Position: Programming and Communications Assistant
Duration: 8 weeks, Monday June 4th – Friday July 27th, 2012
Wage and hours: $10.25 per hour, 30 hours per week
Job Purpose
The Kingston Arts Council is looking for an individual who will work alongside the
Programming Coordinator and the Communications Director. Tasks will be associated
with planning and implementing Kingston Arts Council events, and communicating
events and Kingston Arts Council information to our members and the public through
our www.artskingston.ca. The job will involve administrative duties as well as hands on
event responsibilities.
The position is part of Canada Summer Jobs and the requirements are as follows:
are between 15 and 30 years of age;
have been registered as a full-time student in the previous academic year and intend to return to school on a full-time basis in the next academic year;
are Canadian citizens or permanent residents or have official refugee protection status under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (foreign students are not eligible); and
are legally entitled to work in Canada, according to relevant provincial/territorial legislation and regulations.
The position requires a good working knowledge of Kingston arts, culture, and business, and a desire to build on that knowledge. Strong awareness of Social Media is an asset. This individual would require strong communication skills and would need to show initiative, be strongly self directed, and personable.
How to Apply
Please submit a resume and cover letter detailing your suitability for the position, in doc
or pdf formats, to hiring@artskingston.ca with “Programming and Communications
Assistant” in the subject heading. Applications are due no later than: Friday, May
25th 2012 at 4:30pm. Interviews will take place Wednesday May 30th and Thursday
May 31st and decision will be made by Friday June 1st.
This position starts on June 4th, 2012.
The Kingston Arts Council encourages Aboriginal students, students of colour and
students with disabilities to apply.
We regret to inform that our current office location is not wheelchair accessible.
For more information please contact Josh at info@artskingston.ca.
April 18, 2012
National Youth Arts Week Short Film Screening
"GET INTO OUR SHORTS"
Wednesday May 2nd 2012 7pm at The Screening Room
120 Princess Street (2nd Floor)
The Kingston Youth Arts Council is seeking short film submissions, by young film artists in Kingston and the surrounding area, to be screened at The Screening Room, during National Youth Arts Week on Wed May 2nd 7pm
If you have a short film, of any genre, and are between the ages of 13 and 24, please contact:
CuriousYouProductions@gmail.
Deadline: April 19 2012 4pm
"GET INTO OUT SHORTS" will also include the following Panel Discussion + Q&A:
SO YOU WANT TO MAKE A MOVIE?!
So you want to make a movie? Do your friends tell you you're destined for Hollywood? Following celluloid dreams can be overwhelming for young filmmakers. You know you have the talent but how do you channel it? What resources are available to young filmmakers in Kingston? You've made your cinematic opus but now what do you do with it? Join 3 film industry professionals living in Kingston as they share some their tips of the trade to help you get ahead in movie making.
Kingston Film Industry Panelists will include:
Alison Migneault - Festival Director for Kingston Canadian Film Festival
Michael Patrick Lilly - Chief Creative Officer for Factory Film Studio
Matt Salton- Festival Director for Reelout Queer Film + Video Festival
Following the Youth Short Film Screenings & Panel Discussion, The Screening Room will feature Kevin Smith's 1994 comedyCLERKS. The Screening Room staff and the Kingston Youth Arts Council selected this classic 1990's film because of its ultra-low budget of around 28,000 USD, and because it was filmed in the store Smith actually worked in. Moreover, he was 24 at the time of its production. The film seems to exhibit many of the qualities of young, independent film-making that will be the focus for the evening, and hopefully a source of inspiration for young Kingston film artists.
CLERKS Movie Trailer
LGBT KINGSTON PRIDE ART SHOW
This show was created to give a space for Gay & Lesbian artists when it was difficult for them to find a venue. However, of late, gay content has become positively mainstream, and increasingly no purpose is served by gay artists being ghettoized with a show of their own.
Kingston, and it’s artists, still need as many art shows as it, and they, can get.
Over the years, the Kingston LGBT community has felt the support of the arts. The time has now come for the LGBT community to return the favor. For the second year, the annual Pride Art Show is open to all artists who wish to submit work - however we like to think we are still a little more open to the rebel view.
The Rules/Details
- You may submit up to three works for consideration for the show.
- There is a ten dollar fee for every accepted entry to the show.
- Three prizes are to be awarded -1st is $250 2nd is $150 and 3rd is a peoples choice award of $100
- The DEADLINE for submissions is May 20/12
- We require that you e-mail your name, phone number, e-mail address along with the name medium and dimensions of your work along with an attached photo of the piece to muffetindigo@yahoo.com
- for more information e-mail muffetindigo@yahoo.com The Pride Art Show
-Running from June 4th to the 16th
-The opening party to be June 9th, 6:00 - 10:00
-Prize giving meet the artists Sat 16th of June 2:00 - 5:00 -the Kingston School of Art’s Windows Art Gallery
647A Princess @ Victoria St.
GANANOQUE, ON.
On Monday, February 27th, 2012, Liz Austin, President of the Thousand Islands Foundation for the Performing Arts, announced the successor to Greg Wanless, founding Artistic Director of the Thousand Islands Playhouse. “After an extremely thorough process that involved a selection committee made up of Board members and several members of Ontario’s professional theatre community, we have selected Ashlie Corcoran, currently of Toronto, to take on the position of Artistic Director at the end of the 2012 season. Ashlie brings an impressive new energy and commitment to our theatre and the performing arts scene in Ontario, and will be a fitting successor to continue Greg’s artistic vision of a Playhouse by the river in the 1000 Islands. Her versatile directing and play development experience, especially with her commitment to Canadian work, echoes the Thousand Islands Playhouse’s 30 years of devotion to the creation of theatre for a wide range of audiences. We are very excited to be welcoming Ashlie into the Playhouse and Gananoque communities.”
Originally from White Rock, British Columbia, Ms. Corcoran began her training at Queen's University, Kingston, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) Degree in Drama. She received a Master's Degree in Directing, awarded with distinction, from Goldsmiths College at the University of London. Since 2005, she has been Artistic Producer of Toronto’s acclaimed Theatre Smash, of which she was co-founder. Productions she has directed with the company include Tiny Dynamite, the company’s Dora-nominated inaugural production; Igor Bauersima’s The Bus, Layne Coleman’s Tijuana Cure and Graeme Gillis’ A Boy Called Newfoundland. Recently the Globe and Mail included The Ugly One, which she directed, in the Top 11 of 2011 List. Additionally, Ms. Corcoran producedNorway.Today for Theatre Smash.
Ms. Corcoran has worked extensively both nationally and internationally. She was a Shaw Festival intern director in 2009, where she directed Bedtime Story, was a member of the Canadian Opera Company’s Ensemble Studio, and was the 2010/11 Urjo Kareda Emerging Artist at Tarragon Theatre. Other theatre credits include direction for the Resurgence Theatre, Driftwood Theatre, numerous festivals and Gateway Theatre in British Columbia. She recently acted as a consulting director for The Gay Heritage Project at the 33rd Rhubarb Festival at Buddies in Bad Times and will soon direct The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee at Western Canada Theatre. This spring, she will also be directing Die Fledermaus at Cowtown Opera, and assistant directingThe Barber of Seville at Vancouver Opera.
Artistic Director Greg Wanless and Associate Artistic Director Kathryn MacKay have known Ashlie for a number of years since her early days at Queen's University and have admired her continuing work as a director as well as her work as the Artistic Director of Theatre Smash. "Ashlie will bring enthusiasm, creativity and a very strong work ethic with her and we both think that the future of the Playhouse is in very capable hands".
Accepting the position of Artistic Director, Ms. Corcoran says “I am thrilled to be returning to Thousand Islands Playhouse – where I held my first professional theatre job, in the props department, after graduating from Queen’s University. I am excited to build on the artistic excellence created by Greg and Kathryn, and to continue making TIP an active and contributing part of Gananoque’s community.” Ms. Corcoran will join the company early in the summer to select the 2013 playbill in consultation with Wanless and Associate Artistic Director Kathryn MacKay, who also leaves the company at the end of the season.
KINGSTON, ONT. / Feb. 27, 2012 - As part of the continuing work on the
Kingston Culture Plan, the City is holding a series of public meetings
to develop an Integrated Cultural Heritage Strategy and Cultural Tourism
Strategy.
"We have already facilitated a 'Your Opinion' survey asking residents to
offer their insights into and stories related to local history, and now
we want to offer the opportunity for an expanded public dialogue about
our shared heritage and how we can best highlight it to potential
visitors," says Colin Wiginton, Manager, Cultural Services.
On March 5 and 6, the community is invited to help shape these
strategies by participating in one of four public meetings to be held in
different locations around the City. All four meetings will cover the
same content and each will start at 7 p.m.
Monday, March 5
- 7 p.m. - Memorial Hall, City Hall, 216 Ontario St.
- 7 p.m. - INVISTA Centre, 1350 Gardiners Rd.
Tuesday, March 6
- 7 p.m. - Rideau Heights Public School, 77 MacCauley St.
- 7 p.m. - Military Communications and Electronics Museum, 95 Craftsman
Blvd., Hwy 2 East
The public is also invited to participate in more informal 'Pop Up'
meetings to be held the afternoon of Monday, March 5 between 12 p.m. and
3 p.m. at The Grand Theatre, Public Walkway, 218 Princess St. and the
Cross Roads, Queen's Athletic and Recreation Complex, 284 Earl Street.
The purpose of these two, integrated strategies is to capitalize on the
City's many heritage assets and address potential challenges related to
our cultural tourism offerings. In partnership with KEDCO, the City is
currently working with Lord Cultural Resources to develop:
* The Cultural Heritage Strategy that develops Kingston's powerful
historical narrative, built heritage and natural heritage features into
a broad-based strategy for telling Kingston's stories.
* A Cultural Tourism Strategy that leverages Kingston's heritage and
cultural assets, including the feasibility of a summer festival.
* Guidelines to provide the City of Kingston direction for support of
other national and international commemorative events in preparation for
a number of upcoming anniversaries.
For more information or to be included on our distribution list related
to the Integrated Cultural Heritage and Cultural Tourism Strategy,
please contact Colin Wiginton, Manager, Cultural Services at
<mailto:cwiginton@
more on the Kingston Culture Plan see
<http://www.cityofkingston.ca/
opportunity is again available on this page to take input from those who
would like to share their views on Kingston's important heritage
stories.
This project is made possible with the support of the Ontario Ministry
of Tourism and Culture Creative Communities Prosperity Fund.
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Media contact: For more information contact Cindie Ashton,
Communications Officer (613) 546-4291, extension 3116 (cell 329-3462).
Or call the City of Kingston's media hotline at 613-546-4291, ext 2300.
Please note that the Kingston Arts Council office will be closed on Thursday February 16th for the Building Arts Communities in Kingston Forum as well as on Monday February 20th, 2012 for Family Day. The office will resume regular office hours on Tuesday February 21st.
The Kingston Arts Council is hiring a part-time Grants Officer
Position Description
The KAC Grants Officer works primarily with the Grants Director to administer the City of Kingston Arts Fund (CKAF). The Grants Officer also administers the Nan Yeomans Grant for Artistic Development and contributes to other office duties at the KAC. The Grants Officer works in a dynamic, team-oriented office environment. The Grants Officer reports to the Grants Director and the Executive Director and through them to the KAC Board.
This position is 15 hours per week at $14 per hour. For a detailed posting please click here.
How to Apply
Please submit a cover letter and resume in doc or pdf format to hiring@artskingston.ca no later than Monday February 27th, 2012 at 4pm.
For more information please contact Ted Worth, Grants Director at ted@artskingston.ca or (613) 546-2999.
tettcentre - for creativity and learning
Call for expressions of Interest for artists studios
The Tett Centre for Creativity and Learning is accepting expressions of interest for the rental of individual
artist studios in the renovated Tett Centre, 370 King Street West, scheduled for opening in July of 2013.
The Tett Centre for Creativity and Learning will be a significant arts hub for the City of Kingston, promoting
and supporting local artists, arts organizations and their activities.
A limited number of studio spaces will be available for rent by visual artists, writers, and craftspeople.
The studios will be centered around a common area large enough to accommodate small groups, hold
special equipment, or present workshops. Public display space vvill be available. Individual artists will
share a central water/clean up area and kitchenette type space.
The Tett Centre is envisioned as a destination space where members ofthe public will be invited to attend
during established open hours, as well as for programmed activities. Individual artists will be expected
to embrace this philosophy and participate in the activities of the Tett Centre as much as their discipline
allows. Individual artists will have 24 hour access to the studio, including 'private' hours which are closed
to the public. Studios are intended for work purposes only
Successful applicants will be required to sign a one year lease, and must provide proof of liability
insurance of $2 million.
Prospective tenants will join eight not-for-profit arts organizations confirmed as anchor tenants. ln
addition, the facility is scheduled to include an event room, a rehearsal hall, a community exhibition
space, a general purpose activity room, and a cafe. The Tett Centre is located adjacent to Clueen's
University's Isabel Bader Arts Centre, now under construction.
Please respond with the following information;
Detailed description of arts discipline to be practiced
Number of artists using the studio
Minimum and maximum size of studio space required in square feet or specific dimensions
Special electrical, ventilation or water requirements
Maximum rental rate you feel is appropriate, inclusive of all charges
Any additional information specific to your discipline
Please respond by February 10. 2012 to tettcentre@beII.net
Happy Holidays everyone!
The KAC office will be closed for the holiday season from December 21st to January 4th.
You can email contact info@artskingston.com if you have any urgent concerns during this time.

The Kingston Arts Council and the Community Foundation for Kingston and Area are pleased to announce Michelle MacKinnon as the recipient of the 2011 Nan Yeomans Grant for Artistic Development.
