City looking for dancing ambassador

PRESS RELEASE from the City of Nelson

The Cultural Development Commission (CDC), on behalf of the City of Nelson, is currently inviting applications and nominations for the position of 2012′’s Nelson Cultural Ambassador in the category of dance. The winner will be announced at the City of Nelson’’s Inaugural Meeting in December.

Photo source: La Grande Farmers' Market, Flickr, Creative Commons.

Applicants should be professionals performing in a recognized form of dance, be it traditional, contemporary, experimental or historical (i.e. folk, ballroom, etc.). Applications can be made on an individual basis or on the behalf of a dance troupe or company for a field of work. Preference will be given to dancers or companies who will be performing outside the city limits, in addition to in Nelson.

The deadline for applications is October 28th. Please see the attached press release for full details, and please contact me for further details.

iShow: a play from the future

PRESS RELEASE from Lucas Myers

Photo submitted.

Where will we be in 100 years? Will we be fitter, stronger, happier, more productive? Raymond doesn’t care, but he does care about you, and how you’re coping. He wants to help you be all that you can be in 2111, he wants to show you how to take advantage of the possibilities and hopefully, hopefully, he won’t have a meltdown and get fired again.

Hopefully.

A satirical look at where we may end up, and how one man tries to survive in the face of mounting obstacles and diminishing returns.

Featuring new music and all new material!

WARNING: CONTAINS THE FUTURE. COULD FREAK YOU OUT

Friday, Sept. 30
Saturday, Oct. 1
The Capitol Theatre
8 pm.
tix 16/13
call 250 352 6363 to reserve or online @ www.capitoltheatre.bc.ca

Contemporary Aboriginal Film Screening and Youth Film Workshop

SelfDesign High and Oxygen Art Centre are presenting an evening of Aboriginal film followed by a youth workshop this weekend.

Photo submitted.

Tonight, Wednesday, Sept. 14, 7:30 p.m., the school and art centre present Experience The World Anew, a film screening event featuring contemporary Aboriginal film.

The evening brings together short films by six filmmakers, The World Anew celebrates a multitude of First Nations identities in Canada, as well as past and current Indigenous forms of exchange through diverse forms and genres—from documentary, to narrative, to experimental.

Read more at the SelfDesign High blog.

New season announced at the Capitol

PRESS RELEASE from the Capitol Theatre

The Capitol Theatre announces their new season of performances for the 2011-2012 Season. Discounted subscription packages are available beginning Tuesday, Sept. 6 at the Capitol Box Office.

The Cheesecake Burlesque Revue. Photo submitted.

Opening the season is the return of the Cheesecake Burlesque Revue on Saturday September 24th at 8pm. Multiple award winners who have shimmied across stages from Vegas to Berlin the Cheesecake Burlesque are renowned for their comic timing, seductiveness and high energy performances. Not to be missed.

Capitol season brochures will be delivered to 3,800 homes on Tuesday September 6th and Wednesday September 7th. The full colour 24 page booklet features a season with something for everyone.

On the Capitol Stage this year Barenaked Lady Steven Page, the Arts Club Theatre’s Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story; Ballet Jörgen Canada’s Anastasia, premier Canadian funny woman Erica Sigurdson, the contemporary dance of move:thecompany, The Marc Atkinson Quartet, former Blue “Rodeon” Bob Wiseman and John Reischman and the Jaybirds.

The ongoing family favourite Capitol Kids Series Sundays at 2pm presents Dianna David, Alex Zerba, Monster Theatre and last seasons kids crowd favourite storyteller Kathryn Popham with the Wizard of Oz.

For more information call 250.352.6363, or visit us online to download the season brochure, find a calendar of upcoming events and to buy online www.capitoltheatre.bc.ca. Brochures are available at the Capitol Box Office and multiple outlets throughout Nelson.

Hekkanen launches two new books at the Nelson library

PRESS RELEASE from the Nelson Public Library

Canadian novelist and playwright Bill Gaston has dubbed Nelson’s Ernest Hekkanen—author of no less than 43 books of fiction, poetry, plays, essays, and literary criticism—Canadian literature’s “most resolute maverick.”

Hakkanen

On Tuesday, Aug. 30 at 7:30 p.m. the Nelson Public Library offers a chance experience our own literary maverick as he launches numbers 42 and 43 of his considerable oeuvre.

Wintering Over: Poems Strewn on Snow goes deep into the wintry drifts of the author’s inner reflections, contemplations, and personal demons, the kind of musings born of a long cold night and rendered poetic with humanity, insight, a little surreality and occasional humour.

All Night Gas Bar, and Ten Story Autopsies is a collection of short stories with a twist. Originally penned in the 1970s shortly after Hekkanen arrived in Canada, these stories were unearthed from an archival box in that serendipitous way we find things while trying to clean out. What makes this collection of short stories different are the “autopsies,” preambles that examine, in restrospect, the circumstances that gave rise to each tale. It’s an unusual window into a writer’s literary process, in this case seen with the unique perspective of a 40-year lens.

