Renfrew-Collingwood Community News

News stories from the Renfrew-Collingwood community in East Vancouver


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Local resident wins championship with Lions Gate Chorus

SUBMITTED BY MEGHAN FELL

My name is Meghan and I’ve lived in the Joyce-Collingwood neighbourhood for 13 years now. This November 2023, my Vancouver-based chorus, Lions Gate Chorus, competed in an international competition, and, for the first time ever, we won the gold medal! I’m incredibly proud of this accomplishment; we all worked so hard to achieve this goal. No matter how I’m feeling, joining with 96 other voices lifts my spirit and brings me so much joy. I feel so lucky to have found this group, with whom I’ve been singing for nearly 17 years. — Meghan Fell

Vancouver acappella group brings home the gold at international championship competition. Source: YouTube
Vancouver acappella group brings home the gold at the Sweet Adelines international championship competition. Source: YouTube

Lions Gate Chorus, a Vancouver-based chorus of 100 a cappella singers, secured the title of International Champions on November 4, 2023, at the 75th Annual Sweet Adelines International Convention and Competition in Louisville, Kentucky, with record-breaking scores.

This is the first time in the chorus’s 69-year history to win the coveted international gold medal. Not only did Lions Gate win the contest, but they were also the first chorus in Sweet Adelines history to receive a perfect score in any category from the panel of judges.

The group is well known in the global barbershop singing community for their creative shows and musical excellence. Moments before the announcement of their championship title, Lions Gate was also named the audience’s choice for Most Entertaining Chorus of the competition — an award they won in 2009, 2017 and 2019.

Under the leadership of their musical director, Sandy Marron, Lions Gate has been in the top five of more than 500 Sweet Adelines International choruses worldwide since 2007.

“As soon as they announced second place and it wasn’t us, I knew that after 32 years of directing this fabulous group of singers, we had finally achieved ‘the impossible dream’ of becoming world champions. This was a life goal for me, and I couldn’t be any happier. These singers are not only my chorus members, they are my best friends,” said Marron.

Watch their gold medal performances at https://youtu.be/IgBz1jDRER4?si=FwqjI4LgK7juvsAf (semifinals)
and https://youtu.be/AcLcQN6hGls?si=urvMV0AxquYfu8tf

Lions Gate Chorus fosters an inclusive and empowering intergenerational community, welcoming singers in a safe and accepting space. Singers interested in auditioning can learn more at https://www.lionsgatechorus.ca/join-us. Rehearsals run every Tuesday at 7:00 pm at the Croatian Cultural Centre in Vancouver. Event organizers interested in hiring Lions Gate Chorus to perform can learn more at https://www.lionsgatechorus.ca/hire-us.


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December 2023 issue of RCC News is here

The December 2023 issue of the RCC News has been posted. It’s time to celebrate the holiday season with family, friends and community. Read uplifting stories of neighbourhood connections in this latest issue of the Renfrew-Collingwood Community News.

Download the new issue.

In this issue:

  • Lions Gate Chorus named world champions
  • Remembering Collingwood’s favourite paper boy: Dennis Alexander Reid
  • Youth Connect Program by Still Moon Arts Society
  • Collingwood resident featured in new Coastal City Ballet works
  • Out on a Lim: Photos from Penny Lim to help chase away the winter blahs
  • Christmas: One of our favourite times of the year
  • Collingwood Corner: A happy Christmas in 1963
  • Plus: Renfrew Park Community Complex winter programs

Do you have a local story to tell or an event to share? We’d love to hear about it! Email rccnews-editorial@cnh.bc.ca.

The deadline for the January 2024 issue is a few days early due to the holidays on December 8.

We welcome story submissions from 300 to 400 words long. Accompanying photos must be high resolution in a jpg file at least 1 MB large and include a photo caption and the name of the photographer.


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New exhibit at Il Museo: The Divine Gaze

An Exploration into Our Connection with the Divine and Ourselves

BY ANGELA CLARKE

Fayum portrait by Joy Hanser. Photo courtesy of Il Museo
Fayum portrait by Joy Hanser. Photo courtesy of Il Museo

Has our society ceased to honour the importance of the lingering look as a means to forge human connection? The exhibition at the Italian Cultural Centre Gallery (Il Museo) examines this concept, drawing attention to the visual gaze from the perspective of ancient art history.

The exhibition focuses on the tradition of portraits from Egypt, as well as the Christian and Byzantine icons, which have been influenced by them. The Fayum portraits originally painted between the 3rd century BC to the 3rd century AD unearth the deep power of the human eye to form connections with the spirits of the present, the past and future.

This exhibition features the work of four artists who are contemporary interpreters of these ancient traditions: Joy Hanser, Trish Graham, Alina Smolyansky and David Walker. The first two artists have reconstructed the ancient death portraits from the Egyptian Fayum Basin; the last two have taken the painstaking and ritualistic training which icon painting demands.

These ancient societies are fundamental to our understanding of the human gaze in art history. Long before our days of social media and handheld gadgets, the silence and impact behind the human gaze was one of the most meaningful modes of human connection. In the ancient world and into the early Christian one the gaze embodied not just human connection but a bridge to the nether world and even to divinity.

Even as late as early modern Italy up to the 1700s, the human gaze was considered so potent that it had the power to inspire, destabilize and even speak volumes about the moral character of a person. The gaze offered a massive message to society without even uttering a word.

As the artists in this exhibition reveal, it is only by going back into the annals of art history that we will be able to reacquaint ourselves with the power of the human gaze, long before social media and the computer screen dimmed its impact.

The series painted by Joy Hanser is inspired by 900 Egyptian Fayum portraits discovered in the 19th century. These exquisitely painted panels feature the faces of men and women who lived in the area of Egypt called the Fayum Basin; just 62 miles away from Cairo.

Egypt during this period was directly under the Roman Empire. It was here that a cultural hybrid existed where the Greco-Roman world and Egyptian cultures cross-pollinated, co-existed and gave rise to this beautiful artistic work, which reveal a society grappling to maintain a connection with loved ones after death.

The figures depicted on the paintings were Egyptian by birth, but their aesthetic sensibilities were Greco-Roman. This hybridity extended to their beliefs about the afterlife that was a perfect melding of ancient Egyptian embalming rituals mixed with ancient Roman ancestor worship.

This deep belief in the afterlife is conveyed through the eyes. The eyes contained the soul and that soul continued to resonate long after death.

It is this gaze that became the formative influence over religious icons of the Christian world. The most important feature in religious icons were the large eyes that also represented the deep connection between divinity and humans.

In this exhibition, the egg tempera painter Alina Smolyansky interprets these spiritual images. In essence, in icons, the eyes became so meaningful that all other human features were dwarfed in comparison.

These traditions of spiritual portrait paintings reveal that whether, it is a connection with ourselves, each other, a bridge across time, other worlds, the deity or deities; the gaze has always been a meaningful way to signal connection and inspiration and one we have sadly lost with our dependance on the computer screen.

Please join this exhibition where we explore the lost art of the human gaze. The exhibition opens at the Italian Cultural Centre Gallery (Il Museo) on November 9 and runs until January 7, 2024.

Angela Clarke is the gallery director and curator at Il Museo located at Italian Cultural Centre on 3075 Slocan Street and Grandview Highway.

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