Monthly Archives: December 2014

JUMBLIES: Toronto Artfare Essentials

Jumblies’ calendar year ended once again with our 11th Toronto Artfare Essentials – a 6-day intensive workshop about arts that engage with and create community. This year the workshop brought together 22 artists from Toronto and farther afield. We were thrilled to be joined by Joahnna Berti and Joe Osawabine from Debajehmujig on Manitoulin Island; Calumpa Bobb from Winnipeg’s  Urban Indigenous Theatre Company  – wonderful new creative partners of Jumblies. The farthest traveller was Veronika Hackl from Austria, who works at a new community arts centre in Vienna. Participants also included Jumblies current artist-interns and micro-grantees who hadn’t yet attended the workshop. The workshop was based at The Ground Floor and all of Jumblies Offshoots (Arts4All, MABELLEarts, Making Room, Community Arts Guild) hosted site visits and contributed to the success of the workshop in many other ways.

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Thanks to the Toronto Arts Council and Platform A as well as to the Ontario Trillium Foundation, the Ontario Arts Council, the Canada Council for the Arts and The J.W. McConnell Family Foundation for making this and our other local, provincial and national learning workshops possible.

JUMBLIES: New Assistant Artistic Director

We are thrilled to welcome Angela Loft to a full-year internship position as Jumblies’  Assistant Artistic Director, starting in January. This is made possible through Jumblies’ 11th Performing Arts Internship grant from the George Cedric Metcalf Charitable Foundation. Ange’s position will also be supported by Platform A Mentorship funds. Thanks once again to both the Toronto Arts Council and the Metcalf Foundation for tandem support to our mentorship and partnership efforts.

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JUMBLIES: New Intern, Lisa Bozikovic

Jumblies is happy to accommodate a second-phase internship for singer-song-writer Lisa Bozikovic, supported by Platform A funds. Last year Lisa started her Jumblies internship with a placement at Arts4All. This fall she has worked with the choirs at Making Room (Parkdale Activity Recreation Centre) and The Ground Floor, as well as with Cathy Nostaty’s “I-Pad Choir” with children and seniors at Harbourfront Community Centre. In the new year, she will return to Arts4All to take a musical role there.

JUMBLIES: Metcalf Creative Strategies Incubator Funds

Jumblies was delighted this fall to receive funds from the George Cedric Metcalf Charitable Foundation to expand the activities we have launched for the Platform A Bridging component – creating new partnerships to connect community-enaged and professional arts practice. Jumblies is calling this new strand of activity Jumblies At Large. So far resulting and thriving partnership include CARFAC, several new music organizations (Tapestry Opera, the Canadian Music Centre, Soundstreams and Continuum New Music) and Young People’s Theatre (through Jumblies’ Scarborough Offshoot, the Community Arts Guild), you can read more about this Metcalf program HERE!

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Composer, Martin van de Ven and Designer, Sonja Rainey (Jumblies 10th Metcalf Foundation Performing Arts Intern) at the Canadian Music Centre Jumblies workshop – Photo: Katherine Fleitas (peace photo.ca)

JUMBLIES: Workshop with CARFAC

As part of the Platform A “Bridging” Component this fall, Jumblies hosted the CARFAC Ontario AGM coupled with an evening workshop for CARFAC members and Jumblies artists and interns at The Ground Floor. Also, Jumblies Artistic Director, Ruth Howard, was a panelist for the National CARFAC conference. Thanks to CARFAC Ontario Executive Director, Kristian Clarke, for his enthusiastic collaboration.

CARFAC Ontario’s ED, Kristian Clarke and Board Chair, Devon Ostrom at Jumblies workshop – Photo: Liam Coo

JUMBLIES: 10th Toronto Artfare Essentials Are Halfway Done

We are half-way through our 10th Toronto Artfare Essentials – a 6-day intensive workshop about community arts. It is attended by 22 artists of varied ages, experience levels, cultures and arts disciplines from Toronto, various parts of Northern and Southern Ontario, Winnipeg and Austria. All the Jumblies Offshoots and their Artistic Directors – Arts4All, MABELLEarts, Making Room Community Arts and Community Arts Guild – are also taking part.

This year’s workshop is supported by the Toronto Arts Council (through Platform A), the Ontario Arts Council – Conseil des arts de l’Ontario, the Canada Council for the Arts | Conseil des Arts du Canada, the Ontario Trillium Foundation and The J.W. McConnell Family Foundation.

Artwork by Shifra Cooper
Photo by Liam Coo

JUMBLIES: Composing Community Second Workshop

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Yesterday, on December 11, Jumblies held our second Composing Community workshop, attended by 21 composers, musicians and other artists, including staff from Jumblies and our new musical partners: Tapestry New Opera, Sound Streams, and Continuum Contemporary Music The workshop also included several Jumblies interns (supported by Platform A and other funding). We came together to explore approaches to music creation and Community Arts practice and themes of memory and landscape that we have been developing at the Ground Floor over the past year. Thanks to the Toronto Arts Council (Platform A) and the Metcalf Foundation Strategic Incubator Program for supporting our new partnerships and initiatives!  _A0A8612 _A0A8559  _A0A8511 _A0A8521

photos by Liam Coo

AFCY: Spotlights on Past Micro-grant Recipients

Camelle Davidson: Visual Expressions

camelebatiqplatformaFrom January to June of 2014, Camelle led an intergenerational collective in weekly Modern Batik making workshops.  This program took place at a Toronto Community Housing building in the Glendower community (Birchmount/Finch). The project enabled the participants to develop and display artworks that told a visual story about their community, city, life, history and what they learned along the way.

