Posts by Laura

Merging Dance and Art: Bas-Reliefs

Marie-Josee Chartier and Dan Wild in Bas-Reliefs
For those familiar with the work of Canadian visual artist Betty Goodwin, you can understand why a dancer, of all people, would feel compelled to create an entire show using Goodwin's work as inspiration. Over her fifty-plus career, Goodwin has attacked a number of subjects in a variety of media, but none with such profound interest as the human body.

Using Goodwin's bodies as a point of departure, dancer/choreographer Marie-Josée Chartier brings together 11 artists from Toronto and Montreal in a multi-disciplinary collaboration, incorporating dance, video, lighting, design and photography.

Bas-Reliefs by Chartier Danse is a DanceWorks presentation and opens tonight at the Enwave Theatre as part of Harbourfront Centre's NextSteps Series. Show runs from November 29th - December 1st with 8pm performances.

Ticket Info:
416-973-4000


Photo by Jeremy Mimnagh

Manga on Stage

Susie Burpee and Linnea Swan in Rehearsal for Manga
Here's a curious combo: Japanese comic books and contemporary dance. See the connection? Serge Bennathan certainly does. After a successful premiere in Vancouver, Bennathan, veteran choreographer, brings his latest creation Manga to the Harbourfront Centre - a fierce yet fluid duet of epic proportions inspired by the movement aesthetics of Japanese comic books, better known as manga

Danced by Susie Burpee and Linnea Swan, the 60-minute duet is an emotional and physically grueling journey; a dance in constant motion bringing to life the frames of everyday existence.

Manga opens tonight at the Enwave Theatre at the Harbourfront Centre. Show runs from the 22nd - 24th with 8pm performances.

Ticket Info:
416-973-4000

Photo taken by Ella Cooper of Susie Burpee (front) and Linnea Swan (back) in rehearsal for Manga.

New Proposed Tax Could Turn Billboards into Art

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Photo: "Place your message here!" by blogTO Flickr pooler Gabi~

Now here's a tax that makes sense: The Beautiful City Billboard Fee, a tax that could raise at least six million dollars annually by charging a fee to third-party outdoor advertisers on city billboards. If approved, the revenue raised would be directed through the Toronto Arts Council and used to support a slew of public art initiates.

The proposal launched by the BCBF Alliance may be an ambitious one, but the logic behind it is quite simple: billboard advertisers should be held accountable to the community for their impact on public space. With the rise of illegal billboards in Toronto (over 500 have been confirmed by anti-billboard front man, Rami Tabello, of illegalsigns.ca), the need for serious action is upon us.

The Beautiful City Alliance is asking those who believe in the regulation of city billboards to sign and circulate the BCBF petition. Every signature counts!

Dove Unleashes "Onslaught": Social Responsibility or Corporate Hypocrisy?

It could be said that the art of advertising is the art of convincing people that they are not, in fact, being advertised to. This kind of savvy, ad exec trickery is a challenging feat indeed, but when it works, it really works!



Enter Toronto's Ogilvy & Mather, the ad agency responsible for the wildly popular viral videos from Dove's Campaign for Real Beauty. "Onslaught", the follow up video to "Evolution", has garnered over 200,000 views on Youtube since it first hit the web on Monday. Feeding the viral frenzy are people who may claim to have no interest at all in the Dove brand, but are compelled, for whatever reason, to pass on the video to a friend. I've received the video four times now. The general consensus: "It's a cool ad with a great message." Well done Ogilvy & Mather, you savvy ad execs, you!

Art Aloud: The Scotiabank Nuit Blanche Lecture Series

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Photo: "Speaker on a Hydrant" by blogTO Flickr pooler LT.

I realize that panel discussions aren't exactly the sexiest of events, but given all the hype surrounding Nuit Blanche, I had expected a packed auditorium last night at Art Aloud: the first of two lectures brought to you by the folks at Nuit Blanche. Not only was the panel free, it was also moderated by Christopher Hume himself, urban issues guru and columnist for the Toronto Star.

The panel was held at OCAD in an aditorium fit for 200. With just over 50 in attendance the night was more an intimate dialogue than a critical debate. Where were all the OCAD kids anyhow? Despite the lack of bums in seats there was an undeniable sense of support for both the artists on panel and Nuit Blance as a whole, made clear by a vocal and passionate audience.

Queen West Art Crawl to Queen East Art Brawl: The Lab Sessions 2.0

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For those who've recovered from last weekend's art crawl, it's time to move it on up to the east side tomorrow night for The Lab Sessions 2.0 - the second installment in a series of interactive art parties hosted and curated by Labspace Studio.
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