Friday, April 30, 2010

Rapid Fire Theatre

So the weather is not all that wonderful right now, but so what.

It just means that it it's a great time to replace an evening around the fire pit on a Friday night with an evening at Rapid Fire Theatre.

Every Friday night at 11PM at the Varscona Theatre (10329 83 Ave) where tickets are only $10.00, go to www.tixonthesquare.ca

Thursday, April 29, 2010

International Dance Day

Today is April 29 and do you know what that means?

It means get up and dance!

April 29 is International Dance Day!

So grab a friend, a loved one, or just crank up the tunes on your own and get up an boogie!

Then later this evening celebrate it some more by going out to a dance club, a dance performance or sign up for dance lessons.

Here are some relevant quotes found on the Quote Garden.

There is a bit of insanity in dancing that does everybody a great deal of good.~Edwin Denby
We're fools whether we dance or not, so we might as well dance.~Japanese Proverb
Nobody cares if you can't dance well. Just get up and dance.~Dave Barry
Dancing with the feet is one thing, but dancing with the heart is another.~Author Unknown
Next time you're mad, try dancing out your anger.~Terri Guillemets

Enjoy International Dance Day everyone!

Here's a thought provoking quote of my own: dance is ecnad backwards.- Maritta Renz

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Tuesday: NuSteps Trio

On behalf of the Yardbird Suite

Tonight is the Tuesday Night Session with the NuSteps Trio at the Yardbird Suite, Edmonton Jazz Society, on 11 Tommy Banks Way, Edmonton.

See the whole story on our Performing Arts events page!

Monday, April 26, 2010

Welcome Janet Ducommun

We want to welcome Janet who specializes in singing telegrams and has been in business for well over a decade.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Family connections or great minds think alike!

How  Bizarre!  Genetics and family connections, is it more than brown eyes and blonde hair?

We all know about and see evidence of personality traits being passed along to family members.  But I've just experienced something that has brought to question, in my mind;  just how detailed or specific can these genetic traits be?

My "how bizarre" moment came when my niece Carla and I spent an hour or two together (I don't recall how long it was because time flies by when your enthralled in an activity you love).  We each grabbed a camera and wandered through my friend Al's old abandoned heritage house that has started to fall down.  This house was apparently abandoned in the 70's when a family just packed up the things they loved to take to their new home and left the rest behind.  Since then, people have been there taking a few things out and just leaving whatever wherever.  This house is old, full, and I mean FULL of old stuff and falling apart.

Carla and I each went in different directions through the various rooms on the main floor and upstairs.  Although we were doing this together we really weren't because we'd be in different rooms and barely spoke at all.  Other artists I'm sure can relate and understand that when you're working you can become absorbed in your own world and forget about and tune out everything else around you.

Carla and I come from a family of artistically talented people, especially it seems on the female side.  My mother, my sister and I as well as all 4 of my nieces and my daughter are all artistic.  Some even earn their living from their talents.

After our just for fun photo shoot, I took my cameras back home and downloaded my pictures and reviewed them.  As always I found some weren't great, some good and some I loved.  Then I downloaded Carla's so I could transfer them onto a disc for her.  I could not believe what I saw.  At first, I saw one picture she took that was the same subject matter as one I took, then there was another, and another and another, you get the point.

How bizarre.  I had to go back to my pictures and look again.   I was blown away!  How could two people in a house FULL of a million things or more ( don't think that's an exaggeration) to take pictures of find something interesting and artistic in so many of the same things, in such a short time?

Below, I have a couple pictures of the house just to give you an idea of the enormous amount of items we could have picked to take pictures of.  I have also provided some examples of our similar shots.  Carla's are on the right, and mine are on the left (or depending on your resolution Maritta's first and Carla's second).

IMG_5574IMG_5545

IMG_5657IMG_2270

IMG_5689IMG_2231

IMG_5664IMG_2263

IMG_5700IMG_2241

Bizarre isn't it?

