Renfrew-Collingwood Community News

News stories from the Renfrew-Collingwood community in East Vancouver


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It’s buzzing like bees at Still Moon Arts Society this spring

BY MASA KATEB AND ADA DRAGOMIR

Still Moon spring 2024 events coming up. Visit StillMoonArts.ca for details and to register
Still Moon spring events coming up. Visit StillMoonArts.ca for details and to register. Photos by Still Moon staff and volunteers

Still Moon inspires vibrant and connected communities through art and nature. Spring is the perfect season to invite fresh new growth, joy and experiences of life.

Visit StillMoonArts.ca to RSVP for these blossoming events and experiences.

Gardeners’ Gatherings

A series of work parties at Renfrew-Collingwood’s local dye garden. Participants will work together to tend the garden, ask questions and experiment with natural dyeing. Bring an instrument if you play.

  • April 13, May 7 and 11, June 11, July 27, August 6 and 24, September 7, October 12 and 19
  • Various times
  • Colour Me Local Dye Garden (3958 Renfrew Street, Vancouver)

Dine and Twine: Community Art Gathering and AGM

An evening of food, art-making and community. Elect new board members while enjoying delicious vegetarian chilli and work together to twine daylily leaves to create the hair for Water Woman, a magnificent giant puppet Still Moon is co-creating with community.

  • Wednesday, April 17
  • 6:30 to 8:30 pm (AGM at 7 pm)
  • Slocan Hall (2750 East 29th Avenue, Vancouver) or Zoom (by request)

Beaver Pondering Lodging Completion Celebration

Celebrate the completion of our living-willow sculpture, converse with project artists, listen to guest speaker Bob Baker and enjoy fried beaver tails and hot chocolate.

  • Friday, April 19
  • 12:30 to 5 pm
  • Beaver Pondering Lodging (3185 Grandview Highway, Vancouver)

Cob Shed Plastering Work Party

A week-long work party to plaster the local cob shed with minerals and pigments from the dye garden! Enjoy vegan chilli and unleash your creativity on our community-built structure.

  • April 23 to 27
  • Various times
  • Colour Me Local Dye Garden (3958 Renfrew Street, Vancouver)

Youth Connect: 2024 Spring Cohort

Learn about the Still Creek watershed, remove invasive plants, weave with willow, create art with natural materials and make new friendships in the neighbourhood.

  • April 23, April 27, May 7, May 11, May 15
  • Various times
  • Various locations within Renfrew-Collingwood

Our Water Conversation: Stories and Natural Dyes

Still Moon at Connect Fest

Listen to water stories from guest speakers Lori Snyder and the Quantum Care Team, Masa Kateb and Eda Ertan, then share your own water memories and stories during an intercultural dialogue. Use this as inspiration to co-create scales for Water Woman’s dress with natural dyes. Join in the creation of this giant puppet celebrating our water hopes and dreams.

  • Sunday, April 28
  • 4:30 to 7:30 pm
  • Edmonds Community Centre (7433 Edmonds Street, Burnaby)

May Day Mending

With EartHand Gleaner’s Society

Mend your garments and extend their life with patches, strengthening stitches or invisible mends. Enjoy herbal tea and learn new textile mending techniques.

  • Wednesday, May 1
  • 4 to 8 pm
  • Slocan Hall (2750 East 29th Avenue, Vancouver)

The folks at Still Moon Arts can’t wait to experience spring with you.


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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.

Copyright Renfrew-Collingwood Community News


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2023 Moon Festival: Embrace Water’s Wisdom

BY MASA KATEB

The twilight lantern procession at the annual Moon Festival starts at Slocan Park and winds its way to Renfrew Park Community Centre. Photo by Ricky Chen

Get ready to experience a world of art, nature, music and community as the Renfrew Ravine Moon Festival returns to the neighbourhood for the 21st year in a row.

Presented by Still Moon Arts Society, the festival embraces the powerful 2023 theme of Water’s Wisdom, shedding light on humanity’s most precious element to thrive.

The month-long festival celebrates Harvest Moon, Equinox, Still Creek, local art and diverse cultural traditions.

Mark your calendar for an unforgettable September experience of lanterns, music, dance, workshops and more.

Wetland BioBlitz: A Moon Festival Eco-Adventure
Saturday, September 9 | 1 – 3 pm | Slocan Park

Workshop: Create a Botanical Cyanotype Drum Lantern
Sunday, September 10 | 12 – 3 pm | Slocan Community Hall
By Brittney Appleby and Rea Saxena

Cob Shed Party and Dyer’s Guild Showcase
Saturday, September 13 | 6 – 8 pm | Colour Me Local Dye Garden

2-Day Workshop: Design and Build a Free-Form Art Lantern
Thursday and Friday, September 14 and 15| 4 – 6 pm | Slocan Community Hall
By Yoko Tomita

2-Day Workshop: Build and Program an Electronic LED Lantern
Saturday and Sunday, September 16 and 17 | 12 – 2 pm > break > 3 – 5 pm | Slocan Community Hall
By Isaac Rufus

For The Love of Trees: Drop-in Costume Making Workshop
Monday, September 18 to Wednesday, September 20 | 3 – 8 pm | Slocan Community Hall
By Runaway Moon Theatre

Equinox Ceremony: Quantum Care Moon Music & Labyrinth Walk
Friday, September 22 | 6:30 – 8:30 pm | Renfrew Ravine Labyrinth
By Quantum Care Coaching & Consultancy

Main Festival Day
Saturday, September 23 | Open to public of all ages
> Harvest Fair: 4 pm – Sunset (7:10 pm) at Slocan Park
> Twilight Lantern Procession: Sunset (7:10 pm) – 7:30 pm starting from Slocan Park and ending at Renfrew Community Park
> Streamside Lantern Installation: 7:30 – 9:30 pm at Renfrew Community Park

Truth & Reconciliation Workshop: Naturally Dye an Orange Shirt Emblem
Wednesday, September 27 | 6 – 9 pm | Slocan Community Hall
With Ada Dragomir and Lori Snyder

Food Justice: Mooncake Making Workshop
Thursday, September 28 | Time TBA – check the website stillmoonarts.ca | Collingwood Neighbourhood House
By Renfrew-Collingwood Food Justice

Finale Performance: Consciousness of Streams
Fri, September 29 | 6:55 (sunset) – 8:30 pm | Renfrew Community Park
Created and choreographed by Isabelle Kirouac. Performed by Elektra Women’s Choir, Nayana Fieldkov, Isabelle Kirouac, Uros Sanjevic and community performers

For more information and to register, visit StillMoonArts.ca/Moon-Festival.