Michelle MacKinnon is a Kingston based visual artist working primarily in large scale hyperrealist portraiture. Her current fascination delves into the sociology and ideology of intent in an assortment of human relationships. MacKinnon graduated in 2011 from York University with a BFA in Visual Arts with Honours and Cum Laude status, and from Creative Arts at QECVI in 2007. She has shown solely and in group exhibits in various galleries across Toronto, Kingston, and St. Petersburg, Russia, and has been the recipient of numerous awards.
The Jury also cited Kate Yuksel and Alexa Kathleen Rush as honourable mentions.
Jury members Brian Dodo and Margaret Hughes considered funding requests from 19 emerging artists in total. The applications represented a diverse spectrum of projects in visual media, including drawing, painting, film-making, performance art, print-making and animation.
Kingston artist Nan Yeomans died in 2004, leaving all her art and almost all of her estate to the Community Foundation for Kingston & Area. It was Nan's wish to fund a grant for promising young artists and artisans developing their talents in the greater Kingston area. Established in 2006, the Nan Yeoman's Grant for Artistic Development fund now stands at approximately $100,000 and will continue to provide a yearly grant to support Nan's legacy in the community.
People wishing to donate to the endowment may contact Vikram Varma, the Executive Director of the Community Foundation for Kingston & Area, at 613-546-9696.
For further information contact:
Sayyida Jaffer, Grants Officer
Kingston Arts Council Grants Department
sayyida@artskingston.com [or] 613-546-2999
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October 31, 2011 The deadline for submitting nominations for the 2012 Premier’s Awards for Excellence in the Arts is fast approaching. Don’t wait – nominate an artist or arts organization that deserves to be in the spotlight. Help us spread the word – let’s recognize our artists and arts organizations for their leadership, innovation, creativity and talent. The Awards are conferred in two categories: an individual artist award of $35,000 and an arts organization award of $50,000. Nominations can recognize a candidate engaged in any professional arts practice including community arts, crafts, dance, music, opera, theatre, visual and media arts, writing or cultural industries such as book and magazine publishing, digital media, film, television and sound recording. Details about the Awards, guidelines and nomination forms are posted on the Ontario Arts Council website. Now is the time to recognize and celebrate Ontario’s great artists and arts organizations and the role they play in Ontario’s vibrant arts and culture sector. Nominations are due December 1, 2011. Videos of Premier’s Awards Winners: 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 For more informationThe Ontario Arts Council (OAC) administers the selection process for the Awards on behalf of the Government of Ontario. For more information contact the OAC at: 416-961-1660 ext. 6666, toll free 1-800-387-0058 ext 6666 or info@arts.on.ca. |
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The Ontario Arts Council (OAC) is the province of Ontario’s primary funding body for professional arts activity. Since 1963, the OAC has played a vital role in promoting and assisting the development of the arts and artists for the enjoyment and benefit of Ontarians. |
Prix du premier ministre pour l'excellence artistique de 2012 –Nominez avant le 1er décembre 2011 ! |
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31 octobre, 2011 La date limite du 1 décembre pour soumettre vos candidatures aux prix du premier ministre pour l’excellence artistique 2012 se rapproche. N’attendez pas – mettez en candidature un artiste ou un organisme artistique qui mérite d'être sous les feux des projecteurs. Passez le mot – faites en sorte pour reconnaître nos artistes et organismes artistiques pour leur leadership, leur innovation, leur créativité et leur talent. Un prix de 35 000 $ est remis à un artiste et un prix de 50 000 $ est remis à un organisme artistique. Les candidats doivent exercer une pratique artistique professionnelle, incluant les arts communautaires, les métiers d’art, la danse, la musique, l’opéra, le théâtre, les arts visuels et médiatiques, la littérature ou les industries culturelles comme l’édition de livres et de magazines, les médias numériques, le cinéma, la télévision et les enregistrements sonores. Il est possible d’obtenir plus de renseignements sur les prix et la mise en candidature et un formulaire de mise en candidature dans le site Web du Conseil des arts de l’Ontario. Le temps est maintenant venu de célébrer les grands artistes et organismes artistiques et de reconnaître leur rôle sur la scène artistique et culturelle dynamique en Ontario. La date limite pour soumettre une candidature est le 1er décembre 2011. Vidéos des précédents lauréats : 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 Renseignements complémentairesLe Conseil des arts gère le processus de sélection au nom du gouvernement de l’Ontario. Pour en savoir plus sur le Conseil, il est possible de communiquer directement avec son personnel par téléphone au 416-961-1660, poste 6666 ou au 1-800-387-0058, poste 6666 (sans frais) ou par courriel à l’adresse info@arts.on.ca. |
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Le Conseil des arts de l’Ontario (CAO) est le principal bailleur de fonds des activités artistiques professionnelles de la province. Depuis sa création en 1963, il joue un rôle de premier plan en matière de promotion et d'aide aux artistes et aux organismes artistiques au profit de tous les Ontariens. |
WorkInCulture, which provides career development and business skills training to people working in the arts and culture sector, wants to improve its services and programs. Performers, visual artists and craftspeople, writers (online or print), filmmakers, game designers, artists and all arts workers face special hurdles in creating a living.
To help them achieve this goal you can fill out this short survey by 5:00pm on Friday, November 5th.
For a link to the survey, click here.
WorkInCulture (www.workinculture.ca) is a non-profit sectoral council which helps to develop a resilient cultural sector by directly supporting people working in the sector through lifelong career development and business skills training.The Ontario Arts Council *(OAC) is the province of Ontario's primary funding body for professional arts activity. Since 1963 the OAC has played a vital role in promoting and assisting the development of the arts and artists for the enjoyment and benefit of Ontarians.
The portrait entitled “Aladdin” by Richard Davis, of LaHave, Nova Scotia, was the most
popular portrait in the first exhibition of the finalists in The Kingston Prize competition
held in Gananoque, Ontario. It was awarded the $1000.00 People’s Choice Prize for that
exhibition.
The portrait shows a friend of the artist, Nigel Field, dressed for his work in the
Parks Department in Halifax, carrying his gloves and a lunch pail embossed with its
commercial name “Aladdin.” The painting, executed in oil over tempera emulsion on
honeycomb panel, is a tribute to the working people in Canada.
The exhibition will be shown next at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto from 11
November to 29 January 2012, as part of the program of the Institute for Contemporary
Culture.
The Kingston Prize is a project of the Kingston Arts Coucnil and is supported bby the W.
Garfield Weston Foundation.
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For further information, contact 613-544-6329 or julian@kingston.net
October 24, 2011 – Martha Durdin, Chair of the Ontario Arts
Council (OAC), today announced the appointment of Peter Caldwell as
Director and CEO of the Ontario Arts Council. He succeeds John
Brotman who is retiring after ten years at the council’s helm.
“Peter impressed us with his personal experience as an artist, his firm
understanding of the arts community and the leadership skills that he
brought to the remarkable transformations at OCAD University over the
past several years,” said Martha Durdin, OAC Chair. “He takes over an
organization that has not only thrived in the last decade but which,
under John's guidance, reflects the growth and diversity of Ontario's
arts community.”
“The arts have been integral to my life, and the Ontario Arts Council is
integral to the arts in Ontario,” said Peter Caldwell. “I am very
excited about playing a leadership role at OAC as it approaches its 50th
anniversary of service to artists, arts organizations and all Ontarians.
I hope to honour the legacy of the organization, while also maximizing
future opportunities.”
Peter Caldwell was Vice President, Finance & Administration at OCAD
University (formerly Ontario College of Art & Design) from 1994 to
April 2011. During this time, he served as chief administrative officer
of Canada’s largest university specializing in art and design education.
Among Caldwell’s accomplishments at OCAD, he oversaw the university’s
expansion from two to 12 buildings, including the
architecturally-acclaimed Sharp Centre of Design, designed by architect
Will Alsop. In 2009, Peter Caldwell was appointed a Lifetime Honorary
Alumnus by the OCAD University Alumni Association. In June 2011, he was
awarded an Honorary Doctorate by OCAD University, recognizing his
contribution to the university and to the arts and culture community.
Peter Caldwell has spent his entire career in the arts. He was
Executive Director of the Arts Foundation of Greater Toronto
(1985-1994), where he was responsible for the programming, marketing and
financial management of all activities including ArtsWeek and the
Toronto Arts Awards. Prior to that, he was Program Director at
Toronto Theatre Alliance (1981-83), Theatre Consultant at the
Ontario Ministry of Culture and Recreation (1980-81), and Coordinator
of Training Programs atTheatre Ontario (1977-80). Peter Caldwell’s
volunteer work includes the Boards of Directors of the Laidlaw
Foundation, Toronto Artscape Inc., Design Exchange, Performing
Arts Development Fund of Toronto and Platform 9 Theatre. He has
served on the major grants review panel for the City of Toronto’s
Cultural Affairs Division.
Peter Caldwell has an MBA from the Richard Ivey School of Business at
University of Western Ontario. As an undergraduate at Stetson University
in Deland, Florida, he majored in French and minored in Spanish. He will
join OAC on February 6, 2012.
The search for John’s replacement was led by OAC Chair Martha Durdin
with board members William Aitchison (Stratford), Albert Alexanian
(Hamilton), Verlyn Francis (Toronto) and Harvey Slack (Ottawa). The
nation-wide search was led by Searchlight Recruitment, included wide
consultation with the arts community.
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For more information:
If you have questions, please contact Kirsten Gunter, Director of
Communications at kgunter@arts.on.ca <mailto:kgunter@arts.on.ca> or at
416-969-7403 / 1-800-387-0058 ext. 7403 (toll-free in Ontario).
The Ontario Arts Council <http://www.arts.on.ca/site4.a
the province of Ontario’s primary funding body for professional arts
activity. Since 1963, the OAC has played a vital role in promoting and
assisting the development of the arts and artists for the enjoyment and
benefit of Ontarians.
Awesome Kingston (awesomekingston.org), a Chapter of the Awesome Foundation for the Arts and Sciences (awesomefoundation.org), launches October 21, 2011 in the Limestone City.
Just what is the Awesome Foundation?
The Awesome Foundation for the Arts and Science is an ever-growing, worldwide network of people devoted to spreading the interest of awesomeness in the universe. The foundation distributes a series of monthly $1000 grants to projects and their creators. The money is given upfront in cash by groups of 10 or so self-organising "Micro-trustees". Projects at other chapters have included areas of technology, arts, social good, and beyond.
Why do 10 people want to give money away each month?
Awesome Kingston Trustees are a diverse group of every day individuals looking to make a positive impact in the Kingston community. They want to encourage creativity, community build and help other Kingstonians enhance our community with their own unique ideas. The current group of Trustees include a Geologist, a Senators Fan, a Software Developer, an Insurance Broker, a Soldier, a Hyper-Tweeter, a Leafs Fanatic, a Drupalista and an Investment Advisor. The Awesome Foundation of Kingston is still looking for dedicated Micro-trustees to fund Micro-grants for Awesome Ideas here in Kingston.
How it works:
Grant submissions received through the Awesome Kingston website will be reviewed by the trustees. A group of Top 5 finalists will be selected to pitch to the trustees – and a live, public audience – in rapid pitch style. The $1,000 cash grant will be awarded on the spot to the most awesome idea.
Awesome Awards Nights
The monthly Awesome Kingston $1,000 cash award will be granted each month in an awesome public venue in Kingston. The public is encouraged to come and watch the pitches, meet the trustees, and chat with the team about the ideas and potential new ideas.
If interested in becoming a member of the Awesome board of Micro-trustees, please contact awesome.kingston@gmail.com, contact them on twitter at @awesomekingston, or go to awesomekingston.org.
For more information:
Website: http://www.awesomekingston.
Founder, Awesome Kingston
E: mr.ryan.fraser@gmail.com
T: 613-929-7609
FESTIVITY, a Unique Celebration of Art & Fine Craft is currently accepting entry submissions. This tradeshow-style art event needs artists and artisans to display their work! Selected applicants will be notified by October 30th with more detailed information. Submitted applications must include 2 photographs of the artist’s/crafter’s work. Email to ralph@kyu.ca. Click here to download an application form. Artists and Crafters of all ages and mediums are invited to apply to participate and sell.
Event Date: Saturday, November 12th, 2011
Event Times: 10:00 am - 4:00 pm
Event Location: 775 Progress Avenue
Entry Deadline: October 27th, 2011
Entry Fee: $30 and 10% of sales
Call for Submissions
This October, Corridor Culture presents its first Studio Visit opportunity with visiting curators and critics.
Dannys Montes de Oca Moreda, a researcher, curator and art critic visiting from Havana, Cuba has offered to meet with a number of artists during her time in Kingston, specifically on the 11th, 12th, and 14th of October.
If you are interested in discussing your work with her, we would like to hear from you. Please email a letter of interest and a web link showing your most recent work to corridorculture@gmail.com by Friday, September 30th. Artists will be selected based on the strongest intersections with de Oca's interests and practice. Please also indicate your availability during the above three days.
Dannys Montes de Oca Moreda is an expert in modern and contemporary Cuban art and visual culture. Her research has ventured into the historical processes concerning the evolution of Cuban art and its internal and external links with international art, and broader currents of thought entrenched in the modern, the postmodern and the global. She is the organizer of the theoretical event of the Havana Biennial (2003, 2006 2009 and upcoming 2012) and a member of its team of curators at the Wilfredo Lam Art Centre in Havana. She will be hosted by Cultural Studies at Queen's University and Corridor Culture will bring her more directly to wider Kingston audiences; she’ll lead a workshop that will be a preview of what's coming for the 2012 biennial and a discussion of the changing landscape of curatorial practice and do studio visits with Kingston artists. The Havana Biennial was the first Biennial formed in the “global south” and dedicated to contemporary art from Latin America, Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. In the context of her work for the Biennial, she has focused on the study of North-South relations, center-periphery, and hegemonic processes that characterize the formation of a "world culture." Through her work with the Biennial and her massive project on Cuban art of the 20th Century, her access to and knowledge of Cuban visual culture, including architecture, is unparalleled. We are organizing a trip for her to engage in a similar way with communities in Windsor.