Now I could see that if we spent 1/2 a day or a day there, we would eventually have had an overlap of things to take pictures of,  however as I mentioned, we were only there for an hour or two.  And in fact 1/2 of that time Carla took pictures of a barn while I took some fruit photos.  And from the examples above what are the odds that over 2 floors of an entire house we would both take a picture of the same piece of string?  Or how is it that both of us think that a boot laying beside a table let would make a good picture, and from the same angle to boot (no pun intended)? Or... or...or...

I couldn't help but wonder if we saw beauty in the same weird things because of our family genetics partly at play?  Would two strangers have had the same results?  I guess that unless I come across studies that have been done looking into this I will never know.  But for now, I personally can't help but believe that family connections go deeper than we often realize.

Carla, thanks for a fun afternoon, and for contributing to my "How Bizarre" moment.

Signing off for now.
Maritta Renz

Thursday, April 22, 2010

The Spiral Arguments of Virginia Woolf and Nicole Brossard

I will be discussing A Room of One’s Own by Virginia Woolf and Surfaces of Sense by Nicole Brossard as arguments about the possibility for women to be free through the act of writing. Nicole Brossard’s Surfaces of Sense approaches the argument through its abstracts use of spiral imagery. This imagery is a metaphor for the argument which I consider as being coexistent with A Room of One’s Own and Brossard’s other predecessors. A Room of One’s Own uses a more materialist approach to freedom than Surfaces of Sense, though Virginia Woolf’s argumentative strategy is often satirical, multiple and self reflexive as she resists or plays with the idea of arriving at any concrete conclusion or synthesis: “I should never be able to come to a conclusion [...]I have shirked the duty of coming to a conclusion” (Woolf 3). In this sense, Woolf can be said to also be employing a spiral, that is non-linear, coexistent strategy in her essay.
In the opening pages of A Room of One’s Own, Virginia Woolf states that the thesis of her essay will be “a woman must have money and a room of one’s own if she is to write fiction” (Woolf 3). She continues through the rest of her book length essay to meditate on the topic of women and fiction. In the opening pages, she tells us what her approach to the argument will be a blatant blend and blur of history, fact and fiction because “fiction here may have more truth then fact” (Woolf 4). She suggests that history and how women have been represented in it by men, is insufficient: “women and the fiction that is written about them” (Woolf 3). Therefore history alone will not be a reliable source of truth and the female writer’s imagination will need to be employed in order to arrive at some kind of truth.  The chapter in which Woolf invents the book Life’s Adventure by Mary Carmichael is a practical application of how her writer’s imagination can effect a real change. Woolf makes a statement through the imaginative work of Mary Carmichael about what is missing from literature and what is possible. She does this a times with a sense of humour:

“We are all women you assure me? Then I may tell you the very next words I read are these-‘Choloe liked Olivia...’ Do not start. Do not blush. Let us admit in the privacy of our own society that these things sometimes happen. Sometimes women do like women” (74).

Woolf uses a humble tone as a satire of what is means to be a lady in educated society. She is a lone voice making a rallying cry to a room full of women at a women’s college ruled over by coterie of monks. It is as though she is being polite because she knows that she is being watched. Like a rebellious student she talks loud and clear enough that her friends may hear her message but polite enough that she will not be asked to leave before she is done. There is a trace of sly resentment to her tone which suggests that there is something much angrier and unsettling at the core of the issue which she can only allude to through a metaphor:

“Thought – to call it a prouder name than it deserved – had let its line down into the stream[...]the cautious hauling of it in[...]alas, laid on the grass how small, how insignificant this thought of mine looked [...]the only charge I could bring against the Fellows and Scholars [...]they had sent my little fish into hiding” (5).

