Sunday, August 19, 2007

Film series focuses on city's history from Asian Canadian perspective


Mark Hasiuk
Vancouver Courier
Friday, August 17, 2007


A film series chronicling the history of Asian-Canadians in Vancouver is being presented every Friday evening this month at the Chinatown Night Market.

The film series, entitled Riot in Vancouver, features a collection of short films depicting the events and aftermath of four pinnacle years in four eras of the past century. The subjects include Vancouver's 1907 anti-Asian riots, Asian-Canadians winning the right to vote in 1947, and British handover of Hong Kong back to China in 1997.

This Friday, the third instalment in the series entitled Forces of Migration showcases six short films, ranging in length from three to 26 minutes, which highlight the turbulent year 1967, when restrictions on Asian immigration to Canada were lifted.

Cindy Mochizuki, curator of the 1967 project, spent months researching filmmakers in Vancouver and around the country to collect material for tonight's presentation.

Mochizuki, a 30-year-old video animation artist and Hastings-Sunrise resident, said film is the perfect medium to explore issues that are rarely discussed in the Asian-Canadian community and Vancouver as a whole.

"Each of the artists use a different narrative, either poetically or experimentally, to talk about some of the more traumatic and difficult issues," she said. "So film is an effective way of opening up these issues for discussion."

Mochizuki's film selections include Vancouver artist Kira Wu's Whitewash, about an Asian-Canadian girl who, after watching a TV commercial about a whitening laundry detergent, attempts to rid her skin of pigmentation in the bathtub.

Other films chosen by Mochizuki include Toronto-based video artist Samuel Kiehoon Lee's documentary How to Make Kimchi: According to My Kun-Umma, which depicts a Korean woman's efforts to maintain her ancestral roots in Canada.

Unlike other series presenters, Mochizuki includes two works by First Nations filmmakers. Vancouver artist Dorothy Christian's Spiritual Land Claim chronicles the "Sixties Scoop" that saw large numbers of First Nations children placed in white foster homes.

"Things like that are rarely talked about, nor are there accessible forms of media out there that people can obtain," said Mochizuki. "There are some parts of history that are still invisible--that we need to be reminded of."

Mochizuki's own family history is highlighted by dramatic events in the Asian-Canadian experience. A fourth generation Japanese-Canadian, her father's family was interned during the Second World War. "It's interesting to step back and look at Canadian history, and look at the changes and shifts that are happening, or what hasn't happened."

Riot in Vancouver is sponsored by Anniversaries of Change, a group of local organizations aimed at promoting Asian heritage.

See http://www.anniversaries07.ca for more information.

Photo credit: Photo-Dan Toulgoet of Video animation artist Cindy Mochizuki

Monday, August 13, 2007

Seven for '07 Deadline EXTENSION

On September 8 2007, there will be an all-day public event at the Vancouver Public Library Central Branch that will include panels, displays, multimedia, and performing arts. We are currently soliciting short poems (maximum 20 lines) from local writers addressing the themes of this year of anniversaries. Please note: writers do not have be of Asian descent and submissions do not have to directly address the historical events being commemorated. We are seeking entries that can, in conjunction with other community events, creatively provoke reflection on the current state of diversity and justice in Vancouver and British Columbia.

Seven poems will be chosen and circulated in the following ways:
  1. Large wall-size posters of each poem will be produced and displayed in the VPL atrium on September 8
  2. Smaller posters with all seven poems will be printed and widely distributed as part of commemorative activities in the fall. We will extend a token honorarium to each writer chosen to participate in Seven for '07
Please email entries to instrcc.events@gmail.com by August 17, 2007. Please attach entries in either .pdf or .rtf formats and ensure that no identifying notes or markers are included in the file. In the body of the email, please provide the following information:
  • name
  • address
  • telephone number
  • contact email
  • a short (maximum 40 words) biographical statement
After a blind review process, chosen writers will be contacted in order to arrange publication details.

For more information about Seven for '07 please contact Chris Lee (UBC Department of English) at leechr@interchange.ubc.ca. More information about the Anniversaries of Change can be found on http://www.anniversaries07.ca. Thank you for your interest!

Friday, August 10, 2007

Festival of Art and Social Change

An upcoming exciting sneak preview of the People's History of Canada/Kanada Posters...

Saturday August 12th noon-5pm
Under the Volcano Poster Project Tent
Festival of Art and Social Change

Whey-Ah-Wichen (Cates Park)
Tsleil-Waututh territory in North Vancouver

Information (including free transport): http://volcano.resist.ca

The People's History of Canada/Kanada Posters Project is a collaborative effort between eleven grassroots artists Afuwa Granger, Alex Mah, Ange Sterritt, Annie Banks, Elogyny Tharmendran, Kara Sievewright, Naomi Moyer, Tania Willard, Riel Manywounds, Setareh Mohammadi, Tyler Toews and No One is Illegal-Vancouver.

A series of pieces will explore various moments of repression and resistance in Canadian history. The artists working on this Project come from a diversity of communities and almost all carry his/herstories and direct experiences of colonization and displacement that are being engaged within the Project.

We invite you to check out this powerful series of work on Saturday August 12th. Thank you to all those who made this project possible.

Sunday, August 5, 2007

Asahi Baseball



Come watch the 2nd annual Powell Street baseball game and celebrate the Asahi legacy!