Other Events featuring Dannys Montes de Oca Moreda
The Political Ecology of Curating, a roundtable featuring a keynote by Dannys Montes de Oca Moreda
Thursday October 13, 7pm, location TBA
Watch our Upcoming page here for details
Upcoming Corridor Culture Studio Visit Opportunities
Ariella Azoulay - January 2012
Adrian Stimson - March 2012
Terrance Houle - March 2012
The Corridor Culture collective builds social connectivity in Kingston and the region’s cultural sector by aiding cultural producers’ travel along Ontario’s rail corridors and by bridging visiting scholars and artists with diverse audiences here and along the corridor. Between Fall 2011 and Spring 2012 we present three discrete public projects: workshops with a curator from the Havana Biennial and with an important Middle Eastern cultural theorist, and a performance by two established Canadian Aboriginal artists. Find out more at http://corridorculture.wordpress.com/
ONTARIO MEDIA DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
INDUSTRY INITIATIVES - BULLETIN
OMDC FILM FUND
INFORMATION SESSION: October 14, 2011 (REGISTRATION REQUIRED)
APPLICATION DEADLINE: November 1, 2011 (BY 5:00 PM)
NOTE: Please read the complete guidelines thoroughly prior to commencing your application. There are no changes to the program guidelines and requirements; however, the process for submitting applications is new this year. OMDC has introduced an Online Application Portal (OAP) system and all application MUST be submitted via the OAP.
OMDC has launched a call for applications for the OMDC Film Fund. This fund is intended to increase the level of indigenous feature film production in Ontario. This program provides support to Ontario producers for feature film projects in the final stages of development and production financing.
The OMDC Film Fund supports a range of projects with both cultural and industrial benefits. OMDC measures the results of the OMDC Film Fund primarily based on return on investment and jobs created in the Ontario film industry.
PLEASE NOTE: The Qualified Producer Applicant on the application form must be the primary producer and contact for all communication and dealings with OMDC.
Information Session:
An information session has been scheduled to provide interested applicants with the opportunity to learn more about this program.
- Date: Friday, October 14, 2011
- Time: 2:30 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Program Information Session; followed by OAP Information Session 3:30 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. with time available for questions
- Location: Conference Centre, 3rd Floor, North Tower, 175, Bloor Street East, Toronto.
GUIDELINES AND APPLICATION PROCESS
Complete Guidelines and the link to the Online Application Portal (OAP) are posted on the OMDC website:
For further information on this or any other OMDC programs, please contact the Coordinator, Industry Initiatives at:
175 Bloor Street East, South Tower, Suite 501
Toronto, Ontario M4W 3R8
Direct Phone: 416-642-6695
Main Phone: 416-314-6858
Fax: 416-314-6876
Email: programs@omdc.on.ca

Salary: Approximately $10,200
Hours: Part-time, 20 hours a week
Term: October 4th, 2011 - May 26, 2012
Submission Closing Date: September 13th, 2011
Job Summary
The successful candidate will be responsible for a variety of tasks related to the operation of the Modern Fuel’s New Media Workspace, including: its promotion, equipment rentals, and orientation sessions/workshops on the use of said equipment; the development and promotion of new media programming at Modern Fuel; and the development and maintenance of the website, digital archives, documentation, and computer system management at Modern Fuel.
Qualities
- Passion and understanding of contemporary New Media art
- Enthusiasm for learning about alternative art practices
- Previous experience working in or knowledge about artist-run centres, particularly New Media organizations
Qualifications
- BA degree in Art History, Fine Art, Film or related field.
- Exceptionally strong writing and communication skills. Proven track record in writing successful grant applications.
- Excellent knowledge of both PC and Mac computer platforms.
- Knowledge of design software including the Adobe Photoshop and InDesign programs.
- Experience working in or knowledge of new media art forms and technologies, including maintenance of equipment and programs.
- Internet and web skills and IT skills required.
- Knowledge of the Kingston new media/arts community will be considered an asset.
Submission Documents
- C.V. (Curriculum Vitae)
- Cover Letter
- Two References
- Examples of Previous New Media Work (CD or DVD)
Please send applications to
NMWC application
c/o Modern Fuel Artist-Run Centre
21 Queen Street,
Kingston, ON
K7K 1A1
About Modern Fuel
Modern Fuel is a not-for-profit Artist-Run Centre that supports innovation and experimentation in contemporary art. The New Media Workspace was created in 2002 and aims to provide artist and community organizations with video production/post-production support and services at accessible rates in order to encourage the growth of the New Media Arts community in the Kingston Region.
For further information, contact:
Michael Davidge or Christine Mockett
Modern Fuel Artist-Run Centre
21 Queen St, Kingston, ON, K7K 1A1
(613) 548-4883
modernfuel@bellnet.ca
www.modernfuel.org
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‘BUSKATHON’ 2011
SPRINGER MARKET SQUARE
SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 11th 2011
10am – 4pm
Last year, members from Sweet Folk All and The Kingston Folk Club took part in a charity Buskathon, in Market Square, in support of Joe's M.I.L.L. Last year's Buskathon raised enough money to purchase a new orchestra acoustic guitar and travel bag for the lending library. This guitar has been available for Joe's M.I.L.L. clients to borrow and hone their skills with.
If you would like to offer your musical talents, whether you are a solo performer or a group act, Joe's M.I.L.L. and the 2011 Buskathon team would love to hear from you. 30 minute slots are available all day, across five different "hot spots" in market square. To pre-book your time slot, please e-mail sweetfolkstuff@hotmail.com with your top 3 preffered time slots. Slots may still be available on the day of the event, but slots are available on a first come, first serve basis.
A Joe's M.I.L.L. prize package will be awarded to the performer or group who raises the most money!
The Buskathon team is also looking for volunteers to staff the "HQ" table during the event. Please e-mail sweetfolkstuff@hotmail.com if you would like to volunteer.
The Artel is a live-in artist space in downtown Kingston that is now accepting exhibition proposals from local artists. Accepted proposals will be exhibited for three weeks in the main space for a fee of $75. Gallery hours run from Thursday to Sunday, 12-4pm. An opening reception will be hosted by the Artel, with food and drink expenses covered by the artist.
The Artel also hosts a multitude of arts events throughout the week, including concerts, workshops, book launches and films. Exhibitions will remain installed during these other events, increasing artists’ exposure to diverse audiences.
Accepted mediums include: sculpture, painting, drawing, multi-media, printmaking, photography, performance, installation and more!
The application deadline are September 30th and January 31st. Please visit www.the-artel.com for proposal guidelines.
As mandated, the Kingston Arts Council annually establishes a committee to review the Kingston Arts Council Plan for Administration of Arts Funding for the Corporation of the City of Kingston Arts Fund - a document approved annually by Kingston City Council. In preparation for the 2012 fiscal year this committee will meet this fall to review the 2011 plan to consider possible improvements and amendments.
To assist the committee, artists, arts organizations and communtiy members taking part in Kingston based arts activities are invited to submit written submissions of not more than 500 words commenting or making recommendations on the plan. Please refer to the specific heading and clause numbers in the plan that are being addressed.
We are also seeking input on the role of the sponsor, in the project grants program. If you are part of a collective that has been sponsored or part of an organization that has acted as a sponsor, we encourage your feedback about this relationship.
We request that comments be submitted to grants@artskingston.com no later than Friday September 16th, 2011 at 4pm.
For a copy of the 2011 plan, please click here. For more information please contact Ted or Sayyida at 546-2999 or visit www.artskingston.ca.
For Immediate Release - August 16, 2011
KINGSTON, ON – CFRC 101.9FM, Kingston's only campus and community radio station, is recruiting two local writers for short-term Radio Residencies.
Each writer will produce a sound art project for broadcast and public performance in November, 2011. Projects could encompass sound poetry, creative storytelling, non-linear narrative, non-English languages, integrated music and text and other forms of text- or language-based sound art. Interested applicants should submit a 1- to 2-page proposal for their project, outlining the theme, subject matter, source materials and production techniques (if known), a plan for involving CFRC volunteers and Kingston community members, and addressing how the finished work will engage with local issues and stories, reflect the diversity of the region and connect with listeners from other places. Proposals will be reviewed by a jury of 3-5 members reflecting CFRC's staff and volunteer base.
Applicants should submit proposals to cfrcops@ams.queensu.ca by Friday, September 2 at 4pm. Successful applicants will have access to broadcast production training, CFRC’s audio production studios and portable digital recorders, a small budget for honoraria for volunteers involved in their project, and will also receive a $1000 honorarium for completing the project. Finished pieces will be broadcast on CFRC, shared with other community radio stations and debuted at a community performance at the Screening Room in November.
CFRC's Radio Residencies program will continue in 2011-12 with the recruitment of two more writers to produce audio documentaries in the winter and two writers to produce radio dramas in the spring. This project is made possible with the support of the City of Kingston and the Kingston Arts Council through the City of Kingston Arts Fund. For more information, visit www.cfrc.ca.
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Media contact:
Kristiana Clemens
CFRC 101.9FM Operations Officer
613-533-2121
cfrcops@ams.queensu.ca
www.cfrc.ca
What is Culture Days?
Culture Days is a collaborative pan-Canadian volunteer movement to raise the awareness, accessibility, participation and engagement of all Canadians in the arts and cultural life of their communities. Annual, Canada-wide Culture Days events feature free, hands-on, interactive activities that invite the public to participate "behind the scenes," to discover the world of artists, creators, historians, architects, curators, and designers at work in their community.
Artists, organizations and community groups in Kingston are holding free, interactive arts and culture events over three days — and you're invited. Events are planned all over the city and in locations you might not think of — like centre court at the mall and in the parking lot of a shopping centre. Events are being planned by art galleries and museums, symphonies and theatre companies and by individuals with a passion for music, sculpture, filmmaking and more.
Have an idea for a free, participatory event? Register it at www.culturedays.ca and use the promotional tools you find there to let people know about it. You can also find out about existing registered events, volunteer time or space to another project, and read about national initiatives.
Mark your calendars now and check back for a full schedule of events in early September, including an open rehearsal of the Kingston Symphony Orchestra, a Samba dance party with live drums, and a community singalong.

Kingston Carnival Dance Party
Friday Sept 30, 6:45 pm
LOCATION: Cataraqui Town Centre, Centre Court
Kingston School of Dance and Samba Maracuja offer a free Afro Cuban dance class and drumming class
Multicultural Library Launch
Friday Sept 30, 9 am & Saturday Oct 1, 1 pm
LOCATION Kingston Frontenac Public Library, 88 Wright Crescent
KFPL launches its new multilingual collection and inclusive and welcoming space for new Canadians,
with storytime in many languages.
Art in Our Hearts: BBQ and Dance Party
Friday Sept 30, 3 pm
LOCATION: Pathways to Education, Weller Ave. Plaza Parking Lot
Creative art work and demonstrations by local students and residents, with music by DJs from Kingston
Soul Shakedown.
Scarecrow Festival 2011
Saturday Oct 1, Noon
LOCATION: Wally Elmer Neighbourhood Centre, 50 MacCauley St
Make your own scarecrow - just bring an old set of child-size clothes and a hat. Plus, visit the display of
photos from Kingston Through My Lens project.
Kingston Symphony Open Rehearsal and Instrument Petting Zoo
Saturday Oct 1, 1 pm
LOCATION: The Grand Theatre, 218 Princess Street
Listen in as Glen Fast conducts rehearsal in the auditorium, while in the lobby, try new instruments in
the petting zoo.
Road Work
Saturday Oct 1, 7:30 am
LOCATION: Boucher Park, 74 Clarence St. at King, across from the Keg Restaurant
Artist Andy Berg will spend the day making a labyrinth using random debris from roadside walks as well
as handmade paver stones - help her build it.
Backstage with Queen's Musical Theatre
Sunday, October 2nd, 1 pm
LOCATION: Theological Hall, Founders Row
Join the cast of Drood: The Mystery of Edwin Drood for a choreography rehearsal and sneak peek performance this upcoming show.
Thousand Islands Storefront Writing Contest
The Thousand Islands Writers Festival will hold their first annual Storefront Writing Contest, Saturday August 27th, 2011 in downtown Brockville. Patterned after a similar contest in Bruton, England the contest will pair individuals who write from downtown storefronts creating short stories of approximately 2,000 words in the genre of their choice.
Participants meet at the Brockville Library at 9:30 a.m., on contest morning to register. Store locations and prompts for the contest will be randomly drawn. Writers will proceed to their chosen sites to begin writing at 10:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. Completed work will be turned in at the Grindstone Tapas Lounge (The Mill) with a post-contest social hour.
Entries can be produced by pen or laptop. Laptop users are asked to bring a memory device to download from. Participants are encouraged to dress in period costumes, but it is not necessary.
The entry fee is $5. The deadline for entries is Friday August 19th, 2011. Entries should include the participants name, address, phone number and e-mail address. Drop off is at Leeds County Books, 73 King St. W., Brockville or mail to Thousand Islands Writers Festival, 13 Duke St, Brockville, Ontario K6V 3J2.
Further details may be found at www.tiwfestival.org.
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Contacts:
Doreen Barnes
Chair, Thousand Islands Writers Festival
(613) 345-3365
Russ Disotell
Vice-Chair, Thousand Islands Writers Festival
(613) 342-0793
Port Moody Arts Centre is pleased to launch/announce their 2012 Wearable Art Awards Call for Entry. $5000 in prize money will be awarded.