Editor-in-Chief of the literary journal The New Orphic Review in addition to his own writing projects, Hekkanen is a formidable force. According to B.C. Bookworld editor Alan Twigg’s website www.abcbookworld.com, “Seriously comic, fabulist, theatrical, iconoclastic and shrewd, Ernest Hekkanen is a literary outsider by temperament and necessity but probably not by choice. He has done too much, too well, too fast, too independently, too far away from Ontario, to be fashionable.”

Nelson is certainly far from Ontario, and Ernest Hekkanen is far from ordinary, and both could be said to be good things. This double book launch celebrates the work of Nelson’s most prolific author.

ANKORS Art Slam makes some noise tomorrow

What can an artist create with just 72 hours? Check out the ANKORS Art Slam Grand Showcase to see.

Art Slam

For three days local artists toiled away, creating art for the ANKORS Art Slam. They were given 72 hours to create something, anything inclucing: film, poetry, theatre, song, painting, sculpture, dance – any type of artist expression.

The only rules were the theme and prop (as given at the kick-off meeting) must be present in the final product. The deadline was absolute.

There will also be a silent auction on many of the art pieces, and profits will benefit both the artist and ANKORS. Look forward to seeing and bidding on submissions from Ian Johnston, Debra Loxam-Kohl, Avrell Fox, Keira Zaslove, Dylan Humphreys, Matty Kakes and more.

Source: ANKORS Blog

The showcase is on Friday, Aug. 26, 7 p.m. at the Prestige Lakeside Resort.

Read more about this at the ANKORS Blog.

Rocking start to the Kaslo Jazz Fest

The Kaslo Jazz Festival celebrated its 20th anniversary last weekend, drawing thousands to the north end of Kootenay Lake.

The opening concert featured the Crackling, Dan Mangan and headliners Dehli 2 Dublin, an energetic fusion of Celtic and Indian music that had the audience dancing as soon as they took the stage.

Photographer Phil Best was there for the entire weekend, capturing the images that defined the family friendly festival including this colourful one of Dehli 2 Dublin.

Click the photo to see a larger version.

d2d

Where was that taken?

Below is a map showing where this photo was taken. Zoom out to see other pictures from the Kootenays.

Do you have an image from the Kaslo Jazz Festival you’d like to share? Send it to news@inthekoots.net.

 

Student art show opens this Friday

CLASH is the product of six local youth in the SelfDesign High Summer Art Intensive, a four-week program that culminates tomorrow night with an art show at Oxygen Art Gallery, reports Bill Metcalfe at Arts in the Kootenays.

Students discuss Chloe Lemay's fabric art piece.

Local artistic mentors Anita Levesque, Jessie Demers, Amber Santos, and Laurryn Gerzymisch have taught the classes, and the students get studio time as well, to work on assignments and a final project for the show. The process is an impressive mix of structure (instruction and assignments) and freedom (to do what they choose in their studio time for the final exhibit).

Source: Arts in the Kootenays

Read more and see more photos at Arts in the Kootenays.

ANKORS plans 72-hour ‘art slam’

Artists, get your creative juices flowing, there’s a 72-hour art creation competition coming to Nelson.

ANKORS (AIDS Network Kootenay Outreach and Support Society) is planning their 72-hour Art Slam from Friday, Aug. 19 to Monday, Aug. 22 and they’ll have a showcase a few days later.

ANKORS

Film, poetry, theatre, song, painting, sculpture, dance: they’re all valid submissions for the competition. Participants will be given a theme and prop at the kick-off meeting that must be incorporated.

The principal objective of this event is to address the social issues and stigma surrounding HIV/AIDS in our community, while celebrating artists and art in our community. 100% of the money raised from the event goes to supporting individuals affected by HIV/AIDS, such as subsidizing health care costs. However, this event also aims to join the community together through art. By keeping the event parameters open, we hope to draw all different genres of art and artists.

Source: ANKORS Blog in the Koots

See the ANKORS blog for more details on the competition.

ArtWalk struts its stuff tomorrow night

ArtWalk, the annual celebration of art in the community, starts tomorrow night in Nelson, reports Bill Metcalfe for Arts in the Kootenays.

“On top of all the fabulous art that will be showcased by emerging and professional local artists,” says Nelson’s cultural development officer Joy Barrett, “there will be sand sculpting by Denis Kleine, Peter Vogelaar and David Nichol-Ducharme, chalk art outside each venue, and the fabulous Oxygen Orkestar will be roaming up and down Baker Street – a real party atmosphere.”

Read more at Arts in the Kootenays.

The brochure for ArtWalk is below and can be downloaded through the window there.

ArtWalk Brochure 2011