For the past seven years Vancouver has been home to the Queer Arts Festival. Originally a small community event, QAF has grown dramatically since it’s inception. It now celebrates a wide range of artistic expression—visual art exhibitions, musical performances, and workshops. Held at the Roundhouse Community Arts & Recreation Centre in downtown Vancouver, the festival continues to challenge gender and sexual norms through unabashed, intimate Queer art.


Must-Sees for the 2015 Queer Arts Festival

By Sad Mag

Queer catholic schoolgirls, musical queens, and everything in between—this year's festival is absolutely stacked. Finding it hard to choose? We've whittled things down to our five top picks, just for you.

  • TRIGGER: Drawing the Line in 2015

    By Sad Mag

    In 1990, a collection of Vancouver artists put together a boundary-pushing exhibit called “Drawing the Line”. Now, 25 years later, a curated exhibit of the same name pays honor to the spirit of the original project. The show pairs works by 19 different artists with ones from the 1990 exhibit.  

  • Queerotica

    By Sad Mag

    Expect to be titillated by this evening of steamy, literary reads. Steeped in anti-censorship rhetoric—and of course, saucy scenarios—Queerotica is not to be missed!

  • Sister Mary’s a Dyke?!

    By Sad Mag

    This one woman show takes the classic coming of age story and queers it in a major way. Abby is a Catholic school girl who falls in love and is forced to reexamine everything she thought she knew. Drama, drama, drama!  

  • A Queen’s Music: Reginald Mobley in Recital

    By Sad Mag

    Throughout history the amazing work of both gay composers and people of color has been nearly lost. In A Queen's Music, composer Reginald Mobley and musician Alexander Weimann stage some of the work that has been pushed aside for centuries.  

  • Salon des Refusés

    By Sad Mag

    Not your grandma’s art exhibit! This community art show features a selection of explicit art by queer local talent. Its name pays homage to the Parisian Salon des Refusés of 1863. Held at Little Sister’s Book & Art Emporium, the exhibit is entirely by donation.  

  • Still finding it hard to choose?

    By Sad Mag

    It's worth checking out QAF's Flex-Pass deal. Hit four shows for $69. Bring a friend (or three), or enjoy all four shows yourself—you deserve it!

 

The 2015 Queer Arts Festival runs from July 23 – August 7. For a full event listing, visit the QAF website

Tran APus Rex // images c/o belle ancell photography

It’s been a couple of weeks now since I saw the riveting performances of those who participated in Jen Crothers and Kristina Lemieux’s Queer Arts Festival production, Reflection/Refraction.  Before the night of the performance, I knew the production’s format but I didn’t really know what to expect: the individual performance pieces were to be completely subjective interpretations and responses to one of five short queer films assigned to each performer.  These short films whimsically or charismatically provoked a number of ideas and issues associated with identity, gender, sexuality, intimacy and community. The films included galactic docking, “Miss Chief” dancing, choreographed “brother-herrd,” bus passing and Hawker anime.  The performers, having had several months to reflect upon their personal responses to the short films, were to share their reflective and refracted pieces with the audience.

The first piece was performed by the enthusiastic Ralph Escamillian, who started the show off with a baring it all reverse strip tease, which he described as being his response to the “stereotypes of homosexuality” after refracting his assigned short film, Galactic Docking Company.  The disco pop track “The Beat” got the audience in the mood and Escamillian’s energetically sensual display of layering clothes made me feel that this was now a revolutionary disco docking celebration.

“There’s more between the earth and sky than we can understand,” Mette Bach repeatedly projected.  Bach was assigned the short film Dance to Miss Chief which directed her, surprisingly she admitted, towards a desire to dance that has been something she has struggled with since losing a loved one.  Bach embraced her response to her assigned short film and gave a moving, insightful and honest speech about her loss.  Having lost my Mother recently, Bach’s monologue reminded me that losing someone does produce a period of grievance but can also produce beautiful art by which we can celebrate and still dance with Miss Chief.

The third performance swayed me back into dance mode when Tran APus Rex appeared on stage.  Responding to the assigned short film Herr, Tran APus Rex put identity, gender and sexuality back on the interrogation table by playing around with pieces of clothing, strip teasing and jumping out of a giant blue vagina.  Tran APus Rex’s performance piece, much like Herr, made me wonder about this performer’s identity but care less as to what that meant to me and care more for what that meant to the individual.  It was a lovely display of gender and sexual interaction, and I felt that Tran APus Rex had self-birthed into herr own.