Please check our website: www.wearableartawards.com or go to www.pomoarts.ca/events.
The Wearable Art Awards is not a fashion show, it is a multi-media performance where the human body becomes a living, breathing, moving canvas. We are looking for more than a “pretty dress.” We are asking you to go deep into your imagination to create a wearable piece of art that challenges what most consider to be wearable, or everyday fashion.
The Wearable Art Awards is committed to challenging artists of all mediums to push their imaginations to create evocative, imaginative and thought provoking sculpture for the human body.
CATEGORIES
An entry must fall into one of the following three form-based categories. Cash prizes will be presented to category winners as determined by the jury.
«Entries must be a full outfit to be considered for this category. To be considered a full outfit, the entry should cover a model’s upper and lower body.
AWARDS
In addition to competing for a category win, entries will also be eligible for the following cash prize awards as determined by the jury:
IMPORTANT DATES
The deadline for electronic applications is December 2, 2011, at 5pm.
The application package and applicable entry fees must be received by the Port Moody Arts Centre no later than 5pm on December 2, 2011. (We will not be accepting the actual garments at this point).
Notification of Successful Entries
December 9, 2011
Artists will be notified by email regarding acceptance for inclusion in the performance and exhibition.
Shipping Dates
January 3-13, 2012
Selected entries, entry information forms, appraisals, ticket RSVP cards, and the related shipping materials must be delivered to the Port Moody Arts Centre during this time (note: Arts Centre is closed for the holidays until January 3). Entries can be hand delivered or mailed to:
Wearable Art Awards
c/o Port Moody Arts Centre
2425 St Johns Street
Port Moody, British Columbia, CANADA
V3H 2B2
The Wearable Art Awards Performance
February 18 & 19, 2012
Port Moody City Hall Galleria, 100 Newport Drive
Port Moody, BC
Exhibition Dates
March 1— April 8, 2012
Port Moody Arts Centre, 2425 St. Johns Street
Pick Up of Work After Exhibit
April 14, 2012, 5pm for local artists
Local artists are responsible for picking up their entries no later than 5pm on April 14, 2012. Out of town artists will have their work shipped back after the exhibition. Please allow at least two weeks after exhibition end date for return of your work by courier or mail.
Extended Display
Last week of April, 2012
Some entries may be selected to be part of displays in and around the City of Port Moody provided approval by the artist.
For more information please contact:
GABRIELA (Ella) Caranfil
Events Coordinator
Port Moody Arts Centre
2425 St. Johns Street, Port Moody BC V3H 2B2
604.931.2008 x109 | cell: 604-551-1784
pomoarts.ca |pomoartsfestival.ca
events@pomoarts.ca
Whether to catch the eye, assert status, arouse desire or fulfill an ideal, adorning the body is a universal social pursuit. In this exhibition, decorative and visual arts engage in a dialogue on the drive to adorn. Elegant late 18th to early 20th century accessories are combined with contemporary works of art that luxuriate in similar textures, patterns and colours, and examine the power of visual appeal and rituals of bodily ornamentation.
Adornment features works on paper by artists Hamish Buchanan, Bernard Clark, Dana Holst, Stephen Livick, John Massey, Ed Pien, Tony Scherman and Jeannie Thib. The exhibition also offers a rare opportunity to view recently conserved accessories from the Queen’s University Collection of Canadian Dress – gloves, fans, hats, purses, a parasol and shoes – the ingenious work of anonymous seamstresses, tailors and craftspeople. To these, one exquisite recent acquisition has been added: a gold pocket watch with a significant Kingston connection. All of the works are drawn from the Art Centre’s collection, and many are exhibited for the first time.
For further information, please contact Matthew Hills at 613-533-2190, or go to www.aeac.ca.
This exhibition is supported by the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, the City of Kingston Arts Fund and Dr. Isabel Bader. Several of the accessories in this exhibition were newly conserved by and under the direction of Caterina Florio, the Isabel Bader Research Fellow in Textile Conservation for 2011.
OPEN CASTING CALL FOR STUDIO TELEVISION PROGRAM HOSTS
This is a VOLUNTEER POSITION Beginning in September 2011 in Kingston, Ontario
TVCOGECO and the Kingston Immigration Partnership are looking for hosts for a Fall 2011 studio television program which will focus on improving the visibility of Kingston’s diverse communities and encouraging the celebration of multiculturalism in our city. The hour long program will be recorded once every 3 weeks beginning in late September 2011.
Hosts will need to be available for:
Hosts requirements include:
Auditions will be held in early August 2011 at: TVCOGECO, 170 Colborne St, Kingston, ON
To book your audition and for more information contact:
TVCOGECO Producer Michael Pontbriand
613-544-6311 x8582
General Manager – Kingston , Kingston ON Salary: $32,760 per annum Benefits: 3 weeks paid vacation + paid holiday closure Terms: Prorated to 70% time until August 2012; 100% starting September 2012 Closing Date: July 29, 2011 Job Summary Reporting to the board and Festival Director, and working in partnership with staff, interns, and volunteers, the General Manager plans, oversees and manages all aspects of the Kingston Canadian Film Festival, an annual festival that takes place in Kingston, Ontario. The incumbent will be responsible for coordinating event logistics, facilitating programming, securing media coverage and representing the festival in the press, preparing grant applications and supporting the Development Manager in securing sponsorships, and volunteer management, among other duties. Entering its 12th year, the festival is widely recognized as the largest all-Canadian film festival and is dedicated to supporting our national cinema and filmmakers, as well as aspiring local filmmakers. The General Manager is expected to solidify and further develop the Kingston Canadian Film Festival’s status and success. Principal Duties
Qualifications
Expected Skills
To apply, please submit a resume, the names of two references with contact information, and a one-page letter detailing how your experience, education, skills and abilities will ensure your success in this position (Adobe Acrobat format preferred). Apply by email only to alison@kingcanfilmfest.com. No phone calls please.
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Artistic Administrator |
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K119-194-2011 |
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Closing: |
July 27, 2011 |
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Full Time |
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Salary: |
$49,267.40 - $67,285.40 |
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Cultural Services |
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Position Summary
Qualifications, Competencies
Skills, Abilities, Work Demands
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Apply quoting file # using one of the following methods no later than 4:30 p.m. on the closing date to:
Human Resources, Your resume or application must clearly demonstrate how you meet the requirements for the position. We thank all of those who apply. Only those selected for further consideration will be contacted. Information collected will be handled in accordance with the Municipal Freedom of Information Privacy Protection Act. The City Of Kingston is an equal opportunity employer. |
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http://www.cityofkingston.ca/
UPCOMING EXHIBITION
Annie Pootoogook: Kinngait Compositions
August 27th – December 11th 2011
Bringing together drawings spanning the crucial period of 2001 to 2006, this exhibition deepens understanding of Annie Pootogook’s art and of Kinngait (Cape Dorset), Nunavut, the Arctic community that has been the focus of her practice. While Pootoogook’s work offers unflinching documentation of life in a community in transition from nomadic hunter-gatherer to settled consumer society, she also bears witness to the bonds of shared experience among its people. With a deliberate, almost formal dignity, she focuses on the social life, small rituals, objects and conditions of her surroundings.
In this exhibition curated by Art Centre Chief Curator/Curator of Contemporary Art Jan Allen, we see Pootoogook’s approach refined and applied to the elements of daily life in domestic interiors, community activities, significant quotidian objects, supernatural incidents and interpersonal conflict. In the context of the broad popular appeal of Inuit graphics, these works are distinguished by a disconcerting emotional reserve. The artist achieves a cool observational quality that pushes at the edges of comedy or hysteria, a condition of charged understatement that has particular resonance for contemporary viewers and has drawn intense critical interest to her work.
This project allows examination of Annie Pootoogook’s canny application of artistic traditions forged in Kinngait, where the renowned print cooperative (West Baffin Eskimo Co-operative Ltd., now Kinngait Co-op) was established in the mid-20th century, and a parallel consideration of the life of the settlement. The exhibition will be accompanied by an illustrated publication offering a fresh analysis of the aesthetic and social dimensions of Pootoogook’s art, and consideration of the ways in which her international profile set a game-changing precedent for the vitality and scope of Inuit art.
A concurrent exhibition (1 July 2011 – 11 March 2012) of the Art Centre’s Constantine Collection of exquisite ivories collected in the Northwest in the late 19th and early 20th centuries offers a powerful foil for Pootoogook’s work.
For media inquiries or further information, please contact Matthew Hills at 613.533.2190 or matthew.hills@queensu.ca.
Presented by:
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Additional support for this exhibition has been received fromthe Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, the City of Kingston, the Kingston Arts Council and the George Taylor Richardson Memorial Fund, Queen’s University.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Artist Talk and Demonstration with artist Greg Staats
When: Friday July 22, 2011 at 1 pm
Where: Katarokwi Native Friendship Centre(50 Hickson Ave. Kingston, ON)
Admission to Talk is Free
Modern Fuel, in partnership with the Katarokwi Native Friendship Centre, is presenting an artist talk by Greg Staats and a short demonstration of his practice following a community lunch at the Katarokwi Native Friendship Centre on Friday July 22, 2011. Those interested in attending Staats’ talk are welcome to come to the lunch starting at 12pm. A minimum donation of $2 is requested for the lunch.
Staat’s talk is in conjunction with his exhibition, condolence, on display at Modern Fuel (21 Queen Street, Kingston, ON) until July 23, 2011. condolence, is an ongoing photo and video series that depicts the process of Staats’ reconnection with a traditional Haudenosaunee [Iroquois] restorative aesthetic. Staats has assembled and created an archive of photographic images and documents, both personal and familial, which create and maintain strong connections with the land, nation, community, and family. Greg will be giving a digital presentation of a selection of his works dealing with a continuum of symbols and photographs inspired from the condolence ceremony and the good mind. Greg will also be talking about the exhibition at Modern Fuel and his career as a working artist. Greg will also be giving a portrait demonstration with Polaroid and referencing the family photo album.
This presentation follows on the success of the Voice Off, amulti-media project with the Katarokwi Native Friendship Centre that brought artists in to run video workshops for youths last summer. The goal of the project was to introduce young people at the Katarokwi Native Friendship Centre to new media and to facilitate opportunities for the exploration, creation and sharing of personal and community experiences and stories through new media and video technologies.
Artist’s Bio:Greg Staats has been an exhibiting artist since 1989 working with photography and video. He was born on The Six Nations of the Grand River Territory and has photographed first nations people across Kanata and the land he grew up on. His work has been shown in solo and group exhibitions in numerous galleries and museums across Canada. Recently, Staats has been Faculty for two Aboriginal Visual Arts Thematic Residencies: Archive Restored (2009) and Towards Language (2010) at the Banff Centre for the Arts. Staats has an upcoming solo exhibition in 2011 at the McMaster Museum of Art.
For further information, contact:
Modern Fuel Artist-Run Centre
21A Queen St, Kingston, ON, K7K 1A1
(613) 548-4883
modernfuel@bellnet.ca
www.modernfuel.org
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Artistic Producer – Theatre Kingston, Kingston ON
The Board of Directors of Theatre Kingston requires a dynamic, innovative and
versatile individual to fill the position of Artistic Producer.
Reporting to the Board of Directors, the Artistic Producer has the opportunity to
help grow and set the direction for the future of an established local professional
theatre company. The Artistic Producer will play a critical role as the company’s
representative in the Kingston community.
Theatre Kingston has been developing and producing theatre in Kingston for over
20 years. Our mandate includes the production of stimulating and intellectually
provocative theatrical work at a high level of professional competence, work that
reflects, draws upon, and enriches the Kingston community in all its diversity.
With an annual operating budget of approximately $140,000, we currently produce
three shows annually in the Baby Grand Theatre, Kingston. We also have a Young
Company which tours in the summer, a children’s drama club during the school year,
and a weeklong children’s summer day camp that runs throughout the month of July.
The Artistic Producer is Theatre Kingston’s sole senior management position and is
responsible for the artistic leadership and day-to-day operations of the organization.
Experience and skill is required in directing, grant writing, public relations, new
play development, human resource management, budget development, fundraising,
marketing, and audience development.
The ideal candidate will have the following general qualifications and skills:
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This is a part time position that will begin September 1, 2011.
Interested individuals should forward a resume and cover letter by July 22, 2011 to:
Barbara Linds, Chair, Board of Directors
b.linds@mac.com
Where We Live:
Kingston and Area
The Constantine Collection of Northern Indigenous Art
July 1st, 2011 – March 11th, 2012
Highlighting objects from the Constantine Collection, this exhibition underlines the paths that they have taken, from their subarctic creation to their subsequent collection, acquiring multiple meanings as they move within and across cultures. A public reception for this exhibition will be held Friday, September 16th, 5–11 pm. The exhibition will be held at the Agnes Etherington Art Centre.
The Agnes Etherington Art Centre’s Constantine Collection contains rare carved and engraved historical indigenous objects, primarily from Alaska, the Yukon and Northwest Territories. The objects were first amassed by Henrietta Constantine at the end of the 19th century, while her husband Charles Constantine served with the North West Mounted Police, overseeing the Yukon Gold Rush. In 1929, after Henrietta had moved to Kingston a widow, Agnes Etherington acquired the collection for Queen’s University. From pictorial tusks to miniature ivory figures, decorative containers to jewelry pieces, these are exquisite examples of artistic creativity and cultural continuity.