Woolf uses the image of a fish to suggest the slippery nature of ideas and freedom. She continually alludes to this paradoxical synthesis of fiction and reality in A Room of One’s Own, an approach that is in agreement with Georges Bataille’s statement that sovereignty is “the object which eludes us all, which nobody has seized and which nobody can seize for this reason: we cannot possess it, like an object, but we are doomed to seek it” (Bataille 165). Woolf depicts freedom as an intangible object which by its nature eludes us: “I went on to sketch a plan of the soul so that in each of us two powers preside, one male, one female[...]a great mind is androgynous” (88-89). At other times Woolf is hopeful and pragmatic in the way she sets out a material strategy to end women’s servitude so that they can have the freedom to choose their labours. Amidst the uncertainty and poetic flights of fancy, Woolf unleashes her anger in concrete demands, stating her need for freedom and those of the women around her:

“Intellectual freedom depends on material things. Poetry depends upon intellectual freedom. And women have always been poor[...]women then have not had a dog’s chance of writing poetry”

Woolf also uses examples from history to support her argument in A Room of One’s Own and goes to great pains to sketch the circumstances by which women have not been free to write about their own lives. She suggests issues such as the human need to feel superior; hence men’s need to feel superior to women and the material and spiritual poverty that this imposes on women. It is important to note that Woolf’s writing lost some credibility and suffered from lack of exposure after her suicide in 1941 and it wasn’t until the 1970’s that her work was put into new light by the women’s movement.  This suggests to me the importance of continual renewal and participation in this argument. It takes writers such as Nicole Brossard to restate and reimagine what Woolf was arguing for. It is in this way that it seems as though Woolf and Brossard’s books coexist and suggest the path of a spiral which continues to expand around its central point:

“Now my belief is that this poet who never wrote a word and was buried at the cross-roads still lives. She lives in you and in me, and in many other women who are not here tonight, for they are washing up the dishes and putting their children to bed. But she lives; for great poets do not die; they are continuing presences; they need only the opportunity to walk among us in the flesh” (102).

Surfaces of Sense by Nicole Brossard was first published in French in 1980 and in an English translation in 1989. Nicole Brossard’s unique approach to poetry, formatted as prose typically occupies the top third of a page and is cohesive in theme, characters and style. Surfaces of Sense reads at times like a journal about a fictional work in progress that is being translated into a free form poetic syntax. Other times Brossard is writing a practical manifesto for the liberation of women. It is also poetry in its use of rhythm, line breaks and enjambment. She uses the imagery and themes of spirals, fiction, reality and the cut up account of fictional lesbian lovers, crossed with her fictional representation of herself and her lover:

“From this moment there were double meanings and everything was in the present. A few characters, all women living in reality, in the middle of a tender and difficult fiction which painfully kept them alive[...]Madly, I had thought up a great love story for I wanted to write a book, no matter what[...]

Solve one problem at a time. From prose to anecdotes, entertaining, amusing, but not, however, enough to make me forget the fictional fire in our breasts. Several versions.

“How did Gertrude come into the world?-so real in the ultraviolet light of appearances.”

Brossard’s subversion of typical genres is reminiscent of Woolf’s mash ups of traditional literary forms. It displays a similar distrust for either history or fiction as lies. Without Woolf’s practical demands, the reader is free to interpret what Brossard means in Surfaces of Sense. I focussed on her repeated imagery of the spiral as being symbolic of the coexistent argument which includes A Room of One’s Own:For books continue each other, in spite of our habit of judging them separately” (Woolf 72) and the work of other female literary figures. Brossard uses the spiral as a symbol of collective consciousness and a communal empathy for women struggling for their voice in literature:

“Attentive to the movements which unwind in a spiral pattern in books written by women [...]the spiral pattern opens out onto the unwritten. And the unwritten circulates, round and round, producing emanations like those at the door to an initiatory pathway” (14).