Ralph Escamillan // image c/o belle ancell photography

The Bus Pass evoked a musical response in rising star, cellist Cris Derksen, who took the short film and reworked the scenes whilst creating an original electronically fused performance piece accompanied by her cello.  Derksen told the audience she felt some awkwardness in the film that she wanted to work out.  The intensity of Derksen’s music amplified the room in such a way that made me feel those thoughts circulating and consuming the film actor’s mind.  I felt a tension in the performance piece much the same way that I did when watching the film and in both, that tension had been resolved.

Last, but not least, came David C. Jones’s fishing fiasco.  Jones’s performance was a response to the short film, an animation titled The Hawker.  Jones focused on themes of love and loss and was inspired by the fish in the film to tell a story as a person at sea through a physical mime piece.  I watched Jones’s character spread ashes into a sea of water and cope with what felt like feelings of estrangement and a restructuring of identity.  Without dialogue and scene structure it felt difficult to know precisely what was happening but that was the magic of this performance for me – that in losing someone you might often feel lost and struggle with knowing the way or with knowing how to deal with your emotions and loved ones.  The grieving period of loss is different for everyone and I felt that Jones was successful in displaying a subjective and natural response to self-identity, loss and grief.

It was a pleasure to watch the queer short films and witness the emotions, responses and inspiration evoked in these five performances.  A good life involves reflection but a great life is formed through refraction.

The Queer Arts Festival is here! Co-curators Kristina Lemieux and Jen Crothers have come together with their production, Reflection/Refraction, which will be showcased on August 1st. Chatting over antipasti and casual drinks at Charlie’s Little Italian Pizzeria on Main, Sad Mag correspondent Monika Malczynski learns more about Kristina and Jen and how they found their inspiration.

Kristina Lemieux

SAD MAG: Who are you?
KRISTINA LEMIEUX:  My name is Kristina.  I am originally from Edmonton, well [laughs], Drayton Valley.  I’ve lived in Vancouver for about seven years now and I’m an arts and cultural manager and thinker.  Currently my primary project is with Brief Encounters -we take an even number of artists (ranging from opera singers to architects) and we pair them together and give them two weeks to create a five to twenty minute performance piece.  I also am working on Reflection/Refraction. I also am a co-director of a community dance troop called Polymer Dance.  And I host a dialogue series called SANKASET where I get arts professionals together to talk about directed topics in the arts.  Lots of things, all kinds of things!

SM:  Sounds like it!  And what about you, Jen?
JEN CROTHERS:  I am Jen Crothers. Crothers rhymes with brothers, not that you need to know that in a written document

KL: [Laughs] It’s going in there now!

Jen Crothers

JC: [Laughs], yeah. So I guess I’d say I’m an artist and an organizer.  I am the treasurer on the board on the Queer Arts Festival and I’m pro-curating the show in the Queer Arts Festival with Kristina.  I am an organizer with the All Bodies Swim which is a regular private event at Templeton pool where people who might feel normally feel awkward or excluded from swimming pools are invited to come and swim and have fun in the pool. We invite all kinds of people – fat people, people with scars, lots of tattoos  – and we run this occasion every six weeks or two months.  I’m a filmmaker as well; I made a couple of films one of which is called “Butch Tits” and it’s been around a bit.  I also organize Queer Bodies Film Night which is a semi-regular film night that I show short films that deal with issues such as gender, sexuality, mental health, those kind of things.  So yeah, you know, random projects.  And I’m, obviously, not from here [since she speaks with an accent].  I’m from Australia, from Tasmania, and I traveled to a bunch of places before I got here but I’ve been here for six of the last eight years and I will stay here for the foreseeable future although Australia kind of has my heart.

SM:  You two have paired up to co-curate Reflection/Refraction for the QAF.  How did you begin working together and what is this production all about?
JC:  Kristina and I knew each other before the project.  We were friends for probably about six years before the project began and we sort of connected over the love of spreadsheets, organization and ‘geekery’.

KL:  [Smiles] Yeah, and I think we were just talking one day about how we both wanted to do more organizing or more programming in the arts as we were seeing a bit of a gap in what kind of programming was happening in the queer communities and Jen loves films and I love performing art – although we both love films and performing arts – but in terms of expertise, we thought we could blend the two together and bring both of what we are most passionate about.  So we came up with the idea of having five short films by five queer filmmakers that would then be responded to by five queer performing artists.  We did this back in 2011 for the Queer Film Festival and then our lives got busy last year and we realized that we didn’t do anything for 2012 so we thought we should definitely get involved again and approach the queer arts festival and we did.  So, here we are.