The contexts of their making and collecting are complex and fascinating. Representing Yu’pik and Iñupiaq peoples (among others), some objects had spiritual or utilitarian meanings specific to their makers’ culture. Others were made for trade, adapting the forms of outside cultures to traditional materials, while retaining indigenous styles and iconographies. At the core of the Constantine Collection is a group of stunning engraved ivory tusks. Depicting sleds and kayaks, tall ships and sternwheelers, warehouses and underground dwellings, these engravings reveal a culture in transition in the post-contact period of the late 19th century.
For media inquiries or further information, please contact Matthew Hills at 613.533.2190 or matthew.hills@queensu.ca.
Note: This exhibition is supported by the Ontario Arts Council, the City of Kingston and the Kingston Arts Council through the City of Kingston Arts Fund (CKAF) and the George Taylor Richardsom Memorial Fund, Queen's University. Research assistance has been provided by YCW student, Claire Grady-Smith.
For Immediate Release
Jun. 27, 2011, 2:09 p.m.
Free Canada Day Events At Two Civic Museums
Celebrate our nation's birthday with the City of Kingston's MacLachlan Woodworking Museum and Pump House Steam Museum! At beautiful Grass Creek Park and downtown on Lake Ontario, both Museums will be hosting free Canada Day festivities for the whole family.
Enjoy a wee bit of Scottish culture as the Barefoot Players perform their Skittish Play at 1 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. at the Woodworking Museum. Learn a new trade with our hands-on tutorials in Nail Driving and Shakemaking or simply watch as the masters demonstrate their skills in Blacksmithing. Be sure to check online for the schedule of events.
If you have a taste for fresh strawberries with cream then bring your loonies and plan your visit a little earlier and indulge in the Strawberry Social at the MacLachlan Woodworking Museum which was made possible by our sponsor Fruition Farms. If you're spending the afternoon at the interactive Woodworking Museum, don't forget to check out the new exhibit celebrating UNESCO's International Year of Forests.
Right next to the Museum, Grass Creek Park is offering Canada Day pony rides, wagon rides, face-painting, crafts, mini-golf and lots of other fun. Bring a swimsuit and try out the sandy beach or compete in the sand castle competition. Family-oriented entertainment starts at 11 a.m. and the festivities end at 5:30 p.m. with a Canada Day Ceremony and the cutting of the cake.
Kids can enjoy making their own Canada-themed windmills at the Pump House Steam Museum as they look into alternative energy sources such as wind. Visitors of all ages will be able to enjoy science exploration throughout the day and be sure to check online for the schedule of guided tours!
Join us, rain or shine, on Friday, July 1, from 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. at the MacLachlan Woodworking Museum and the Pump House Steam Museum.
The MacLachlan Woodworking Museum is located at 2993 Highway #2 East, 1km East of Joyceville Road, exit 632 from HWY#401. For more information, please contact the Museum at 613-542-0543 or visit <http://www.woodworkingmuseum.
The Pump House Steam Museum is located at 23 Ontario Street. For more information, please contact the Museum at 613-546-4291 ext. 1666 or visit <http://www.steammuseum.ca>.
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Media contact information:
Julie Fossitt, Marketing Administrator at 613-546-4291 ext. 1143 or <mailto:jfossitt@cityofkingsto
Download the full Job Description here
Located on the campus of Queen’s University in historic Kingston, Ontario, the Agnes Etherington Art Centre (AEAC), through its distinguished collections and award-winning programming and publications, ranks as Canada’s premier university art gallery, and is regarded as among the top art galleries in Canada. Founded in 1957, the AEAC boasts a collection of some 14,000 works of art, with strengths in Canadian historical and contemporary art, 17th century Dutch painting (including two of only five Rembrandt paintings in Canada), Renaissance and Baroque drawings, African art, Inuit art and decorative arts. Its publications and exhibitions record includes catalogues that have become landmarks in the field, and through its public programs, the AEAC offers a wide array of lectures, symposia, artists’ talks, school programs and general tours that have marked it as the most vital public art gallery in southeastern Ontario.
The Gallery Association of the AEAC (GA) operates both the Art Rental and Sales Gallery and the Gallery Shop (the GA Gallery and Shop). The GA is a not-for-profit corporation and registered charitable organization which, through the efforts of its members, assists the AEAC in pursuing its mandate to further the cause of art in the community. The GA Gallery and Shop are intended to enhance the experience of GA members and visitors to the AEAC, promote artists within the region to the community, and raise funds to further the AEAC’s mandate.
This position offers an exciting opportunity for a motivated individual interested in retail and gallery management in the not-for-profit environment. The successful candidate will understand that remuneration is by way of a fixed honorarium paid by the GA, and is not tied to the number of hours worked.
Some of the duties associated with the Manager’s position are generic to both the Gallery Shop and the Art Rental and Sales Gallery, whereas others are unique.
PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release: June 22, 2011
The Kingston Arts Council and the City of Kingston are pleased to announce the recipients of the 2011 City of Kingston Arts Fund Grants. The Grants were awarded in two categories, Operating Grants and Project Grants. As part of the Kingston Cultural Plan, and thanks to Kingston City Council, an additional $50,000 was invested in CKAF this year, and was proportionally divided 70%/30% between Operating Grants and Project Grants. All CKAF applicants will be notified by mail as to the status of their grant request, and, in the case of the successful applicants, how they should proceed to redeem their grant.
Operating Grants
The Operating Grants Review Committee (voting) was comprised of Rebecca Anweiler, Jason-Emery Groën, Andrea Robertson, Gordon Smith and Maurice Smith. The Chair of the Committee was Craig Walker. City Councillors Rick Downes and Liz Schell, Brian McCurdy, Cultural Director, and Colin Wiginton, Manager, Cultural Services, were non-voting members on the Operating Grants Committee.
The Operating Grant program received 12 applications requesting a total of $427,860 in funding. Of these, 10 applications were successful, and $335,000 in funding was awarded to Operating Grant applicants. The Operating Grant Award recipients are listed in alphabetical order below:
|
Organization |
Grant |
|
Agnes Etherington Art Centre |
$ 75,000.00 |
|
Cantabile Choirs of Kingston |
$ 24,000.00 |
|
Le Centre culturel Frontenac |
$ 18,000.00 |
|
Kingston Canadian Film Festival |
$ 25,000.00 |
|
Kingston Symphony Association |
$ 75,000.00 |
|
Kingston WritersFest |
$ 20,000.00 |
|
Modern Fuel Artist-Run Centre |
$ 39,780.00 |
|
Reelout Arts Inc. |
$ 14,360.00 |
|
Theatre Kingston |
$ 32,500.00 |
|
Union Gallery |
$ 11,360.00 |
|
TOTAL Operating Grant Funds Awarded in 2011: |
$ 335,000.00 |
Project Grants
The Project Grants Review Committee (voting) was comprised of Cliff Edwards, Kate Graff, Sadiqa Khan, Susan Lord, and Bill Penner. The Chair of the Committee was Craig Walker. City Councillors Rick Downes and Rob Hutchison, Brian McCurdy, Cultural Director, and Colin Wiginton, Manager, Cultural Services were non-voting members on the Project Grants Review Committee.
The Project Grant program received 30 applications requesting a total of $361,006 in funding. Of these, 18 applications were successful, and $145,000 in funding was awarded to Project Grant applicants. The Project Grant Award recipients are listed in alphabetical order below:
|
Organization |
Project Title |
Grant |
|
Burlesque Youniversity |
High Voltage Burlesque |
$ 3,775.00 |
|
CFRC 101.9 FM |
CFRC Radio Residencies Program |
$ 9,650.00 |
|
Corridor Culture |
Corridor Culture |
$ 8,500.00 |
|
Curious You |
Pretty Pieces |
$ 5,000.00 |
|
H’art School |
The Day of Abled Artists Project |
$ 15,000.00 |
|
Joe’s MILL |
Joe’s MILL Concert Workshop Series |
$ 6,375.00 |
|
Kingston Chamber Choir |
Kingston Chamber Choir Presents: “Messiah” |
$ 3,500.00 |
|
Kingston Community Health Centres |
Kingston Multicultural Arts Festival |
$ 15,000.00 |
|
Kingston Interval House |
Kingston International Women’s Week 2012 |
$ 6,000.00 |
|
Kingston Jazz Society |
Live @ your Library – Concert Series: Jazz Around the Corner and Around the World |
$ 6,000.00 |
|
Kingston Punk Productions |
Fun House Festival 2012 |
$ 5,000.00 |
|
Live Wire Music Series |
Live Wire Music Series – 2011-2012 |
$ 5,000.00 |
|
Museum of Health Care at Kingston |
Friendly Fire |
$ 5,250.00 |
|
OPIRG Kingston |
Push It: OPIRG Kingston’s Hip Hop Festival |
$ 6,000.00 |
|
Purple Dragon Puppet Troupe |
Puppet Cabaret |
$ 13,000.00 |
|
The Gallery Association of the Agnes Etherington Art Centre |
Kingston Artists’ Profile Project |
$ 7,000.00 |
|
Tone Deaf Festival |
Tone Deaf Festival 2011 |
$ 14,950.00 |
|
xcurated |
APP Kingston |
$ 10,000.00 |
|
TOTAL Project Grant Funds Awarded in 2011: |
$ 145,000.00 |
|
About the City of Kingston Arts Fund (CKAF)
The City of Kingston Arts Fund (CKAF) was established by Kingston City Council in 2007 to support the arts and arts organizations and is administered by the Kingston Arts Council on behalf of the City. Each year the Kingston Arts Council submits a plan for the administration of the Arts Fund for approved by City Council.
Operating and Project Grants are awarded based on the decisions of two separate CKAF review committees that include members of Kingston’s various arts communities. In 2011 these committees met in May and their decisions were ratified by the Kingston Arts Council’s Board of Directors before being submitted for approval to Kingston City Council.
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For further information contact:
Ted Worth, Grants Director
Kingston Arts Council Grants Department
grants@artskingston.com [or] 613-546-2999
Fueling up for Square Pegs IV
Modern Fuel Artist-Run Centre is currently accepting submissions of video works for Square Pegs IV, a screening of short videos by local, national and international artists to be shown in Kingston, Ontario’s Market Square on Wednesday, August 17th, 2011. Please submit your short videos (max. 15 minutes in length) as an attachment via e-mail to modernfuel@bellnet.ca as well as an artist’s statement and a CV. NTSC DVD and MiniDV submissions will also be accepted.
CARFAC fees will be paid for screenings, http://www.carfac.ca/
Submissions are due by Friday July 15th, 2011 (applications postmarked for July 15th, 2011 will be accepted)
Note: Only successful applicants will be contacted.
For further information, please contact us at:
Modern Fuel Artist-Run Centre
21 Queen St, Kingston, ON,
K7K 1A1 (613) 548-4883
modernfuel@bellnet.ca
www.modernfuel.org
The Kingston Arts Council is currently seeking applications for the Executive Director position, with a closing date of June 20th, 2011.
Job Description
The Executive Director (ED) is responsible for the overall administration of the programs and services of the
Kingston Regional Arts Council (KAC) as well as day-to-day operations and management of the organization and
staff. The ED must attend to the needs of KAC’s members and follow direction defined and determined by the
Board of Directors. Supervision of staff and close collaboration with associates are essential elements of the
position. The ED represents the KAC in the media, the city, and, most importantly, throughout the arts
community.
For complete posting, please see the following document:
Kingston Arts Council Executive Director Job Description (pdf)
For Immediate Release
Jun. 7, 2011, 5:39 p.m.
Kingston Jazz Festival Porch Jazz Line-up Announced
The Grand Theatre, Kingston Jazz Society and The Kingston Arts Council have announced the full line-up of free programming for Saturday, June 25. This partnership will feature three days of world-class music at both the Grand Theatre and The Mansion June 23 to 25.
The Festival kicks off with the multi-Grammy award winning Dave Holland Quintet making their Kingston debut on June 23 at the Grand. This jazz bassist, composer and bandleader has been a forceful presence on the jazz scene for more than fifty years and has played with Miles Davis, Chick Corea, Anthony Braxton, and Kenny Wheeler - just to name a few. The "Back to BASSics" Series continues with the Grammy award winning vocalist Kurt Elling, who will perform for the first time in Kingston. His "Swings Sinatra and More" performance on June 24 at the Grand is a must for any lover of Frank Sinatra and the big band tunes of the 40s. Having performed with Sonny Rollins, Chick Corea, Natalie Cole, James Brown and Sting, Christian McBride is quickly making a name for himself on the world stage. McBride and his quintet, Inside Straight, make their debut in Kingston on June 25 at the Grand. See these three great performances for the amazing price of just $99 (plus applicable tax and service charges). Passes are available through the Grand Box Office.
One of the top live music spots in Kingston, The Mansion will host the Juno-Award winning Brandi Disterheft Quintet on Friday, June 24, at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. The energetic blend of jazz and funk by the Shuffle Demons will pack the dance floor at the Mansion on Saturday, June 25, at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. These great performances are presented by the Kingston Jazz Society and tickets are $20 plus applicable tax and service charges, available in advance or at the door (subject to availability). See all shows at the Grand and the 10 p.m. shows at the Mansion for only $115 plus applicable tax and service charges - that's only $23 per show!
The Kingston Arts Council presents free neighbourhood jazz with the Limestone Trombone Quartet, Greg Runions, Paul Clifford, Downtown Trio, Sounds of Jazz and Dave Barton performing on porches across the City from 12 p.m. - 3 p.m. Join the parade from Clergy St. to Barrack St. and end up at the free jazz in Confederation Park with The Brandi Disterheft Quintet, The Shuffle Demons and Mauricio Montecino's Latin Fusion from 3 p.m. - 6 p.m. Full details of all artists and porch jazz locations are available at <http://www.artskingston.com>.
Living arts, living culture, living history -history and innovation thrive in Kingston! The Kingston Jazz Festival is made possible by the Kingston Culture Plan (<http://www.cityofkingston.