Brossard, as Woolf did, meditates from multiple perspectives of the argument. She evokes the past, enacts the present argument in her own act of writing and calls attention to the unwritten future for women writers. The spiral becomes important as a symbol for an argument and discussion which is participatory. The spiral is a shape that expands and gains in circumference as it circulates around a central point. It suggests an argumentative approach whose goal is not conquering or appropriating but adding, embracing its predecessors. The spiral as symbol of argument is also a postmodern critique of the patriarchal tendency for linear and logical rhetorical structures: “once the line has deviated from its normal path (the course of reason), anything can happen; and it can take any sort of turn (lively or slow) with each new beginning” (22). In the section titled “Traces of a Manifesto” Brossard, as Woolf before her, is struggling with issues of sovereignty. Brossard’s struggle includes a resistance to gender categories implied by the male gaze that dominates literature. The spiral form is “charged with disseminating the patriarchal plague” (44) and to get our from under the “contemptuous gaze of others” (41). I read Surfaces of Sense as though Brossard was writing an updated version of Mary Carmichael’s Life’s Adventure. Brossard writes about women as lovers of other women. She is aware of the limitations of fiction, poetry and language to resist definition and thus be absolutely free. There is the sense that Brossard is avoiding logic and naming as a statement of freedom. Like Woolf, in order for Brossard to write about freedom, she must also dwell in some agitation and paradox.  She creates the fictional world of Gertrude and Adrienne (I read this as an intertextual nod to pioneers of women’s writing Gertrude Stein and Adrienne Rich). These characters are sometimes confused or combined with Brossard and her real life lover Yolande: “Adrienne’s words overlapped with Yolande’s” (20). Also like Woolf, Brossard is not working in any clear genre but draws from many sources, she is creating a manifesto out of the collision of facts, fictions, histories and forms:

“At Adrienne’s side; convinced as I was that each image in my words, in my life, could become so patently obvious that the bodies of our women marching slowly through the streets suddenly acquired the status of a manifesto. For when Adrienne and I went further and further back into History, we were always confused in an absurd way with fiction, as though we had never really existed” (41).

It’s important to note the historical lineage that links Virginia Woolf and Nicole Brossard. There is a theory which Slavoj Zizek discusses that the modern world is a post-ideological one, as though the work of the feminism or other “–ism’s” are somehow done. It strikes me for this reason that feminism is more important than ever. To note the link between Woolf and Brossard goes to show that the argument is never over and needs continual renewal and re-evaluation for each generation or else the work of our predecessors may be lost. This is a case in point for the necessity of writing and expression in the struggle for freedom and sovereignty. In The Puppet and the Dwarf Slavoj Zizek’s writes that: “freedom is not a blissfully neutral state of harmony and balance, but the very violent act which disturbs this balance” (36).  This supports my belief that the participatory nature of the spiral and the necessity of an argument is that it not arrive at a synthesis or conclusion. That the freedom to argue, to express conflicting points of view that expand and reiterate on past arguments is paradoxically a statement of freedom and a desire for sovereignty.


Bibliography

Bataille, Georges. Literature and Evil. Surrey: Calder and Boyars, 1973.
Brossard, Nicole. Surfaces of Sense. Trans. Fiona Strachan.Toronto: Coach House Press, 1989.
Woolf, Virginia. A Room of One’s Own and Three Guineas. London: Penguin Books, 2000.
Zizek, Slavoj. The Puppet and the Dwarf: The Perverse Core of Christianity. Boston: The MIT

by Mat Laporte

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Moda Boho

Have you heard of Moda Boho?  I hadn't until just recently.  Moda Boho is a new shop that just opened up on 11204 - 96 St, a couple of weeks ago.

I was on a mission to find a door prize for the AWE Conference held in Edmonton April 21 - 23 when I drove past a new little shop that looked like it might have some local art to sell.  Since my job is to promote artists, I felt I should donate a door prize that was made by a local artist.

I met the store owner who was very helpful.  We browsed her new shop which is full of antiques and gifts that are unique, interesting, and, I thought, very affordable.  I was pleased to see she did indeed have items from Canadian artists, and I ended up buying two things.

The first item was a beautiful bead and jade bracelet made by Janie's Jewellery Design.  I highly recommend taking at look at her jewellery.

I also purchased a Raku Clay Rock Bird by Gayle Schmidt of Claymoon Studio in Terrace B.C.  Gayle is a Raku Clay Artist and can be contacted by email using gschmidt at telus dot net.  The birds on display were of various colors and when you shook them they each sang/whistled a different sound.  They really were well-crafted and beautiful.

It was nice to find another little hidden treasure in Edmonton where I can go to for unique antiques and gifts.  I wish Moda Boho all the best and great success!