SM:  So essentially the shorts will be shown and then each performer, having spent approximately four months coming up with their own interpretation or response to their film, will  perform. Is that right?
JC and KL:  Yes, that’s right.

SM:  So if you can recall, because you originally came up with this idea in 2011, where did your inspiration come from?
JC:  I think the inspiration- we were sort of just talking and all of a sudden it kind of just came.  We were doing a lot of this: eating a restaurants, have some casual drinks and ideas were being discussed.

KL:  Yeah, and I don’t think it came out in the way that it was a completely laid-out format, that this was going to be the way it was done, but that after some conversations back and forth we sort of figured things out. We were brainstorming ideas and ways which a performance could address certain issues. And the other thing we both really like is creativity within certain boundaries: time frames are limited, time performances are limited, what happens when you sort of constrain the creative process.  And that’s how we came up with Reflection/Refraction; it was something that we thought could fit into that creative boundary.

JC:  Yes, and we talked quite philosophically about it.  We talked a lot about the difference between film and performance and we found that when a filmmaker makes a film, at some point it becomes fixed.  That first you edit, then show some friends and you might edit it again and again but at some point it becomes a fixed piece of art that you can no longer change again.  Whereas with a piece of performing art, you perform it and you have an audience reaction and you might tweak it and then you have another performance then talk to someone or have another reaction and then you tweak it again. I mean, this doesn’t always happen, sometimes people perform the exact same thing. But even on a good night a performer might respond to the energy of the audience.  If the audience is giving a lot of responsive energy, the performer might give a bigger performance.  Whereas film is fixed and it’s flat.  So when we were thinking about the idea of putting people into the position where they were kind of forced to be inspired. It was somewhat of a theoretical approach. Kristina is a total theory nerd and I’m a bit more scared by her intellectualism but nevertheless, I try to keep up [they both smile].

SM: Have you seen the progress that the performers have made with their approach or will you be seeing their performances for the first time next week?
JC:  We did want to curate the performances; we did want to interact with the performers, critique them, give them suggestions of how what they’re doing might work or not.  So we did meet with them once about their initial ideas about the films.  Some of them were like “yes, I’ve got an idea of what I’m going to do” and others were like “I have twenty ideas and don’t know which one to choose” and other people were like “uh, I have no clue what I’m going to do.”  This weekend we are going to see them again and see what they’ve come up with and give them some feedback again and then they’ll have a chance to fine tune their performance and then yeah, then we’ll get to see it again.

all photos c/o Monika Malczynski

SM:  Having been involved with many creative projects over the last several years of living in Vancouver, and coming from different cities, how do you feel about the “creative scene” in Vancouver?  Do you think this city poses challenges for artistic people or do you find there to be easy and creative avenues to explore?
KL:  There is a lot of amazing stuff happening in the arts in Vancouver but I think that if anything could be improved that there be stronger avenues to communicate with people on what they’re doing.  In the last eighteen months we’ve lost, like three cultural reviewers?  Don’t quote me on that but a good chunk of cultural reviewers from our major publications.  And not that I think our general public is reading print media but because where we are getting our information from is in flux, there’s nowhere to go to get a curated list of what’s happening.  Almost every week I’m asking myself, “which one of these amazing productions do I want to pick to go to tonight?” which shows there’s a lot going on.

JC:  Yes, and just to clarify that – in a sense that information is out there like with Sad Mag, Vancouver is Awesome, the Province and so on but it’s just so across the board that you have to be reading all of those publications to get the full sense of what is going on.  I personally hear about things through friends, Facebook, social media and word of mouth.  Usually, unless I know someone who’s involved with something or unless someone suggests we go to an event so it makes such a difference when someone says to me “you should really see this show.”  So, word of mouth is really important.  And being a smaller city, Vancouver is good for word of mouth but there still lacks a space where people, critics, are giving opinions and suggestions about the arts.  There’s just an overwhelming amount of choice which is both good and bad.  Vancouver is a lot smaller than Sydney, for example, but there’s usually a lot of choice so I personally get overwhelmed and that’s why that personal connection or suggestion really pushes me and makes a difference for me.

KL:  Yeah, and just to also point out, I’ve personally been involved with arts management for the past 15 years and one of the reasons I moved to Vancouver is because it is a city that does allow one to make a living in an artistic field.  Sure, I may not ever own a home but I’m not sure that that’s important anyway.  And in the smaller cities, at least the more isolated ones, you don’t have the same level of municipal and provincial support that you have from the government so there are lots of opportunities for the arts here.

 

For more information and to buy tickets, check out Reflection/Refraction on Facebook and on the QAF website.