Tickets for all Grand Theatre and The Mansion performances are available in person at the Grand Theatre Box Office at 218 Princess St., by phone at 613-530-2050 or online at <http://www.kingstongrand.ca>.
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Media contact information:
Julie Fossitt, Marketing Administrator for Cultural Services, <mailto:jfossitt@
(Please note: despite the similarity of names, this is not a KAC event; neither the KAC's Kingston Prize, nor the KAC's Juried Art Salon. Nevertheless, the KAC encourages you to enter!)
The Salon Prize – June 1, 2011
The third annual Salon Prize has commenced and is building steam! We looking forward to meeting new
talent!
The Salon Prize is a national art competition that focuses on supporting and showcasing national
talent. This Kingston based art competition was created in 2009 by creator Cleah Bunting
because of her lifelong love of art. All profits obtained from the submission are given out in
prizes the following year, “We do this because we love it and we want to help keep attention on
the importance of the arts, not to make money” says Cleah.
The Salon Prize gives artists, professional and amateur, the opportunity to showcase their
works, “The aim of this prize is to open doors for artists and their arts” says Cleah. Our art
showcase will take place at Gallery Raymond in Kingston where 16 chosen artists will have their
paintings displayed.
This is an open competition, meaning art submissions can take the form of paintings, drawings
and sculptures of any genre (abstract, realism, impressions etc) or medium (oil, acrylics,
watercolours, charcoal, pencil etc). The works can also be of any subject. For example:
landscapes, still life's, portraits, figurative are all acceptable. The art submitted must have been
done in the previous 10 years, and must be created and submitted by someone 18 years or older.
It is $35 to enter.
Prizes:
1st place: $2000
2nd place: $500
3rd place: $150
4th place: honourable mention
The Mark Bunting drawing award: $100
This competition is nationwide, accepting art from across the country. The deadline for
submissions is September 10, 2011.
All submission requirements can be found by visiting The Salon Prize website at
www.salonprize.com
Also check out The Salon Prize 2011 on Facebook!
Please contact kimgascoigne@gmail.com for questions/interviews
Sustainable Kingston is looking to commission a chalk artist to create a Sustainable Kingston logo - see http://www.sustainablekingston.ca/ - on the market square located behind City Hall. This will take place at an event planned to coincide with the opening of “Communities In Bloom” on May 18. The idea is to have a large professionally done logo in the middle of the square and students participating in the event will have the opportunity to chalk their vision of Sustainable Kingston around the logo. If there are any artists interested, please contact Dan Hendry, dhendry@cityofkingston.ca or 613.546.4291ext. 1279.
Modern Fuel Artist Run Centre is seeking a motivated and organized individual for the full time position of Administrative Director at the Centre, to start at the beginning of July 2011.
A catalyst for cultural activity in Kingston, Ontario, Modern Fuel Artist-Run Centre is in its 34th year of operations. Modern Fuel is a not-for-profit Artist-Run Centre facilitating the presentation, interpretation, and production of contemporary visual, time-based and interdisciplinary arts. Modern Fuel supports innovation and experimentation, and is committed to the education of interested publics and the diversification of its audiences.
Position Summary
The Administrative Director reports to the Board of Directors and is the lead administrator for Modern Fuel, sharing a co-directorship with the Artistic Director. The Administrative Director is a full-time position, ensuring effective development and implementation of organizational goals and strategies, overseeing the centre’s finances including grant writing and fundraising, recruiting and training all short-term contracts, interns and volunteers and assisting the Artistic Director in the coordination of all Modern Fuel programming. The Administrative Director will promote effective management and growth of Modern Fuel’s programs and facilities, support its objectives, and work to enhance its position
This position is a renewable, 12-month contract, for 35 hours per week and offers health and dental benefits. Gallery hours of Tuesday to Saturday from 12 to 5pm function as the core hours of the position at 25 hours per week and meetings, events, and duties outside of gallery hours contribute to a workweek of 35 hours (on average).
Summary of Key Responsibilities
Qualifications
The ideal candidate has:
Salary: $23,400 to $26,520 + benefits
Please submit a curriculum vitae and a letter of interest to:
Hiring Committee
Modern Fuel Artist Run Centre
21 Queen Street
Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7K 1A1
Or email: modernfuel@bellnet.ca
All applications must be received at Modern Fuel by Monday May 16th
Modern Fuel is an equal-opportunity employer. We thank all applicants for their interest; however, only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
Deadline: May 14th, 2011 (applications postmarked for deadline date will be accepted)
Modern Fuel is now accepting applications for New Media Workspace Coordinator, a unique and dynamic summer jobopportunity in the field of contemporary art and new media! The Coordinator will be responsible for the promotion and operation ofModern Fuel’s New Media Workspace, including its equipment rentals, and organizing orientation sessions and workshops on the use of said equipment as well as the development and promotion of Square Pegs, a free, annual public screening of artist video shorts submitted to Modern Fuel. The Coordinator will also assist in the day to day operations of Modern Fuel including gallery sitting, office maintenance and facilitating other programming.
For More Application Details Please See our Website: www.modernfuel.org
Job Posting: Website Database Assistant
Download the full job description here.
Position: Website Database Assistant
Duration: 7 weeks, May 23 – July 8, 2011
Wage and hours: $10.25 per hour, 30 hours per week
Job Purpose
The Kingston Arts Council is looking for an individual to manage membership data from multiple lists, contacting list members where necessary to ensure records are current, with the end goal of ensuring that all content is being populated on our interactive arts portal (www.artskingston.ca).
The position requires a good working knowledge of Kingston arts, culture, and business, and a desire to build on that knowledge, through conducting outreach to collect any information not currently documented. The individual needs to have a good grasp of Excel, Access or similar database and content management systems and feel comfortable manipulating large amounts of data. Strong awareness of Social Media an asset. This position requires a good communicator who is keen, strongly self directed, and personable.
How to Apply
Please submit a resume and cover letter detailing your suitability for the position, in doc or pdf formats, to info@artskingston.com with “Website Database Assistant” in the subject heading. Applications are due no later than: Monday May 2nd, 2011 at 4:30pm. Interviews will take place the week of May 9th and decisions will be made later that week.
This position starts on Monday May 23rd, 2011.
The Kingston Arts Council encourages Aboriginal students, students of colour and students with disabilities to apply.
We regret to inform that our current office location is not wheelchair accessible.
For more information please contact Josh at info@artskingston.com.
During the 2011 Election campaign, we'll be trying to post regularly and update you on what's happening in the arts. For quicker and more regular updates, friend us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter:
http://www.twitter.com/artsking
https://www.facebook.com/kingstonartscouncil
The KAC will try and remain non-partisan throughout the election - however, personal biases may sneak through from time to time, and there is currently very little being discussed on Arts issues. We'll post what we find, and whatever you send us that is arts related. Help keep us informed!

Liberal Platform - Your Future. Your Family. Your Canada.
(Excerpts on arts, culture and heritage on pages 18-19 and 60)
Green Party Platform – VisionGreen
(Excerpts on arts, culture and heritage on pages 94-96)
Conservative Party Platform - Steven Harper: Here for Canada
(Excerpt on Support for Culture and the Arts on Page 43)
New Democratic Party Platform - Practical First Steps
Follow your local candidates here:
Green Party, Eric Walton: Website Twitter Facebook
New Democratic Party, Daniel Beals: Website Twitter Facebook
Conservative Pary, Alicia Gordon: Website Twitter Facebook
Liberal Party, Ted Hsu: Website Twitter Facebook
Leaders’ Debates
English Debate – April 12, 2011 Time: 7 pm – 9 pm EST
French Debate – April 14, 2010 Time: 8 pm – 9 pm EST
The Broadcasting Consortium, which includes CBC/Radio-Canada, CTV, Global and TVA, will hold both the English and French-language leaders’ debates. The English-language debate will be moderated by TVO’s Steve Paikin, while Radio-Canada's Anne-Marie Dussault and TVA’s Paul Larocque will co-moderate the French-language debate.
Social Media
Social media will help you stay on top of the latest news from the election frontlines and communicate with individuals of shared interests. Here are some tips on how to effectively use social media during the election period:
Follow each political party or their leaders on Twitter:
Bloc Québécois: @BlocQuebecois and @GillesDuceppe
Conservative Party: @PMHarper
Green Party: @CanadianGreens and @ElizabethMay
Liberal Party: @liberal_party and @M_Ignatieff
NDP: @jacklayton
· When you’re tweeting and looking for election related tweets, use the following hashtags: #elxn41, #cdnpoli, #fed2011 and #artsvotecan. If you’re tweeting about a specific political party, you can also use the following hashtags:
Conservative Party: #cpc
Green Party: #gpc
Liberal Party: #lpc
NDP: #ndp
Follow each party or their leaders on Facebook:
How to vote
If you have any questions or concerns about the voting process itself, we encourage you to visit Elections Canada’s website. It includes information on:
· How to vote;
· Finding your electoral district and member of Parliament;
· Backgrounders on the electoral process;
· And more
For immediate release
8 Actors Play 80 Characters to bring The Laramie Project to Life
Play has not been run in Kingston for 8 years!
Queen’s University (Kingston, Ontario) March 31, 2011 - Fifth Company Lane, a student-run drama company, in association with Blue Canoe Productions, is proud to present the critically-acclaimed play, The Laramie Project. Written by Moisés Kaufman and the Tectonic Theatre Project, the play is celebrated for its brave and insightful depiction of the aftermath of the 1998 hate-crime killing of Matthew Shepard, a Wyoming student and resident who happened to be gay. It will be performed in Vogt Studios, Carruthers Hall, Queen’s Campus from April 13 to 17, 2011.
Widely produced since its premiere in 2000, The Laramie Project is an award-winning production lauded for its innovative and provocative depiction of how Matthew Shepard’s violent death changed the town of Laramie forever. Moved by the scale and atrocity of this incident, members of the Tectonic Theatre Project visited Laramie to interview hundreds of residents directly and indirectly involved with the tragedy. Their efforts resulted in The Laramie Project, a play consisting of 80 provocative, insightful and poignant perspectives embodied by 8 very talented actors.
“We hope to offer the Kingston community an exciting theatre experience as well as an insightful look at this definitive moment in recent history,” said Anja Zeljkovic, Executive Producer of the show.
Fifth Company Lane’s production of The Laramie Project is directed by Aidan Payne, an emerging theatre artist studying and living in the Kingston community. This production is entirely student-produced and is the most recent staging of this production in Kingston in eight years.
Tickets are currently available online at www.bluecanoeproductions.ca, or in person at TriColour Outlet on Queen’s Campus, or at Novel Idea on Princess Street.
About Fifth Company Lane
Fifth Company Lane Productions is an up-and-coming youth theatre company committed to producing small ensemble works. Founded by a tight-knit group of Queen’s University drama students, the company is based on a collaborative creation process. Our aim is to involve the Kingston community with our passion for theatre by creating intimate environments in which to tell unique stories as told by exceptional characters.
###
For more information:
Emily Dimytosh
Marketing and Sponsorship Coordinator, Fifth Company Lane
fifthcompanylane@gmail.com
647-297-7552
Dance-appreciation Talk With Respected Canadian Dance Artist
This April the Grand Theatre will launch their newest, free community programs: The Artist in Motion Series and The Grand Masters Series.
The theatre has commissioned Christopher House, the Artistic Director of Toronto Dance Theatre, to facilitate an informal talk aimed at helping new audiences approach, appreciate, and become comfortable with the process of watching dance. This Artist in Motion talk will take place on Friday, April 15, at 5:30 p.m. at the Grand Theatre, Davies Lounge.
In the talk, House will draw similarities between dance and the visual arts to demonstrate how the skills people often use in appreciating painting, sculpture, or photography can be used to enjoy modern dance performances.
Grand Theatre offers free workshop on the Creative Process as part of The Grand Masters Series.
Christopher House's residency will continue with an interactive working session aimed at exploring the creative process underlying the development and production of choreography on Sunday, April 17, at 11:00 a.m. at the Queen's Dance Studios, 284 Earl St. House will present his approach to the creative process, particularly as it relates to his experience creating Severe Clear. During the session, he will engage participants in a variety of creative and/or choreographic exercises aimed at fostering their artistic development, and may also explore the different performance goals and/or production considerations relevant to various forms of dance and theatre.
Christopher House is one of Canada's most respected dance artists, and joined Toronto Dance Theatre (TDT) as a dancer in 1979. He has been the company's Artistic Director since 1994. House has contributed over sixty works to the TDT repertoire including Glass Houses, Four Towers, Early Departures, Vena Cava and Chiasmata. He has created works for Lisbon's Ballet Gulbenkian, the National Ballet of Canada, Les Grands Ballets Canadiens and Ballet British Columbia, among others, and directed two collaborations with Joel Gibb and The Hidden Cameras. House is a three time Dora Mavor Moore Award winner for Outstanding New Choreography and is an Associate Dance Artist of Canada's National Arts Centre.
This new program complements the already active Masterclass programs for dancers offered throughout the season. The Grand has also recently released three-tiered online materials to help educate audiences about watching dance.
* In the "sy.nop.sis" guide, patrons will learn the brief history and importance of the art form, along with basic vocabulary.
* The "ed.u.cate" guide is a resource tool to assist teachers preparing their students to experience performance through relevant connections with in-class learning. The guide provides student engagements that may support the curriculum objectives of the classroom.
* Lastly, the "pre.view" gives show-specific information that helps prepare audiences for their ticketed event.
Currently, modern dance and classical ballet guides are available at <http://www.kingstongrand.ca/education>. A full line-up of Artist in Motion and Grand Masters Series events will be presented in 2011-2012.
