• Working together for a vibrant Chinatown

    Working together for a vibrant Chinatown

    Chinatown Millennium Gate at Pender and Carrell St

    Working together for a vibrant Chinatown

    Chinatown has served as a symbol of how Chinese-Canadians overcame hardships and discrimination, and in the process, helped make Canada a more just society. Today, it’s an important part of Vancouver’s cultural identity.

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    Chinatown Transformation Team

    The Chinatown Transformation Team (CTT) is a dedicated staff team formed in September 2018 to work with the community and key partners on Chinatown-related work.

    The CTT, community, and partners will co-create a plan and implement actions that focus on living heritage and culture for a vibrant Chinatown. Key areas of interest include:

    • Tangible living heritage and culture
    • Intangible living heritage and culture
    • Business and economic development
    • Intergenerational relationships and community capacity building
    • Relationships with communities around Chinatown

    This plan will propose priority projects, actions, partners, and resources to create a new Living Heritage and Cultural Assets Management Plan for Chinatown.

    The plan is a key component of the overall process towards a possible UNESCO World Heritage Site application for Chinatown, as adopted by Council on November 1, 2017.

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    MORE INFORMATION

  • Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition

    Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition

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    Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition

    June 23, 2018 – January 11, 2019

    The exhibition has been designed with a focus on the legendary RMS Titanic’s compelling human stories as best told through authentic artifacts recovered from the wreck site of Titanic and extensive room re-creations. Upon entering Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition, visitors will be drawn back in time to April 1912, when the Ship embarked on its maiden voyage. Guests will receive a replica boarding pass, assume the role of a passenger, and follow a chronological journey through life on Titanic.

    Hours 10am to 7pm Monday to Thursday and 10am to 8:30 pm Friday to Sunday.

    Lipont Place
    4211 No. 3 Road, Richmond, BC V6X 2C3
    (604) 669-2288

    Tickets available at this link

  • SUNKEN TREASURES: ASIAN CERAMICS

    SUNKEN TREASURES: ASIAN CERAMICS

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    SUNKEN TREASURES: ASIAN CERAMICS

    An exhibition of ceramics from shipwrecks found in Pacific seas

    Program Events

    Saturday, October 6th, 2-4pm
    Opening Reception and Talk by Scott Williams, “Lost Asian Treasures: The Manila Galleon Wrecks of North America”
    Free admission to opening

    Sunday, October 21st, 2-4pm
    Family Day, by educator Julie Grundvig

    Saturday, October 27th, 2-4pm
    Talk by Paula Swart, “Shipwrecked: Treasures and Monsoon Winds, Ceramics from Ancient Shipwrecks”

    Introduction
    Cargoes from shipwrecks, filled with silk, tea, spices and prized Chinese and Southeast Asian ceramics, attest to the vigour of trade and the rich cultural history of the Asian region. From the 14th to 19th centuries Chinese junks and Portuguese, Dutch, Spanish and English galleons were among the many ships actively plying the South China Sea, the Manila to Acapulco route and beyond, forming a ‘Maritime Silk Road’.
    The Sunken Treasures exhibition presents Asian ceramics from shipwrecks. Known for their beauty and utility, they offer snapshots in time of cultural treasures retrieved only recently from the bottom of the sea.

    Presented by:
    The Canadian Society for Asian Arts, and the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden

    September 16 – November 8, 2018
    Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden
    Hall of One Hundred Rivers
    578 Carrall St., Vancouver, BC

  • Cantonese Opera  Artistic Workshop

    Cantonese Opera Artistic Workshop

    MVOH

    Cantonese Opera Artistic Workshop

    Indigenous Music, Opera & People from South Guangdong

    There is a long oral tradition of storytelling in China. Muk’yu/muyu (wooden fish) songs, naam yum (southern sound), dragon boat songs and a variety of folk songs have been popular among the ordinary people in South Guangdong for at least over 300 years. Over time they have found their ways into Cantonese opera which has the capacity to enrich itself and evolve continuously throughout its evolution and migration from place to place.

    The most famous muyu song book – The Flowery Scroll with its 1713 Chinese edition preserved in the Museum of Paris today- was translated into English, Russian, German, Dutch and French by scholars in the 19th century. Muyu songs have been well-loved by the folks in the Siyi and Sanyi areas in South China and are sung in those dialects by women, children and peasants working in the fields and on many special occasions. Early migrants to Gold Mountain were familiar with this art form.

    MVOH 2018 will investigate the relationship of these indigenous musical genres of South Guangdong and their place in the life of the early migrants and recent immigrants in Pacific Canada.

