Lorna Mills and Sally McKay
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The much awaited day has arrived... Hawkeye Parker's epic Everquest battle poem is now online at Clog! |
Check out the photo gallery of great looking fluid experiments by John Bush, Associate Professor of Applied Mathematics at MIT.
This one: , this one: , and this one: are my favourites.
(Thanks to Zeina for the tip!)
Toronto's art and science conference, SubtleTechnologies is next week. Come for the whole conference, but don't miss my lecture/performance on Friday, May 27th at 11:00 am.
I'm a clod. lumpen. slow. myopic. I never remember to spellcheck, but worse, I don't remember to GOOGLE! And that's a problem if you are as thick as me, cause if you don't google you can go around whining that Toronto's best art journalist RM Vaughan's National Post column isn't available online when in fact it IS online and also he wrote something nice about you in it about a million years ago and you never knew. uuuuuuh. y'all can pull the feeding tube whenever you want.
thanks (again!) to Simpleposie for dragging me into the loop.
Simpleposie has posted details on the Canada Council's next Toronto "VISUAL ARTS INFORMATION SESSION ON THE NEW VISUAL ARTS PROGRAM FOR VISUAL ARTISTS". Gotta love them all caps. The council has to use 'em cause they come from the CAPital city of Canada! Uh, anyhow. The event is May 25th.
Last night I took part in a focus group at the Art Gallery of Ontario. They are working on a re-branding strategy to go with the big Gehry-induced physical transformation in 2008. They've invited various stakeholders to give input. My group was "artists." There's another "artists" group on Wednesday. In attendance last night were 8 artists, an outside facilitator, and Arlene Madell, the director of marketing and communications. Of the artists, 7 were white females between 35-45. Pretty well everyone in the group knew each other really well. As a bunch, we were kind of mean and negative. I hope the feedback was helpful, it was definitely impassioned and honest. Here are my favourites of the more positive, action-oriented suggestions that came up:
- Give more power and freedom to young curators with vision and excitement for contemporary art. We named names. I dunno if I should do that here. It seems like it would be a breach of confidence. If I change my mind I'll make an update.
- Host regular get-togethers for curators and programmers from galleries across Ontario, including artist-run centres, private galleries and public galleries, to compare notes about specifically what projects are upcoming and explore ways to work together.
- Expand on the good work that the education and outreach department is doing, particularly Teens Behind the Scenes and any like programs.
- Open an AGO bar and hold free weekly events there.
- Get excited about showcasing contemporary Canadian art to local, regional and international audiences, and tour contemporary shows around the country.
- De-accession works from the collection which are not relevant to current goals for the institution and channel that money into contemporary programming.
- Shed the small-time Upper Canadian museological stuffiness for some genuine, committed engagement with current Canadian art.