Both events are free admission, however, to secure a spot you must RSVP by April 11 to <mailto:mahady.wilton@sympatico.ca>. The Grand Theatre is located at 218 Princess St., and more information can be obtained by telephone at 613-530-2050 or online at <http://www.kingstongrand.ca>.
The Grand Theatre would like to acknowledge its 2010-2011 Grand Theatre Presents sponsors. The Four Points Sheraton Kingston is the Official Hospitality Underwriter, Kingston Life is the Official Print Media sponsor and CKWS is the Official Television sponsor.
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Media contact information:
Julie Fossitt, Marketing Administrator for the Grand Theatre, at 613-546-4291 ext. 1143 or <mailto:jfossitt@cityofkingston.ca>.
OMDC FILM FUND – PRODUCTION
OMDC FILM FUND – DEVELOPMENT
INFORMATION SESSION: April 5th, 2011 (REGISTRATION REQUIRED)
APPLICATION DEADLINE: April 29th, 2011 (BY 5:00 PM)
NOTE: Please read the complete guidelines thoroughly prior to commencing your application. There are no changes to the program guidelines and requirements; the process for submitting applications is now through the OMDC OAP Application Portal (OAP) system and all application MUST be submitted via the OAP.
Online Application Portal (OAP) - Application Submissions Information:
OMDC has launched a call for applications for the OMDC Film Fund. This fund is intended to increase the level of indigenous feature film production in Ontario. This program provides support to Ontario producers for feature film projects in the final stages of development and production financing.
The OMDC Film Fund supports a range of projects with both cultural and industrial benefits. OMDC measures the results of the OMDC Film Fund primarily based on return on investment and jobs created in the Ontario film industry.
***** PLEASE NOTE: The Qualified Producer Applicant on the application form must be the primary producer and contact for all communication and dealings with OMDC.
Information Session:
An information session has been scheduled to provide interested applicants with the opportunity to learn more about this program.
- Date: Tuesday, April 5th, 2011
- Time: 3:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
- Location: Conference Centre, 3rd, Floor, North Tower, 175 Bloor Street East,Toronto.
To register to attend the OMDC Film Fund information session, please complete our online registration form by Monday April 4th, 2011 by 5:00 pm. Unregistered guests will only be accepted if space permits.
GUIDELINES AND APPLICATION PROCESS
Complete Guidelines and the link to the Online Application Portal (OAP) are posted on the OMDC website:
For further information on this or any other OMDC programs, please contact the Coordinator, Industry Initiatives at:
175 Bloor Street East, South Tower, Suite 501
Toronto, Ontario M4W 3R8
Direct Phone: 416-642-6695
Main Phone: 416-314-6858
Fax: 416-314-6876
Email: programs@omdc.on.ca
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Kingston Canadian Film Festival announces Steam Whistle Home Brew Award winner
Short film IMPRESSIONS wins $200 prize
KCFF is excited to announce the winner of the first Steam Whistle Home Brew Award, for the best Local Short at the 2011 festival. The winning film, IMPRESSIONS, was decided by audience vote online at IndieFlix.com
Created as part of the Focus Film Festival in 2011, IMPRESSIONS was written, shot and edited in 72 hours, says Eric Ferguson, one of the filmmakers. The team responsible for writing, acting, directing and every other aspect of the film includes Ferguson, Tristan Tiggeloven, Kevin Ikeda, Deborah Hong and Elizabeth Lindsay.
The Local Shorts Program at KCFF has presented over 200 locally-produced short films over the years. Employing a piggyback strategy, local shorts are paired with feature length films, ensuring an audience for local films, and making sure that Kingston is represented at the festival. “The Steam Whistle Home Brew Award allows us to further several of our goals, including supporting local filmmakers and letting film audiences and film lovers decide what they like to see,” says festival director Alison Migneault.
“I believe it's important for filmmakers to showcase their work, whether it be for critical assessment or for inspiration,” says Deborah Hong. “Ultimately, our main goal is to engage the audience in discussion. The Kingston Canadian Film Festival has certainly allowed for us to do just that.”
“Kingston is a great place to make films, because of its welcoming and arts-friendly community and because of the incredible opportunity represented by the Kingston Canadian Film Festival,” agrees Eric Ferguson. “The festival's system of pairing a local short film with nearly every major feature screening guarantees that our films find new audiences, which is one of the most important - and most exciting - things for a beginning filmmaker. Winning the Home Brew Award is vote of confidence from the Kingston community."
IMPRESSIONS also claimed several awards at the Focus Film Festival, including Best Picture, People’s Choice and Best Original Screenplay.
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For interviews with the winning filmmakers, please contact Eric Ferguson, erictferguson@gmail.com, 613-328-9456
For more about this award, the Local Shorts Program, or the Kingston Canadian Film Festival, please contact Stephanie Earp, stephanie.earp@kingcanfilmfest.com, (613) 777-0161 x 1
--
Stephanie Earp, Festival Manager
613-777-0161 ext. 1
Kingston Canadian Film Festival
March 2 - 6, 2011
www.kingcanfilmfest.com
For Immediate Release: March 2, 2011
City of Kingston Arts Fund Announces the 2011 Grants Program
The Kingston Arts Council is now accepting applications for the 2011 Operating and Project Grant Programs for the City of Kingston Arts Fund (CKAF). The Kingston Arts Council will host two information sessions that all applicants are encouraged to attend.
The Operating Grants Information Session will take place Thursday March 10th, 6:30pm in the Delahaye Room, Kingston Frontenac Public Library – Central Branch (130 Johnson St).
The Projects Grants Information Session will take place Tuesday March 15th, 6:30pm in the Delahaye Room, Kingston Frontenac Public Library – Central Branch (130 Johnson St).
Paper copies of the Grant Forms & Guidelines will be available at each meeting.
Please Note:Changes to the CKAF program will be discussed at each Information Session. If you are unable to attend it is strongly encouraged to call the Kingston Arts Council to speak with CKAF staff.
Grant Application Packagesare available for download at www.artskingston.com/ckaf.cfm. Paper copies are available for pickup during office hours at the following locations:
· The Kingston Arts Council (253 Ontario Street, Suite 203 – Office hours: 10:00am-3:00pm weekdays);
Completed Project Grant Applications are due at the Kingston Arts Council Office on or before Friday April 15th, 2011 at 4:30pm.
Completed Operating Grant Applications are due at the Kingston Arts Council Office on or before Monday April 18th, 2011 at 4:30pm.
The objectives of CKAF are to nurture the capacity and quality of the arts in Kingston while fostering artistic excellence, stimulating economic development related to the arts, enhancing Kingston’s quality of life for its citizens and attractiveness as a community, and aligning Kingston’s arts funding with that of comparable cities.
For more information, please visit www.artskingston.com, or contact:
Ted Worth, Grants Director [or] Sayyida Jaffer, Grants Assistant
Kingston Arts Council Grants Department
grants@artskingston.com [or] 613-546-2999
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A message from CARFAC:
The Canadian Museums Association told a parliamentary committee on Tuesday they would like to see the Exhibition Right "abolished". Jon Tupper, President of the CMA, also asked to be exempt from paying artist fees for things such as reproductions in catalogues, in slides for public lectures and online.
Canadian museums are the main source of copyright income for visual artists. An amendment proposed by Bill C-32 to open fair dealing to education appears to have been perceived by the museum community as an invitation to stop paying the fees that artists such as Jack Chambers fought so hard for. Although they claim their budgets are too tight, for most public galleries artists' fees represent a small portion of their budget. When faced with similar arguments back in the 1970's, artist Tony Urquhart suggested to a Montreal museum director that instead of hosting twenty contemporary exhibits in a year, he host nineteen and use the last budget to pay the artists.
Tupper insisted that museums should not have to pay artists fees for artwork which they own but recognized that more and more museums do not have the funds to purchase artwork. In Ontario alone, 98 percent of art collections are acquired by donation, meaning that visual artists would not receive any payment for these works if the CMA's recommendations were followed.
"The principle of compensating artists for the public presentation of their work has been enshrined in two Canadian laws for over twenty years," said CARFAC president Gerald Beaulieu. "Clearly our parliamentarians have supported this notion because it is sound and just public policy."
What do you think about the Canadian Museum Association's statement?
Post your comments to CARFAC's Facebook group or send them to communications@carfac.ca.
Outreach and Sales Associate
Thousand Islands Playhouse-Gananoque
The Thousand Islands Playhouse, a leading arts organization in Eastern Ontario, is seeking a dynamic individual to
fill the full-time position of Outreach and Sales Associate for its 30th Anniversary Season.
The Outreach and Sales Associate is in charge of executing revenue generation and audience development
activities for the company’s seven productions between May and November. This is a full time, entry level position
from March to October, 2011
Please submit a cover letter and résumé by February 28, 2011. The start date is negotiable.
Lin Bennett
Marketing and Development Manager
Thousand Islands Playhouse
Box 241
LBennett@1000islandsplayhouse.com
Gananoque ON K7G 2T8
More information: www.1000islandsplayhouse.com
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The Amherst Island Art Group is looking for models who may be interested in posing for a Life Drawing group who meet every Monday from 9:00 to 3:00 on Amherst Island. Experienced models are preferred however not essential. Male or female models must be comfortable to pose nude in front of a group of 5-8 artists in a very relaxed and private atmosphere. Competitive rates will be paid. Confidentiality will be assured. If you are interested in being included on our list of available models, please contact Chris Laffin at laffchris@hotmail.com.
You will be expected to arrange your own means of transportation to the Amherst Island ferry in the village of Millhaven in time for the 8:30 a.m. crossing. Parking is available and is free. You will be driven from the ferry to the studio, then will be returned in time to catch the 3:00 p.m. ferry back to the mainland. The village of Millhaven is located in Loyalist Township, 22 km west of the city of Kingston on Highway 33. Millhaven also has a direct connection with Highway 401 (Interchange #593) 10 km north of the ferry.
City Names Eric Folsom As First Poet Laureate
Kingstonians can now look forward to how their first-ever Poet Laureate will capture and enrich the vibrancy of civic life and encourage literary arts in the community. Kingston City Council approved the appointment of renowned Kingston poet Eric Folsom to the position last night.
"I do feel amazed. I look at everything waiting to be written, so much to say about Kingston and ourselves. Just figuring out where to begin will take some imagination, and the possibilities are exciting. Amazed and humbled, perhaps an inch or two from total shock," says Folsom, who will serve the city as a literary ambassador and an advocate for poetry, language and the arts within the community.
Folsom is the author of three books of poetry: Icon Driven (2001), What Kind of Love Did You Have in Mind? (1997) both published by Wolsak and Wynn, and Poems For Little Cataraqui, published in 1994 by Broken Jaw Press.
His poems "ReSet" and "Arpeggio" will appear at <http://www.cityofkingston.ca/
Folsom has been at the centre of Kingston literary life since making his home here in 1974. He was an editor for Quarry Magazine, has taught at The Upper Canada Writers' Workshop, St. Lawrence College and in the Limestone District School system. For seven years he organized and hosted a reading series, Cargo Kulture, which brought poets from across Canada to town. He founded and single-handedly ran the literary quarterly, Next Exit, giving voice to several generations of emerging writers. Folsom has been Ontario's representative for The League of Canadian Poets, reviewed books, read on Stuart McLean's The Vinyl Cafe and his work has been published widely in Canadian literary journals and anthologies. Most importantly, Folsom's work is respected by fellow writers, and widely-appreciated across Canada and internationally.
Serving a four-year term, Folsom will be the spokesperson for the literary arts in this city - home to Kingston Writersfest and a prodigious number of celebrated authors. He will be required to write a poem during each year of his appointment that addresses aspects of life in Kingston. He will read the poems at the Mayor's annual New Year's Day Levee.
"This is a very exciting moment," says Colin Wiginton, Manager, Cultural Services. "The Poet Laureate program is intended to recognize the achievements of a local poet whose work exhibits excellence and resonates with the people of this community. It also embodies the City's belief and support of the arts and recognizes the importance of the literary community here in Kingston."
The position of the Poet Laureate will increase awareness of Kingston as a centre of writing excellence and increase the profile of the literary arts within the city and beyond. It also means that Kingston joins 18 other cities across Canada that have embraced this cultural ambassador position, including Toronto, Victoria, Edmonton and Barrie.
Folsom was selected by a Nominating Committee appointed by the Arts Advisory Committee, which chose him for the high quality of his writing, his deep familiarity of Kingston's history, his enduring interest in new literary voices, and his demonstrated ability to showcase Kingston as a centre of writing and artistic distinction.
From Newswire.ca:
TORONTO, Oct. 14 /CNW/ - Mark Sinnett was named the winner of the 2010 Toronto Book Award for his novel The Carnivore (ECW Press) tonight at a reception at Toronto Reference Library's Appel Salon.
"I want to congratulate Mark Sinnett for his exceptional novel The Carnivore," said Mayor David Miller. "His book gives a unique perspective about our diverse city and was selected from more than 70 book submissions. All of these authors tell great stories about Toronto and can be incredibly proud of their work."
Toronto Public Library's City Librarian Jane Pyper commented, "The Carnivore is a captivating story of how memories can shape and define a marriage. Readers will also enjoy the evocative descriptions of a 1954 Toronto caught in the maelstrom of Hurricane Hazel."
The 2010 Toronto Book Awards Committee, made up of members Marsha Chesley, Alexander Greer, Angela Rebeiro, Kristine Thornley, and Karen Tisch, volunteered their time to read all of the books and select the shortlist and winner. They commented on how "Sinnett takes what would be a cliché in lesser hands - Hurricane Hazel's devastation of Toronto in 1954 yoked to an affair that silently undermines a young marriage - to produce a novel of adventure and sorrow. Sinnett's taut prose, sense of the era and the city, and ear for the words and silences of a marriage brings the storm, the city, and the characters fully to life."