    Workshop in Cantonese                                        Workshop in English

    Date: 10th October, 2018 (Wednesday)                  Date: 12th October, 2018 (Friday)
    Time : 2:00-4:00pm                                                     Time : 4:00pm-6:00pm
    Venue : 578 Carrall Street, Vancouver, BC              Venue : IKBLC, UBC

    Part 1: Guangdong Musical Storytelling & Chinese Canadian/American Immigrants
    Panel Speakers: Dr Sonia Ng & Ms Winnie Cheung
    Muyu Song Singing Demonstration in Siyi dialects by elders from Chinatown

    Part II: Muyu, naam yum, dragon boat song, yue ou and Cantonese opera “chang hong”
    Speaker: Cantonese opera maestro Mr Lau Wing Chuen
    Demonstration: Mr Anthony Cheung & Mrs Angela Keung

    For registration and other MVOH events, please visit:
    mvoh.online or www.pchc-mom.ca

  • Breaking Ground

    Breaking Ground

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    Breaking Ground

    Join PIRS for an evening of migrant stories
    “What would happen if one woman told the truth about her life? The world would split open.” ~ Muriel Rukeyser

    ? Four women from the Vancouver chapter of The Shoe Project tell their stories of arrival and adaptation — through a pair of shoes.

    ? Award-winning journalist Suzanne Ma reads from her compelling book Meet Me in Venice, a tale about the Chinese in Italy.

    ? Three contributors read from the book Wherever I Find Myself, edited by Miriam Matejova, recounting their immigration stories

    Celebrate the resilience of starting over in a new country
    When: Tuesday, September 25, 2018
    Where: Emerald Supper Club, 555 Gore Street
    Time: Doors at 7 pm — Event begins at 7:30 pm
    Tickets: $45.00 — Includes appetizer buffet and one drink

    For more information contact Jugnoo at jsalahuddin@pirs.bc.ca

    Buy tickets online HERE

  • Artist Talk: Diyan Achjadi on Coming Soon!

    Artist Talk: Diyan Achjadi on Coming Soon!

    Organized opportunity

    Join us for an artist talk by Vancouver-based artist Diyan Achjadi, who will present on her public artwork Coming Soon! This is a year-long project taking place throughout Vancouver on the structures that surround construction sites. Each month, a new series of prints made using letterpress, linocut and lithography techniques are installed throughout the city, mirroring the landscapes around new developments. Over the course of the year, the posters will accumulate. Vulnerable to the effects of the elements, the prints will begin to decay and transform. At the heart, this project is an exploration of questions of value, temporality, and labour.

    Diyan Achjadi works in drawing, printmaking, and animation. She received a BFA from the Cooper Union School of Art (New York) and an MFA from Concordia University (Montreal). She has exhibited at Façade Festival (Vancouver), Carleton University Art Gallery (Ottawa), Dunlop Art Gallery (Regina), Richmond Art Gallery, Art Gallery of Mississauga, Open Studio (Toronto), Centre MAI (Montreal), Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, Oboro (Montreal) and AIR Gallery (New York), among others. Born in Jakarta, Indonesia, Diyan lives and works in Vancouver, and is an associate professor at Emily Carr University of Art + Design.

    Coming Soon! was selected as part of the City of Vancouver’s Artist-Initiated Public Art call that invited local artists to propose new works throughout the city, contemplating its defining features, spaces and neighbourhoods.

    Details:

    Learn More

    Web: http://vancouver.ca/creative-city-strategy
    Facebook facebook.com/vanculture
    Twitter @VanCultureBC
    Instagram @vanculturebc

  • Shut Up and Write New Series Starting!

    Shut Up and Write New Series Starting!

    Tom-Cho-photo

     

    What Is Shut Up and Write?

    Shut Up And Write meet-ups place the typically solitary activity of writing into a more social space. The idea is simple: a group of people get together and focus on their own writing, with short breaks to socialise – “No critiquing, exercises, lectures, ego, competition or feeling guilty.”

    Originating in San Francisco, the idea has spread to other cities and continents and there are now SUAW groups in across the US, Canada, Australia, and more – there’s even an online meet-up and communities for those who can’t get to a group in person. It works for writers at all stages and in all genres – poets, academics, journal writers, novelists, bloggers, students, etc.

    A new series of drop-in writing sessions is now under way Wednesdays, 6:00 to 8:00pm, at Historic Joy Kogawa House, 1450 West 64th Avenue.

    Session leaders are novelist Cathleen With and poet Holly Flauto Salmon.

    RSVP info@kogawahouse.com

    Coffee, tea and wifi provided! BYO snacks to share.

    Admission by donation ($5 each week). Or sign up as a member ($25 till the end of the year) and get in free!

    Venue accessibility

    Unfortunately, Historic Joy Kogawa House is not currently wheelchair accessible. For details and measurements, please see the accessibility page at www.kogawahouse.com.