Maritta Renz

Monday, April 19, 2010

The beta period has been extended

Thank you for your many suggestions as we work to make this site as effective as possible for you, the consumers and artists of the creative community. We have been very pleased by the reception you have given us and look forward to providing more and better services to you. One milestone that we passed today was the listing of over 250 event listing within 24 hours. We didn't expect to reach that level until the fall so we are very happy to have met an important need for you. Last week we released an improved design for the website to make it more user friendly and attractive. Keep those comments coming because we are sprinting to keep up with your needs. I won't list the upcoming enhancements but watch here or on our twitter feed: @stoodio8 for announcements on our activities or the changes we make for you.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Cosmic revelations

Know what I think is really and I mean really cool in my mind? 

Earth is said to be about 4.6 billion years old, an incredible piece of art in itself.  Human civilization started as cavemen about 35000 years painting art in caves, and just forming language and music; yet still every day, 35000 years later, we are all still gifted by incredibly unique art forms.  Just think about it, after that many years human civilization can still come up with new and different and cool things to view, listen to, read, use and watch. 

Isn't "art" and imagination a magnificent thing?  How can we not want to support, share and celebrate it?

Maritta

Thursday, April 15, 2010

It's in the cards!

What's frustrating?  Well pretty much all the normal things that go with starting up a new business with no track record.  But that's ok, because being frustrated can sometimes be fun.  My parents were big card players and I mean BIG!  They loved a variety of games and a popular one with family members is a game we call "Frustration."  Without getting into detail, it's a game where you must complete one level before you can play the next.  The frustrating part is that sometimes you can get stuck on a level that should be easy and watch others move on, and then levels that should be hard can come easily.  It's also frustrating because the decisions you make about which cards to throw, not only effect your hand but others in the game.

Launching stoodio8 is much like this card game.  Frustrating because I want to be successful by making the right decisions and be the best player in the "game".  And I have to succeed at one "level" to be able to successfully move on to the next, even though I want to do it all now, not in stages.  And the decisions I make in each level effects not only me, but all the "players" such as my family, staff, stoodio8 members, and art supporters.  It's also fun though, because I like it when I succeed at one level and move to the next.  It's satisfying to overcome obstacles people and events throw your way. 

So even though I feel moments of frustration, that's what drives me to work to turn them around so it's something to smile about or even reflect on and laugh at because I'm moving up to the next level and winning.

Maritta

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Why am I excited about the marketplace to the arts community?

Well, here I go.  stoodio8 is officially up and running in a beta testing mode.  It's exciting, energizing, nerve-racking and frustrating.

It's exciting because it's been a long time in the making and it's still just the beginning.  Developing stoodio8 has evolved into the beginnings of a great opportunity for the entire arts community, of which I am a huge fan.  My love of visual art, such as my own painting and photography started my quest to design a website that helps promote Canadian artists.  Along the way I realized that the entire arts community is an integral part, not just enjoyable part of our everyday lives.  Every day I am exposed to and privileged to be a recipient of various artistic forms.

I love to paint and take pictures and thoroughly enjoy looking at other artists' work.  For example, when I went to New York for only a 4 day girls get away, I spent an entire day on my own at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (MET) and left there feeling enriched by having had access to real historical masterpieces.  That was a day I will always cherish.

I love music. I don't believe there are any genres I really don't like.  Maybe some I only enjoy in small doses, but overall my collection of music is very eclectic, and whether at home doing housework, working, or driving, the tunes are on.  I enjoy going to concerts, often with my kids who also appreciate their tunes.  Music highlights for me include taking my kids to the Juno Awards in Edmonton when they started touring, buying CD's from groups singing on the subway trains, and listening to my daughter sing, who really does have a beautiful voice when she lets people hear her.

Then there's the performing and literary arts. Who doesn't love a great movie, play, or book?  The evolution of Canadian movies and theatre has been astronomical and just keeps getting better.  I have tried to expose my kids to musicals, ballets, plays, etc. in hopes they grow up with an appreciation for the various artistic forms available to them.  As I write this I realize now that they are older and everyone is so busy we have not been to a play since the Lion King was in Edmonton.  I will have to plan another family night out to the theatre soon.