Due to renovations at the community site, they had to move their program to another location at Victoria Park/Sheppard. Despite this unexpected challenge, Camelle did not let this obstacle stop the amazing success of the program.  Since the renovation, she has a consistent weekly turn out of 15+ participants!

Camelle has continued to facilitate the program past the micro-grant timeline and the participants do not want the program to stop anytime soon.  “One of the participants had depression and anxiety issues for years. Which has affected her whole life. She came up to me after one of my classes and thanked me for being there,” says Camelle, “great change was occurring.”

This program has inspired Camelle, even more than before, to apply for bigger grants, to curate her own art exhibit, and to pursue aspirations on becoming a certified schoolteacher.  She also dreams of opening her own personal studio.

Camelle is currently displaying her artwork at the “Bending Spoons Gallery” at Vesuvio Pizzeria & Spaghetti House (3010 Dundas St. West).  This exhibition is featuring AFCY Emerging Youth Artists and is running until January 5th 2015.

Leila Dey: The Dey Dreamers Program

dey dreamersDey Dreamers was an artist development program for young women between the ages of 15-29 who would not have access otherwise to professional music services. Over 10 weeks, the program mentored young women as emerging recording artists by engaging them in full-day sessions at Sandbox Studios, in which they gained performance and recording skills from community artists.

After the completion of The Dey Dreamers Program, the participants have gone on to perform at many showcases, some of which include the events in partnership with AFCY. Benita Singh (pictured above), one of the Dey Dreamers participants, has performed on many stages including the 6th Annual Big Bam Boom Youth-Led Arts Festival’s live showcase at the AGO and at York University. Benita has also had her single “Dust” (which was recorded during The Dey Dreamers Program) feature on CBC radio!

AFCY has connected Leila Dey with Lawrence Heights Middle School’s Beyond 3:30 after school program to facilitate music production workshops. In addition, she recently sat on the jury for the 2015 Platform A micro-grant selection.

Leila says, “Through the micro-grant process, I learned how to stay on top of my budgets, how to run a program, how to stay committed, but most of all I learned how to put my dreams into action. I’ve always had the idea to help young people pursue their artistic dreams but never knew how that might look. I know The Dey Dreamers Program is not the perfect program, but the fact that I have a starting point and some experience with how I want the program to grow, is more than I could have asked for. The Dey Dreamers alumni and I have been working out ways to fundraise for another round of The Dey Dreamers Program to help another group of young girls pursue their dreams.”

 

CUE: Artists Exhibit in Margin of Eras

In October 2014, over 40 artists who received project funding from CUE over the past Untitled5year exhibited and performed their final works in a pop-up arts exhibition called Margin of Eras. Hosted in a vacant storefront, the exhibition attracted an audience of over 550, and sent a powerful wave of underground momentum throughout the downtown core.

ARTISTIC STATEMENT

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– Exterior of pop-up space at Bloor and Shaw
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 – Top floor of pop-up gallery.

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– LOWER LEVEL OF POP-UP SPACE.

 

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– Live music audience on opening night.
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– Lower level of pop-up space

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BUCC N FLVR CREW KRUMP PERFORMANCE ON OPENING NIGHT

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– STUDENTS FROM DELTA ALTERNATIVE SCHOOL ENJOYING A GALLERY TOUR

The exhibition was positioned alongside Toronto’s municipal elections by way of a Political Infiltration Campaign – a surreal critique of the political system led by CUE directors and a team of artists. Click here to read an op-ed outlining the motive for the project.

CUE: Recap of Fall 2013 Micro-Grants

In partnership with Platform A, CUE’s Fall 2013 micro-grant cycle supported a total of 22 artists. Throughout the development and production process CUE artists achieved many successes. Artist Jesi the Elder not only finished her animation entitled Blossom, but also took part in CUE’s first ever 2-week residency program, where she gained access to SKETCH’s ceramics studio and completed a series of abstract ceramics mugs. Some of these pieces were exhibited at Jesi’s solo show at Xpace gallery in 2014.

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– Jesi the elder

Artist Heather Fulton completed an experimental photography project, went on to sit on CUE’s grant review team, and later become one of the lead organizers for CUE’s 2014 group exhibition, Margin of Eras.

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– Heather Fulton

 

Many other artists realized similar leaps and bounds in their careers and practices, selling work, securing other grants, and gaining public exposure.

With support and partnership from Platform A, CUE aims to not only provide accessible arts funding, but also offer employment opportunities and help open up other avenues for emerging artists in developing their creative careers.