Tuesday, 19 November 2013

Its been way to long since I had anything to say about street art in Calgary...so here it is...I'm gonna make this happen...SPRING 2014...with the help of ACAD and the City Of Calgary Public Art.....


Introduction:
From giant blue orbs to community patchwork murals, the City of Calgary is claiming to embrace Public Art.  One modality that has been marginalized is the ever-popular movement of Street art.  City officials, worried about condoning illegal graffiti have created a polarity of art or crime, which has created a backlash against legitimate urban artists. These artists who choose the streets as their galleries are unwelcome in Calgary as there is little recource for them to get legal public canvasses.  We are hoping to re open the conversation of what constitutes appropriate publc street art and come to a more balanced perspective.  Thus the need for a panel discussion, with experts that have insight into this complex issue:
“New Page” Fresh Perspectives on Street Art in Calgary, Challenges and Sucesses in other North American Cities and what we can learn moving forward.
Background:

Calgary, like so many other large North American Cities, has spent millions on illegal graffiti cleanup at the expense of the public.  In an attempt to control the situation, Calgary Police and Bylaw serves have implemented a "graffiti free" mandate and an unconstitutional bylaw that discriminates on one particular style of art. This has done very little to curb youth graffiti, but it has created a backlash against all street art.  In the current political climate in Calgary there is very little access to wall space, funding, displays, youth mentorship and community revitalization for legitimate artists that work in this medium.  "New Page" is not interested in advocating for illegal taggers and graffiti artists, but for street artists that want to work with the City of Calgary and Private businesses to create inspirational murals.  Good street art brings color, vibrancy and diversity to he community and encourages youth to express themselves in a constructive way. 


Proposal:

I want to host a panel discussion at the Stanford Lecture hall at ACAD in the spring of 2014.
 I want to open up the dialogue about the positive merit of Street Art, and it's place in Calgary, and address important questions such as:

""What happened during the Shaw Millennium pilot project?''

"Hoe does Zero Tolerance of graffiti impact both legal and illegal graffiti?

"Does the city of Calgary see legal street art as a legitimate contemporary art form?

" How do we respect the city we live in and give street artists a venue to paint?"

"How have other North American Cities found success with legal street art projects?"

I have selected a panel of experts who can offer insight and experiences on this subject who include:

Dawn Ford: Co-coordinator for the city of Calgary Art Program (CONFIRMED)

Dawn has an MFA in theater and has worked extensively with marginalized groups, allowing people who have little voice the opportunity to express themselves through the arts.   She has experience and insight into Calgary's Arts programming and the challenges the City Public Arts department faces while working with bylaw and police when advocating for Street Art projects.

Kirsty Trinier: Past Director of Edmonton Public Art

Kristy Trinier is a contemporary artist, cultural director, writer and researcher based in Edmonton, Canada. She is a Curator at the Art Gallery of Alberta. While working as the Public Art Director in Edmonton, she set up a successful legal wall system, which is still operational today.  

Adam Melnyk: Author Visual Orgasm, The Early Years of Canadian Graffiti
Adam Melnyk is a successful writer and historian for graffiti art in Western Calgary.  He understands the roots of Street Art in Calgary and the issues this movement has faced over the last 15 years.  He can help demonstrate to the public the difference between well-organized legal productions and vandalism.


Druh Farrell: Alderwoman, Ward 7

Druh Farrell has commissioned a street art style mural by Daniel Kirk on the side of her headquarters in Kensington.  As an Alderwoman she understands the communities perspective, and her ward is one of the more progressive areas in Calgary in terms of embracing legal street Art. 

*******: Street Artist

********* has painted in Calgary, all over Canada and Europe.  He was part of Fairstyles crew and did projects in Kensington and with the Mustard Seed.

Format:

A panel discussion with five keynote speakers, hosted by ACAD, taking place April 25 @ 7pm.  Each speaker will have twenty minutes or less to do a power-point presentation on their area of expertise.  Jeanne Ironside will moderate the discussion.  It will be followed by a question and answer period lasting 30 minutes.  There will be a reception in the main mall following the panel discussion.

Benefits:

This panel discussion will help further the development of a constructive street art mandate for the city of Calgary's public art program.  It may lead to revisions on Bylaw, which respects all forms on self- expression in appropriate contexts.  It will give voice to the positive merits of legal street art, and will give the supporters of this art form a chance to interact and strengthen their position. Ultimately it will lead to a more balanced perspective on the issue within the community, as both sides of the argument will have a voice.

Sunday, 7 April 2013

YOUTUBE Meditations


Class Discussion   FINA 450

My Experience with Meditation:

Chris Cran asked us to give a class presentation and imagine we were talking to a friend about something we found to be interesting.  After giving it some thought, I decided to share my personal experience with meditation, and in particular youtube meditations, because this has helped me a lot in my life, and maybe other people will be feelin' it after checking out some of my links.

I like the explanation that "prayer is talking to your Higher Self," the universe, or whatever people use as a source of inspiration, and "meditation is listening for the answer", which inevitably comes, if one is patient, in my experience.

Meditation is a completely personal experience, and everyone's journey to connect to inner peace looks different.  Most people think you have to sit on a pillow with your legs crossed, and pay attention to your breath.  If that works for you, that’s great, but I think it would make me insane.  Other approaches to "clearing you head" include connecting with nature, walking, yoga, swimming, walking in labyrinths, deep breathing, reiki and my personal favorite, guided meditations or visualizations on youtube!

The benefits of meditation are enormous.  From a scientific point of view, it has been proven that it can change your brain waves, and help them to slow down from beta, waves "thinking/analyzing etc" to theta and alpha waves, which I assume will regenerate our energy if we are running on beta for long periods, or are experiencing stress.  In my experience meditation helps by calming the nervous system, helping to reconnect with the body, gaining perspective on situations, getting centered and sleep.

