PSA: Visual Arts Development Awards applications released

News Release! Spread the Word!
 
April 11, 2007
 
$56,500 IN AWARDS FOR BC ARTISTS AND ARTISANS NOW AVAILABLE
2007 Visual Arts Development Awards applications released

The eleventh annual Visual Arts Development Awards (VADA) is now underway. The Awards assist British Columbia’s emerging or mid-career visual artists and artisans. The initiative is to encourage the development of new skills and techniques. Grants range in size from $3,000 to $5,000. Deadline for receipt of completed applications is Friday, June 29th at 6 p.m.

This award is for emerging or mid-career visual artists and artisans who want to explore a new technique or process that will further their practice and artistic development. Last year, 14 visual artists and artisans from across the province received awards. Their projects included: travelling to Iran to learn skills and techniques of traditional Persian miniature painting; mentoring with a Chilkat weaver to connect the processes of dovetailing, interlocking and drawstring to recreate a full Chillkat dance apron. Learning the fundamentals of garment conception, construction and alteration; learning how to use a Focused Ion Beam to produce work with gallium and other substrates; a self-directed program to learn the linocut printmaking process to incorporate cutting and printing into 2D works; and learning digital technologies such as basic editing, titling, graphics, digitizing video and production methods.

Read more details over the jump! Continue reading

Operation Global Media Domination: all I want is you…and you’re looking damn fine lately…

Best of Blogs finalist badgeYour humble blog servant – say, have you cut your hair? Something about you looks just so remarkably alive lately, we’ve all been meaning to tell you – begs to draw your attention – seriously, are you working out? You must be doing something right; your skin just glows – to the fact that a dear, dear friend of yours – really, you can bunk with us anytime, we’ll even clear out the Haunted Chamber for you – and a loyal blogreader except if you’re not a blogger in which case we pore over your comments (or silences as the case may be) as if they were morsels of gold from the lips of the Buddha himself, is a finalist in the Best of Blogs competition and humbly petitions for your consideration.

Vote here, pretty please with a cherry and the naked
celebrity/obscurity of your choice on top

You have only till midnight EDT, Friday, April 13,
so don’t delay, vote today!

Have I mentioned that I give marvelous head?

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“No More Drug War” Filmfest Double Bill

Pivot Legal Society is proud to support

“No More Drug War FilmFest Double Bill”  

The British Columbia Compassion Club Society and the Vancouver Island Compassion Society cordially invite you to the No More Drug War Double-Bill Filmfest featuring two exceptional documentaries exploring very different aspects of our failed drug prohibition: Damage Done: the Drug War Odyssey, directed by Connie Littlefield and sponsored by the National Film Board of Canada; and Waiting to Inhale: Marijuana, Medicine & the Law, directed by Jed Riffe and supported by the Sundance Independent Film Festival.

A community dialogue will follow the screenings with the directors of both films and special guests from Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) including former Mayor of Vancouver Senator Larry Campbell (at the Vancouver showing).

When and Where:
Saturday April 14th in Victoria – Roxy Theatre (2657 Quadra Street)
Sunday April 15th in Vancouver – Vancouver International Film Centre (1181 Seymour Street at Davie)

Both locations: 12:30-4:30 p.m. (doors 11:45) Tickets (door only): $10 Regular / $5 Seniors & VICS/BCCCS members.

Special sponsor tickets with reserved seating are also available for $50 each, please call us in advance if you would like to purchase one of these. All proceeds will go to the British Columbia Compassion Club Society (www.thecompassionclub.org) and Vancouver Island Compassion Society (www.thevics.com).

For more information contact:
Victoria: Philippe Lucas, 250-884-9821;
phil at thevics dot com
Vancouver: Rielle Capler, 604-875-0214; rielle at thecompassionclub dot org

We hope to see you there! Rielle Capler and Philippe Lucas

P.S. Special thanks to the following supporting organizations:
The National Film Board of Canada
TIDES Canada Foundation
The Center for Addictions Research of B.C.
Canadians for Safe Access
Creative Resistance
Voices of Substance
Law Enforcement Against Prohibition
Pivot Legal Society
B.C. Persons With AIDS Society
Society of Living Injection Drug Users of Victoria B.C. Civil Liberties Association

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Olympic evictions declared illegal

From Pivot Legal Society:

“Olympic” evictions declared illegal 

Vancouver – Pivot Legal Society and a coalition of advocacy groups won two low-income housing eviction- and rent-increase cases for residents of one of the Downtown Eastside’s low-income hotels today.

Two residents of the Golden Crown Hotel received notice today from the Residential Tenancy Branch that their illegal eviction notices and rent increases linked to the Olympics were set aside.

“We are pleased to be part of a process that set aside these flawed eviction notices and rent increases,” says Shabnum Durrani of Pivot Legal Society who was counsel for the tenants. “However, this is a short term solution. The only real solution is for government to reinvest in social housing.”

The eviction notices given were for March 31, 2007, to the 28 units in the Golden Crown Hotel located across the street from the Woodward’s building. The eviction notices and rent increases are linked to the 2010 Olympics as owners of the hotel have indicated that they would like to use the hotel to provide housing to Olympic workers rather than the current residents.

In setting aside the illegal eviction notice, the dispute resolution officer in the case wrote, “the ‘Notice’ given by the landlord is not an ‘effective’ Notice because it is not in the approved form and it is fatal in its deficiency because it does not inform the tenants of their [rights]…I find the ‘Notice’ given by the landlord is void from the beginning.”

The Golden Crown hotel was one of the four hotels scheduled to close to low income individuals in the last four weeks. As a result of the work done by Pivot and several other advocacy groups including the Downtown Eastside Residents’ Association and the Save Low Income Housing Coalition, three of the four hotels have remained open and operating for low income individuals.

Earlier today 46 single room occupancy (SRO) hotel rooms were saved when the new owners handed management of the Carl Rooms to a local non-profit organization. Community advocates, including David Eby from Pivot Legal Society, convinced a partnership of developers, 0773477 B.C. Limited, to turn over management of their recently-purchased SRO to Atira Property Management, a non-profit property management organization. Atira is a Vancouver-based company that operates three other low-income buildings in the Downtown Eastside. The owners’ agreement with Atira includes plans to renovate and improve the building, while it remains at rent levels accessible to those on basic social assistance.

Link to the Court decision, (6-page pdf)

For more information contact:
Shabnum Durrani – Pivot Legal Society – 778 228 5952 or (604) 255-9700 ext. 104
Reginald Walton – Resident of the Golden Crown Hotel – 778-235-4557

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About Pivot Legal Society
Pivot
’s mandate is to take a strategic approach to social change, using the law to address the root causes that undermine the quality of life of those most on the margins.   We believe that everyone, regardless of income, benefits from a healthy and inclusive community where values such opportunity, respect and equality are strongly rooted in the law.

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Buy this damn thing

I hear that I’m allowed one discreet text link to an item that’s delegated its power to the Capitalist Conspiracy, ie something for sale, so here it is.

Buy This Damn Thing

For the love of god, would you click through and purchase that fucker already? Vicus is going to whine uncontrollably until everyone on Earth has at least one copy, and god forbid he get maudlin about it and start with the weepy Sixties folk tunes. If the book doesn’t sell out, don’t blame me if the blogosphere is subjected to nothing but recitals of bloody Kumbiyah in creaky and wistful Donovan style for the next six straight months.

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