The written word, wow how powerful. Every night I go to bed and read a few pages of someone's novel.  Sometimes when I finish a great book I reflect back and wonder how one mind can come up with such an imaginative and creative piece?  I use to work as a Government Relations Advisor and wrote all day long.  Writing doesn't come naturally for me and I often struggled to find the right words, phrases and concepts.  Fortunately,  Sharon, a very talented co-worker, whom I always admired because she could take any topic and make it sound natural and easy to read, was often there to bounce ideas off of.

I included Industrial Design in stoodio8 as the diverse artistic talent in this field is truly amazing, and I feel underappreciated, and often misunderstood.  I often find myself stopping to admire the design of something such as a chair, table, jewellery, or even a fork, or glass.

Maybe it's the Scorpio in me, but I truly appreciate ALL the art forms and am happy to bring to the table a way for everyone to share and celebrate them in a cohesive pool of talent.  My objective is to make stoodio8 an affordable and easy way to do this.  It's so exciting to think that every day now I will work around and enjoy being exposed to even more people, artists, and art forms.  How cool is that?

I'll continue in my next blog with why this project has been energizing.

Maritta Renz

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

The stoodio8 Genesis - why is there a marketplace for the arts

Launching stoodio8 is very nerve-racking because, well, I'm nervous.  I have had the idea to have some sort of gallery for years, but for various reasons it was never something I thought I would actually do.  But sometimes in life things happen that can alter your outlook on life enough to cause change.  In my case it was the passing of my mother.  My parents were great parents.  Both of them came to Canada with very little and worked hard to provide for four kids.  They didn't earn a large income but enough to fulfill their outlook on life which seemed to be  that even though you work hard there always needs to be time for fun and vacation.

My father was the first to pass away and it's a very difficult time when you lose a parent.  But then when you lose your second parent, as when my mother passed away, there is an even greater sense of loss as you no longer have "the other parent" to hang on to.  It was sad to think that on my side of the family the 4 of us kids were now the oldest living generation in our family tree, as both my grandparents and now parents had passed on.  I started to feel that I could no longer procrastinate on doing some of the things I wanted to do.

When the estate was settled and I received my portion of the inheritance, I didn't even have to think about what I would do with it.  I can't explain it, but I had such a strong feeling that I had to do something with the money that would honour my parents for their hard work.  I saw this as family money, not my money.  I wanted to do something that would go beyond using it for myself.  I felt that it would be best if my entire family could somehow benefit from this over the long term.

So I put the money into a company account, hired a web design company and started to create an internet art gallery.  stoodio8 as it is now called, is nothing like what I initially envisioned, and has evolved into something I truly believe in.  But now, I admit I am a little nervous.  I believe in the value of this site, but will others? I know how this can truly help the entire arts community, but will others? I am now nervous about finding the best way to have people understand my vision for the website and take the leap of faith to come on board and be a part of something that may seem basic right now, but will evolve into some incredible stuff.  I am nervous because I am doing this with my parents money and in honour of them,  and I guess there's still that kid in me that doesn't want to disappoint my parents.

Maritta

Monday, April 12, 2010

A change is as good as a rest!

The old saying "a change is as good as a rest" is so true.  Launching stoodio8 has been energizing.  I am now able to do something that for me, is new, exciting and interesting.

This venture has led to meeting new people I would never have met.  I'm eager to grow the site and see the talent that comes on board.  It's stimulating to think of the huge potential this site has for future growth that will promote the arts.  I have ideas of where I want the stoodio8 to evolve to, but the driving force will be the members.  I will listen and watch and learn, and then shape stoodio8 accordingly.  I can't wait!

I am the type of person who enjoys change, trying out new things, and going to new places, so the evolution of stoodio8 will be so energizing for me because as the site evolves it will always stimulate and generate new ways to market, network and promote its members, which will continue to stimulate and energize me.  It's all good.

Maritta