I wanted to share my positive experience with youtube meditation videos.  At first I thought the whole thing was a little silly, but now I can't live without it!
I did have to try a few different ones, and filter through lists and check out links that came up, in order to find ones I really liked and found to be beneficial. 
Here are some links to different videos, and I encourage people to try some of them or search for their own topics:

Chakra Meditations:

Letting go of things, relationships:
Fear and Courage:
Foregiveness:

Positive Thinking/ Clearing Negativity:

Pure Relaxation:

Shamanism:

Other topics Ive explored are mental health, grief, creative visualizations etc.

Using the word "guided" and "meditation" before and after the topic is how I look for videos.


The way I would explain it, is that by stilling / slowing your mind, you can find a place of safety and security, your own "happy place" like Adam Sandler in Happy Gilmore:

Tuesday, 11 December 2012

We got talent in this City!


Calgary Graffiti Jam..The Community of Kensington Keepin it Real!


The City of Edmonton…Keepin' it REAL!


Check out some of these quotes about murals in our Capital in the North…

Edmonton's Official Standpoint:

Graffiti zones encourage the development and recognition of the iconography, technique, and skill associated with this medium for both the public and for graffiti artists, which results in higher quality graffiti. While it is not expected that the graffiti zones will eradicate illegal vandalism, it will provide a much needed safe place for talented graffiti artists to practice legally and to encourage the public to experience these open source murals as artworks with great value.




Exert from an Amazing Paper by a Director of Public Art....

 Part of the subversive reputation of graffiti culture is the idea that you can claim your city. This concept directly relates to modern art movements that advocate that the city can be viewed as an outdoor gallery. And that art should be for everyone, and should not be restrained to the
context and regulations of a traditional white-cube art gallery exhibition space, which is usually considered to be exclusive in terms of which artists are represented and how the artwork is presented.


The McCauley Project:First Nations Represent!

Yet, these murals can have a very positive effect when the values of the neighborhood are encapsulated by the artwork. As seen in another image, the mural depicting Aboriginal ways of life is left remarkably untagged. The piece shows dream catchers and tipis in unison with the environment, as well as the familiar skyline of downtown Edmonton depicted behind them. This creates a message that the Aboriginal culture has largely, and positively influenced the city, and has helped make Edmonton the city that it is today. The youth who may generally paint graffiti as a form of reaction against their rejection by the middle class standards of society now leave the pieces intact, with the only spray paint on them being small signatures at the bottom of the wall, perhaps as an artist’s signature at the corner of the canvas, or indeed, as a silent indicator of their approval.


Shaw Millenium


Shaw Millennium-A Legal Wall Pilot program that went Sideways…
 “ Over the course of two days, a pack of paint-wielding hooligans attacked the blank canvas that was the spiral Landmark building at Millennium Park, turning it into a masterpiece of mayhem and myopia. What started as art ended up as a hideous eyesore. If it's a testament to the sheer tenacity of the vandals with the cans of spray paint, it's a monument to the blind stupidity of the grown-ups who left "young urban artists" alone to decorate a public park.

Micheal Platt, The Calgary Sun
"They destroyed the fricking park -- they graffitied the hell out of it. They tagged the entire fricking park," said Ald. John Mar, barely able to contain his anger and outrage at the mess, and a clean up bill estimated at between $30,000 and $60,000.
While I was in Nanaimo, the city of Calgary decided to give legal walls a try, with disastrous consequences.  I remember talking to someone on the BC ferries, and he said the city of Calgary organized a graf jam and a ton of artists got arrested. The truth isn’t much better. From what I gather from the newspapers, and taking to Ryan Coulson, a skate park monitor, the city of Calgary’s intentions wasn’t to entrap graffiti artists, but the situation got pretty out of hand.  Coulson said there was a lack of strategic planning and foresight of what might happen if angry teenagers got to have a free for all at Millennium.  Apparently, all the frustrations towards the city got taken out on the park, in a less than artistic way. 
The attempt to give Calgary Youth a legal wall ended up with Shaw millennium covered in hateful, angry youth art and with the cost to taxpayers estimated at $100 000 they probably won’t be endorsing a legal wall for a while.  I wasn't there so I don't really know why this "legal wall" ended up becoming a fiasco, but it sounds like inexperience on the part of the organizers, as well as a lack of awareness of the political culture of youth in Calgary, and the implimentation of a "longterm" legal graffiti management strategy.



http://www.flickr.com/photos/thekidbelo/3854251922/

Back in the Day....


Legal Walls in Calgary

When I was a teenager, around 2000-2004, there was a "legal" tunnel at Barlow Maxbell.  It was a sweet underpass, made of cement.  There was always different individuals and crews rocken' pieces, characters and productions.

Another area that was temporarily sanctioned was the sandpits situated around the city.  They are weird hexagon shaped cement structures incased in wood paneling, and the inside had graffiti pieces that ran all the way around the parameter.

Both of these areas were self-governed.  It was pretty theatrical at times, because within the scene there is a hierarchy, based on experience, street cred, and skills as well as rivalries between individuals and crews.  In spite of all the drama, a sense of community was build up over time between writers.

The walls were beautiful, interesting and ever changing.   They helped create a sense of respectability for Calgary street art, a showcase legitimizing the art form. 
These sanctioned areas where a positive, because the artists had time to contribute something meaningful to the community and do really good pieces.

As far as I know, for political reasons, there are currently no legal walls in Calgary, and that makes me sad, because a part of Calgary's subculture has been whitewashed by conservative agendas.