Tag: transformative power

Education Without Barriers: The ‘Hum’ Success Story

HUM 101 programme at UBC

In Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, students bring rich perspectives to the study of university-level humanities.

Humanities 101 Community Programme students, alumni, volunteers, staff and faculty at the Vancouver Art Gallery. You can hear their voices in their audio piece in the ‘WE: Vancouver 12 Manifestos for the City’ exhibition, or on their website.

Events in Tunisia and Egypt have dramatically shown how profound social change can originate from the smallest seed of courage and imagination, be it an action, image, speech, article, book or film, planted in the right soil at the right time by passionately committed individuals.

Last year’s award-winning documentary, Waste Land about the power of art also depicted the transformative power of books and ideas. In the film, Tiaõ, one of the impoverished catadores who collect recyclable materials at a landfill on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro, describes how Machiavelli’s 1532 realpolitik classic of political philosophy, The Prince, along with other discarded books collected there, influenced his understanding of power relations. Applying the ideas he had absorbed from his reading, he created the Association of Recycling Pickers of Jardim Gramacho, a co-operative which steadily improved the living and working conditions of his fellow catadores. With funds raised from the sale of the art that the catadores produced in collaboration with artist Vik Muniz over the course of the film, Tiaõ and a fellow catadore later built a community library with over 7,000 books, an IT room stocked with computers and a learning centre.

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Harlem Biennale

Harlem Biennale logo

The Harlem Biennale (HB) brings together artists, curators, educators and the public from Harlem, New York and around the world to connect with our history, geography and diverse communities through innovative explorations in contemporary art.

Harlem Biennale (HB) brings together artists, curators, educators and the public from Harlem, New York and around the world, to connect with our history, geography and diverse communities through innovative explorations in contemporary art. Combining a focus on Harlem and Upper Manhattan with socially-engaged artistic practices, Harlem Biennale creates a platform for cultural production and dialogue on urgent issues confronting our local and global community. HB’s unique model provides an ongoing program of events, exhibitions, performances, artist residencies and art education culminating in the bi-annual event. The first edition HB2012 is slated for May 3rd to July 1st, 2012.

Harlem Biennale (HB) is a non-profit arts organization incubated by the Fund for the City of New York (www.fcny.org).

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“Waste Land”

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Filmed over nearly three years, WASTE LAND follows renowned artist Vik Muniz as he journeys from his home base in Brooklyn to his native Brazil and the world’s largest garbage dump, Jardim Gramacho, located on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro. There he photographs an eclectic band of “catadores”—self-designated pickers of recyclable materials. Muniz’s initial objective was to “paint” the catadores with garbage. However, his collaboration with these inspiring characters as they recreate photographic images of themselves out of garbage reveals both the dignity and despair of the catadores as they begin to re-imagine their lives. Director Lucy Walker (DEVIL’S PLAYGROUND, BLINDSIGHT, COUNTDOWN TO ZERO) has great access to the entire process and, in the end, offers stirring evidence of the transformative power of art and the alchemy of the human spirit.Lucy Walker’s “Waste Land” is an inspiring account of the hardscrabble lives of catadores (i.e. pickers), Brazilians who scrape an honest living out of an ocean of trash outside Rio de Janeiro, and how an artist and his art changed them.

Walker charts the quest of Brazilian artist Vik Muniz, who grew up poor in Sao Paulo and whose organic works include a set of so-called “sugar portraits” of the children of Caribbean plantation workers. Muniz wants to do more than make art. He wants to change the lives of the catadores. To do so, Muniz took on a two-year challenge to work among the pickers in a wilderness of blue plastic bags and make portraits of them out of various recyclable materials. “Waste Land,” a by-product, finds something unexpected in the largest landfill on the planet: proud workers who have organized to get their roads paved and a sewage system. His wife however seems less than thrilled at his latest project and is justly concerned about the hazards. Muniz, meanwhile, exudes missionarylike zeal.

What he discovers in Jardim Gramacho (“Jardim” means “gardens”) is that lives already have been transformed by the dignity bestowed upon workers by their labors. For the women workers, including one beauty aptly named Isis, who come from the favelas, the only viable alternative to picking is prostitution. For the men, the benefits are similar. Their work gives them hope, makes it possible for them to dream, usually about better lives for their children, gives them a desire to better themselves and provides a moral compass. Being turned into modern art hanging on the walls of museums gives them an even greater impetus to improve their lives. Walker is especially good at letting us see how individual pickers respond to Muniz and his work and how truly transformative the experience is for all of them. One picker named Tiao, a workers’ organizer, ends up dreaming of running for president. “Waste Land” has some things in common with “The Gleaners & I,” Agnes Varda’s wonderful 2000 nonfiction film about French field workers. But “Waste Land” goes even further.

Not rated. In English and Portuguese with subtitles.

Counterfiet Sanctity at C3 April 28th to May 16th

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Counterfeit Sanctity at C3 brings together the work of two recent VCA graduates Carmel Seymour and Kate Tucker. In a examination of the transformative power of our belief systems. Carmel produces some beautiful rendered drawings that in addition to their mysterious and contentious content intrigued me. It knocked me off guard. Operating within the understanding of pencil drawing and watercolour she subverts them and plays with her visuals. Enlightening the occult and washing away our magic carpet.

Kate Tucker’s drawings were undeniably joyful. The skill of placement finds us sucked into the planes of existence that she creates cleverly within the two-dimensional. Her play of shape texture and colour are erudite while still holding onto the bold coarse edges and displacing lines. Her functional relationship to objects and symbolism has been digested and reinterpreted to allow her confident and exciting talent as a maker simply do the talking. The piece she named Necklace, gives rise to questions of the boundaries between art and craft that she has supplanted and made her own so easily. Well worth a look.

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