Mark Sinnett's other work includes The Landing (Carleton University Press, 1997), poetry, winner of the Gerald Lampert Memorial Award; Bull (Insomniac Press, 1998), short stories; Some Late Adventure Of The Feelings (ECW Press, 2000), poetry; and The Border Guards (Harper Collins, 2004), a novel/thriller, short-listed for the Arthur Ellis award. He lives in Kingston, Ontario. His work was chosen from a list of finalists that included Seán Cullen for his novel The Prince of Neither Here Nor There (Puffin Canada); Cary Fagan, for his novel Valentine's Fall (Cormorant Books Inc.); Lauren Kirshner, for her novel Where We Have to Go (McClelland & Stewart Ltd.), and Dragan Todorovic for his novel Diary of Interrupted Days (Random House Canada).
This year marks the 36th anniversary of the Toronto Book Awards. Established by Toronto City Council in 1974, the Toronto Book Awards honour authors of books of literary or artistic merit that are evocative of Toronto. The annual awards offer $15,000 in prize money. Each finalist will receive $1,000 and the winning author receives the remaining prize money. For more information about the awards and what the jury members said about all of the books, visit http://www.toronto.ca/book_awards.
The Toronto Public Library is the world's busiest urban public library system. Every year, more than 17.5 million people visit its 99 branches and borrow more than 31 million items. To learn more about the Toronto Public Library, visit the website at http://www.torontopubliclibrary.ca or call the Answerline at 416-393-7131.
Toronto is Canada's largest city and sixth largest government, and home to a diverse population of about 2.6 million people. It is the economic engine of Canada and one of the greenest and most creative cities in North America. Toronto has won numerous awards for quality, innovation and efficiency in delivering public services. Toronto's government is dedicated to prosperity, opportunity and liveability for all its residents. For information about non-emergency City services and programs, Toronto residents, businesses and visitors can dial 311, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
For more details on the award please click here.
The City of Kingston Arts Fund is seeking nominations for 2011 CKAF Jurors. Jurors are members of the Grants Committee and are responsible for reading and assessing all applications and participating in a day-long meeting to determine project or operating grant awards. Jurors are selected by the Kingston Arts Council Nominations Committee. In order to be considered, please submit a CV and Juror Interest Form: http://www.artskingston.ca/assets/CKAF/Juror%20Nominations/CKAF-JurorInterestForm-Final.doc to grants [at] artskingston.com (preferred) or mail it to:
Jurors
Kingston Arts Council,
P.O. Box 1005
Kingston, ON K7L 4X8
Please submit your nomination by November 30, 2010. For more information please contact Ted or Sayyida at grants@artskingston.com or 613-546-2999.
The Kingston Arts Council invites you to attend an information session on Granting Opportunities in the Arts on Wednesday October 27, 6:30pm in the Wilson Room of the KFPL (130 Johnson St).
The Canada Council for the Arts, The Ontario Arts Council and The Ontario Trillium Foundation will be present. Program officers will talk about granting opportunities for organizations, projects and individual artists. There will be time to ask specific questions to program officers in smaller groups later in the session.
For more information or to RSVP please contact Sayyida at (613) 546-2999 or grants@artskingston.com. This information session is free and wheelchair accessible. RSVPs are not required but encouraged.
The Focus on the Arts All Candidates Meeting on Oct. 13 very well attended and received full coverage from the Kingston Whig Standard. Be sure to read their coverage, and the lively debate that has arisen in the comments section. Click here to view.
NB. These are direct quotes from the candidates’ websites. If the candidates do not have a website or do not mention arts or culture, then they are not listed here.
Mayoral Candidates
A Vision for Kingston
The future of Kingston is an important investment for every resident of the city from East to West, from the centre of downtown to the farthest reaches of the North end. Through consultation with the public the city has developed a plan to become Canada's most sustainable city, a plan that I have adopted as part of my vision for the future of Kingston.
When we hear the word sustainable we often think about the green initiatives that are so popular today. While that is a facet of the plan for a sustainable future for the city it is only one part - or pillar - in the four pillars of sustainability. The four pillars of sustainability together create a complete foundation on which to build a platform for the future. Please read on to learn of some specific ways in which I plan to work with the residents of Kingston to create a better, stronger community.
Vibrant Arts & Culture
Mark's Plan
The Four Pillars of Sustainability
Cultural
City Councillors
Kevin George, Loyalist/Cataraqui
The arts community is an important component to any city and that is certainly the case in Kingston. Funding has always been an issue but I believe we can do more to support our arts community and I will work with Council and City Staff to identify where extra resources may be found.
Liz Schell, Portsmouth
In the City of Kingston
The Culture Plan
As we worked on the Culture Plan it came to light that Kingston has no inventory of the art, artifacts, monuments and public art pieces that the city owns, or the condition of each. We need to create this inventory.
We do not have a public art policy. When we build a new city structure, I think it would be useful to have a policy in place if we decide to celebrate the building with a piece of commemorative art.
Kingston is a former capital of Canada, home of its first Prime Minister, a UNESCO heritage site, and a gateway to the numerous waterways. I would like to work with KEDCO and our local heritage presenters and museums to do much more to announce our place in history and tell the story of our past, for tourists and citizens alike.
I also believe the work of community artists and artisans, musicians and performers of all types must be encouraged, especially through the Kingston Arts Council, working in conjunction with the Culture Department. Just as sports are a great way to get exercise and feel part of a community, the arts foster creativity and community.
Bryon Patterson, Trillium
Thursday, October 12th
Bryan will be sharing his vision for Kingston's arts community at an all-candidates meeting at Portsmouth Olympic Harbour at 7:30pm.
Jeffrey Lowes, Cataraqui
Arts & Culture
There are a number of issues surrounding cultural support and the arts. The last thing the arts community needs is a politician deciding what is art or culture. As a Counsellor, Jeffrey will focus on two issues that will help the arts and culture flourish in the Kingston area.
According to the Ministry of Education; “approximately 1.4 million students attend Ontario’s 4,000 publicly funded elementary schools” and “approximately 700,000 students attend more than 850 publicly funded secondary schools in Ontario”. This is not including the students from Quebec or our neighbours to the south in upper New York State. With that said, there is not a program in place to bring these students through he dozens of art galleries to inspire young minds and the museums that are full of rich Canadian history including Fort Henry. The issue is not touch on in the newly released “Kingston Community Cultural Policy Plan.”
We should create our “educational tourism season” to run in the early spring and late fall. With a bigger snow removal budget we could even run a winter program but that is another issue. This would dramatically improve the operational budgets for many of the museums and the exposure for the local artists. Add a boat tour, dinner and some time for shopping we would see a lot of support from the business community.
This program could be run by Tourism Kingston under a “Museum Passport” system where a small surcharge could go into a dedicated reserve fund to further promote the program and additional arts funding in the community. The second stage for this program would be to develop national competitions in different areas of the arts to be held in the Kingston area. We could start by supporting The Kingston Prize.
Business Planning and Operational Support
The second issue would be operational and budget planning support for the arts community. Many groups that can deliver a unique cultural experience do not have the time to focus on the long-term financial planning issues. This support would include help in accessing monies from other levels of government through a Cultural Development Office placed in KEDCO. In exchange Jeffrey would like to see the art and the artists support the development of a website about local art and artists. This portal would be on the City of Kingston, Tourism Kingston, KEDCO, School Boards, Queens, and St Lawrence College websites.
Jeffrey would also like to see a single website outlining all of our museums, historic sites and archaeological sites. KEDCO would be charged with the duty to keep the information up to date, including hours of operation, location on a map and contact information. KEDCO is close but some of the information on the links is out of date or the physical site is currently closed for the season.
Ed Smith, Williamsville (Incumbent)
My decision-making process integrates environmental, social, cultural and economic benefits resulting in balanced community decisions.
Some Continued Priorities for Next Term
Bill Glover, Sydenham (Incumbent)
Bill Glover’s Vision of Kingston’s Future
I have been an active supporter of arts, culture, and heritage. As well as being vital to us and our community, it represents 24.35% of our $234 million tourism spending.
My colleagues and I have also shown careful financial management. The last Council had annual tax increases of 5.7% and twice of 6.2%. By comparison, our highest rate was 4.7% deceasing annually to 3.23%. But we still improved parks, increased arts investment, enhanced services and continued infrastructure renewal.
Bill Glover's Council initiatives 2007 – 2010
My promise going forward
Queen`s Performing Arts Centre
Council unanimously passed Councillor Bill Glover's Motion to have Queen's enter into a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on the specific role their new Performing Arts Centre (QPAC) would play in Kingston's cultural spectrum:
Floyd Patterson, Sydenham
Culture, the Arts and Heritage
Hockey, Soccer, baseball, football, golf, the triathlon drive sports tourism at an ever increasing pace; we have now discovered that culture, the Arts and Heritage can become a bigger economic driver; the next Council, with the new Community Cultural Policy Plan to guide it, will have the challenge of empowering creativity and heritage conservation to make Kingston a cultural earning power, and an entertainment destination, that will be the envy of other cities.
When the thriving creative arts, fascinating museums, and unequaled stock of historic architecture are added in, Kingston, neighboured by the UNESCO-designated World Heritage waterway, the Rideau, including the Fort Henry fortification at one end and the present national Capital, Ottawa, at the other, has the makings of a cultural economic driver that few other tourist centres can match. The next City Council’s mission is to re-work our identify into an arts and history destination that will garner unprecedented wealth from world travel.
[From his blog:]
Kaleidoscope: Celebration of the Arts
by Floyd Patterson
Kingston Arts Council’s “Celebration of the Arts” at Renaissance last night showcased music, poetry,dance, craft, film and theatre. I found it to be a wonderful spotlight on the rich cultural life of the Kingston region. Thanks to Barbara Linds of the Advocacy Committee and Ted Worth, Grants Director, and many others who put this event together, we were treated to engrossing poetry, read by its author, Steven Heighton, and the Kingston Symphony’s Triola musical ensemble.
The Kingston Community Cultural Plan, a consultant’s study to raise arts and culture to a significant economic driver in Kingston, has a wealth of artistic creativity to help launch this plan.It will take some months for the next City Council to figure out the best ways to implement this new approach to boosting the cultural life of Kingston.
Rob Hutchison, King's Town District (Incumbent)
Rob’s approach has been to balance community and economic development through balancing the four pillars of sustainability – economic, environmental, social and cultural.
Rob will continue to support and develop the work of the Kingston Arts and Design Centre downtown to help develop more community art and anchor our downtown economy.
Richard Moller, Pittsburgh District
Sustainability
I was pleased and honoured to be part of the FOCUS Kingston committee when Council accepted our recommendation to set the goal of making Kingston Canada's most sustainable city. Many people have an idea about what sustainability means to them. Commonly I hear people talking about the "four pillars" of sustainability: Economic, Environmental, Cultural, and Social. These four areas, I believe, are key to developing a sustainable city, but "pillars" are static and entrenched. We need a more energetic view of our goal. Perhaps it is my time at sea with the navy, but I see sustainability as parts of our Ship-of-State.
Clearly the economy is the engine that will drive our ship forward, but it is our culture that provides the keel on which everything else is built. The hull of the ship creates the living environment for us. It is our social conscience that guides where we are going and how fast we should get there as we stand on the bridge.
If all four elements work together, our city can sail into whatever future we choose. If we ignore even one aspect, we will stall and stagnate and our entire city will suffer.
Feel free to email it or print it off and post it.
Also, stop by the Kingston Arts Council office at 253 Ontario St. Ste. 203 to pick up your Focus on the Arts buttons.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 20, 2010
Municipal Candidates to respond on Arts Issues
Municipal candidates to respond on arts issues
Kingston, ON: Candidates for municipal office will be asked questions from members of the arts community and their supporters at an all candidates meeting on Tuesday, October 12th at 7:30 p.m. in the Press Lounge at the Portsmouth Olympic Harbour.
Arts supporters were out in force at the Focus on the Arts meeting during the 2006
municipal election campaign. City Council responded to the demands of arts supporters by making significant progress on a variety of arts issues over the past four years. The list of accomplishments by the outgoing Council include the completion of the Grand Theatre renovation, the creation of an Arts Advisory Committee and the Cultural Services Department, the establishment of the City of Kingston Arts Fund, the creation of The Kingston Culture Plan (KCP) and The Sustainable Kingston Plan, and the development of the JK Tett Centre restoration.
In the 2010 election the most important arts issues are the Kingston Culture Plan (KCP) and the Sustainable Kingston Plan (SKP). Culture and creativity are widely recognized as being central to community development and wealth creation. The KCP presents a big picture view of culture and the critical role it plays as major asset that can leverage benefits for the community as a whole. The SKP is the roadmap to transform Kingston into "Canada's most sustainable city" and culture is one of four pillars of sustainability. According to the SKP "creative, vibrant, and resilient places...create employment opportunities, expand the tax-base, and generally add real wealth to the community".
The new Council will be responsible for shaping the future of Kingston's cultural agenda by implementing and resourcing the Kingston Culture Plan and the Sustainable Kingston Plan.
Focus on the Arts is an All Candidates Meeting that will offer candidates for municipal office the opportunity to answer questions and to tell the community how they intend to implement these exciting plans over their term in office.
Candidates will be provided in advance with a list of questions that have been submitted by leading arts organizations in the city. After the formal part of the meeting members of the audience will have the opportunity to ask questions. Well-known Kingston arts supporter Brian Osborne will be the moderator for the evening.
Sponsors are the Kingston Arts Council and Canadian Federation of University Women
Kingston.
For further information, contact:
Heather Kembel 613 384-2240 or Barbara Linds -613 377-1856, or election@artskingston.com