGBTQ Communities are, and that we’re stronger together.”

How can you get involved with QueerFM? You can listen on CiTR 101.9FM Vancouver, Like QueerFM on Facebook, and follow them on Twitter. Also check out QueerFMVancouver.com, or email them your love letters or requests to be a guest on the show!

What’s next for QueerFM after Aedan’s departure?

“QueerFM 2.0 launches just after my departure on June 5th to continue the legacy Heather and I have created and nurtured.  Our NEW Producer/Host Jared Knudsen is a great guy, and when you add in the other hosts (Barb Snelgrove, David C. Jones, Ryan Clayton and Velvet Steele) there are not many topics in the LGBTQ community and beyond that they couldn’t handle.  They’re a fantastic collaborative team. CiTR has been pretty fantastic in their support and we appreciate their continued commitment to diversity and support of the LGBTQ Community in Vancouver and beyond…

As for me, I’m headed home to Hawaii, and have a great little show called QueerFM Hawaii that I’ve already scheduled to start when I arrive as well as cross-show content between Vancouver, Victoria and Hawaii.  So we’re expanding the rainbow… one city at a time! :)

“Thanks SAD Mag & Vancouver…it’s been quite a ride.”

Rainbow24
June 1st 6:00AM – 6:0oPM
CITR 101.9FM
Listen online at CITR.ca
QueerFMVancouver.com | Twitter | Facebook

Peach struts on to the stage in a bedazzled, black-and-white-striped dress looking like the most glamourous of inmates or a sexy Hamburgler. The crowd at The Cobalt showers applause upon one of its newest and most admired drag queens.

Music begins, bass rumbling, and she reels off every word to Lil Kim’s “How Many Licks” in perfect lip-sync. I been a lot of places, seen a lot of faces, aw hell, I even fucked with different races. Near the end of the song, Peach does one-armed push-ups in three-inch heels while maintaining the illusion that she is, in fact, Kim’s white doppelganger. The audience hurls five-dollar bills at the stage. Girl is hustlin’.

All in a night’s work for this unlikely queen. Underneath the make-up, Peach Cobblah is Dave Deveau, award-winning playwright and promoter for popular East Van queer parties, Queer Bash and Hustla. Deveau produced a drag show for a year prior to putting on make-up and strapping on fake breasts himself, and first found inspiration to do so in his wallet.

“My business partner and I started doing drag for financial reasons,” he says. “We weren’t making any money but watched queens get tips thrown at them week after week so we thought, ‘Let’s make some fuckin’ tips, girl.’”

Peach Cobblah aka Dave Deveau photographed by Rob Seebacher in Issue 9: TRANSPLANT.

Get Issue 9 here.