     “The system works because you have made a private commitment to writing at this time, acted on that commitment by turning up, and used the mutual support of others to help you stay the distance. It’s a one-step program for the procrastinator in us all.”Tom-Cho-photo

  • To My Unborn Child

    To My Unborn Child

    to my unborn child

    To My Unborn Child
    Wen-Li Chen

    Hosted by the Richmond Art Gallery
    Curated by Tyler Russell

    September 14 – November 10

    Talk and Tour with Curator Tyler Russell: September 13, 6-7pm
    Opening Reception: September 13, 7-9pm

    Richmond Art Gallery Hours: Monday to Friday, 10am-6pm
    Saturday & Sunday, 10am-5pm

    The Richmond Art Gallery is located in the Richmond Cultural Centre at
    7700 Minoru Gate, Richmond, BC

    This exhibition takes place on the unceded Coast Salish territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh peoples.

    Centre A is excited to present To My Unborn Child, Taiwanese artist Wen-Li Chen’s first exhibition in Canada. The exhibition is hosted by our generous partners the Richmond Art Gallery.

    How does one generation speak to the next? How do aspirations, traumas, and traditions cross the membrane from parent to child? What is the nature of knowledge transmission in matrilineal communication?

    Wen-Li Chen, whose practice focuses on matrilineal/mother–daughter/grandmother–granddaughter communication, memory, and processes of identity loss and formation, examines these questions in her new work, To My Unborn Child. A dynamic multi-media installation featuring video, light, and book-making, To My Unborn Child struggles to consider what can be held on to and what might be lost in this transmission between generations. What is the texture and form of memory? Beyond mere text and toward the embodied and highly personal, when memory is transferred from mother to child through the womb, what is its form? How is it felt? How is it held? How does the child feel it? Can it passed on? What new shapes accrue?

    A woman of Kavalan–Sakizaya descent, Chen is the holder of important and endangered cultural memory. Her grandmother’s practice of secret Kavalan rituals with other Kavalan women late at night, as the anthropologists came to conduct interviews and treated her grandmother as someone very special, gave her a glimpse of a world that she is heir to. But how much does she hold—how much can she hold? How much can be passed on?

    The Kavalan, an Indigenous people of Taiwan, have over the last 4+ centuries experienced land loss and cultural assimilation as a result of incursions from Qing invaders, Japanese colonizers, and others. By the end of the 19th century, they were ultimately pushed to live among the Amis, another Indigenous group in Taiwan, able to partially hold on to Kavalan language and some traditions, but being separated from their land. Erased by Taiwan’s shift toward multicultural and inclusive policies, the Kavalan only gained official recognition as an Indigenous people in 2002. Perhaps a corollary narrative in British Columbia is Canada’s pushing of the Sinixt or Arrow Lakes First People from their lands over the course of the late 19th and early 20th centuries while state authorities declared them extinct and left them to live among the Confederated Tribes of the Colville, only to finally begin, in recent years and through great struggle, to regain some form of recognition in Canada.

    Chen, who is also half Han-Chinese, only learned of herself being Kavalan at the age of 12 and did not begin to acquire some knowledge of Kavalan traditions until the age of 30.  She is now living as a global woman, displaced from her lands and now residing in North America, but acting as a holder of her traditions and culture.

    To My Unborn Child derives from the artist’s research, sourced from family archives, household objects, conversations with family and friends, official government documents, recent documentation of her village’s infrastructure, newspaper articles, forgotten textbooks, and didactic historical texts. Chen presents her findings as a conversation with her unborn child, using experimental image-making processes that, in her words, imagine “how the child is going to experience life as her mother did, learning something lost and missed in fragments and blurry pieces. When the baby is inside the womb, she can only experience the world through blurry light and sound through the fetal membrane. This resembles the way I have grasped, collected, and gathered fragments of memory and history from personal experience and everyday life in order to understand and learn about what Kavalan means.”

    The installation features digital and analog projections that overlap somewhat haphazardly with heat-transferred images on cotton sheets. “The result,” Chen states, “was to project and, in projecting, catch onto the myriad concerns I have about how future generations of Indigenous descendants will cope with the unstoppable changes that make the continuity and perseverance of culture and identity complex.”

    To My Unborn Child also collects Chen’s research in a Zu Pu (??), or genealogy book, to be passed on to her unborn child. The Zu Pu, a kind of formal record keeping, is a nod to the Han Chinese side of the artist’s family tree. “Indigenous people don’t keep written records,” she explains. “They pass on knowledge orally, according to a system of loyalty and trust.”

    Wen-Li Chen is an artist based in Taiwan and the United States. She holds a Masters of Design in Photography from the Glasgow School of Art and has exhibited her work in Singapore, Taiwan, the United Kingdom, and the United States. She is founder and executive director of FOGSTAND Gallery & Studio (?????), based in Hualien, Taiwan and St. Paul, Minnesota.

    Concurrent to this exhibition at RAG, Centre A will be presenting Ho Rui An: Sun, Sweat, Skirt, Fan at its own Chinatown location, at 268 Keefer Street. The exhibition runs from September 7 – 29, 2018.

    This exhibition would not have been possible without the efforts and cooperation of the whole Centre A and Richmond Art Gallery teams, in particular Nan Capogna, Matthew Brown, Godfre Leung and Joni Cheung.