Matrices 2010: Electronic Media

Posted in Art on July 19th, 2010 by Lisa

Two of my digital photographs have been selected for the international juried exhibition of electronic art organised by the Hungarian Electrographic Art Association. Matrices 2010 will be shown at the Danube Gallery, KAS Gallery, Hungarian Workshop Gallery, D-Court Gallery, and FISE Gallery in Budapest, Hungary from August until October 2010.

Landscape with Cowboys

Satyr v 1

See more work from this series here.

Mannequins

Posted in Uncategorized on July 11th, 2010 by Lisa

Just riding around town with my mannequin bits …

Art History meets Contemporary Tunes: 70 Million by Hold Your Horses

Posted in Art on March 20th, 2010 by Lisa
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Golden Olympic Finale

Posted in Current Events on February 28th, 2010 by Lisa

Ty and I decided to watch the last period of the Canada-US men’s hockey game on the big screen outside Live City, Yaletown. After building up a 2 goal lead, the US came back to tie it up in the last 24 seconds of the final period.

The crowd was tense; the mood became a bit somber … then, some minutes into overtime, he shoots, he scores. Sidney Crosby scores the winning goal and the crowd goes wild.

That was about three hours ago and the crowd is still going wild out there.

From  our place we can see and hear the crowd yelling and screaming, horns honking, cars scrawling along with multiple flags flapping …  after the game, we walked through Yaletown and up along Granville Street to Robson, along Robson to Richards, and then home again in a huge sea of red and white flags, hair, hats, boots, painted faces, hockey sticks. Granville and Robson are both shoulder to shoulder for blocks; people are dancing, high-fiving, singing, all sporting their colours.

With the men’s hockey win, Canada has 26 medals, including 14 gold, more than any other nation in history. After a very shaky start, red, white and gold redemption for these games.

See more photos here.

He waited until the final moment – with Canada teetering on the brink of a national panic attack – before Sidney Crosby put his mark on this game, this gold medal, this emerging legacy.

Timing as they say is everything.

In a game for the ages, it was Crosby – the leader of Canada’s Generation Next – who scored the golden goal 7:40 into overtime, leading Canada’s men’s Olympic hockey team to a thrill-a-minute 3-2 victory over their arch rivals from the United States.

It was Canada’s eighth Olympic gold medal overall in men’s hockey and they became the first to win on home ice since the U.S. did it in 1980′s ‘Miracle On Ice.’

Crosby was one of a handful of players who had a chance to put the game away in regulation. Canada nursed a 2-1 lead into the final minute of play; prior to that, Crosby had been denied on a breakaway with about three minutes to go and both Pronger and Shea Weber hit the post early in the third period.

Normally, in the rhythm of any hockey game, too many missed chances at one end translate into a goal at the other – and yesterday was no exception. With 25 seconds remaining in regulation; Canada getting set for a celebration; and goaltender Ryan Miller on the bench for a sixth attacker, the U.S. tied the game on a goal by Zach Parise. The sequence was potentially heart-breaking: Patrick Kane’s shot deflected off Jamie Langenbrunner’s skate right to Parise, who skated across the front of the goal crease and tucked a shot past goaltender Roberto Luongo.

To be so close to the championship – and then needing to return for four-on-four overtime – was just the final test in what had been a pressure-packed two weeks for the Canadian team. Thanks to Crosby, they survived.

( The Globe and Mail)

Another Day, Another Bunch of Gold

Posted in Current Events on February 27th, 2010 by Lisa

Friday evening Ty and I headed out to watch the Hockey matchup between Canada and Slovakia. Our first thought was the Hennessey Irish Pub next to the Ramada Inn on Granville but they already had a full house, as did the next three places we tried to get into. Finally, after a brief stop at the crepe place down the street, we were heading back to Granville when we thought, “Hey, what about the Yale?”. A blues bar on the corner of Granville and Drake, this place has been a staple on the Vancouver night scene for at least 40 years and this day was packed with sports fans. There was room at the inn but initially it did not seem as though we’d be able to get a seat. Ty finally found us a tiny table against the wall next to the cash machine – the last free table in the house – yippee! – with a great view of the gigantic screen and two smaller ones right in front of us.

Since the Yale wasn’t serving food, after the first period Ty headed out to grab something from the White Spot across the street but they were too slow. So, we waited one more period, and then I ran out down to Bella Pizza three blocks away for a pepperoni pick-up, and we watched the final cliff-hanger while munching on that.

The last few minutes of the game were tight and the crowd in the Yale was raucous. As the last 20 seconds counted down and the Canadians seemed barely able to hang onto their 1 point lead, the crowd went crazy. When the clock ran out and the game was won, the roar was literally deafening. I have never heard a cheer so loud and long – everyone was on their feet and the noise was rolling through the room and bouncing off the walls as the patrons screamed, shouted, pounded tables, and pumped their fists in the air. Coming from the outside we could hear the car horns honking, people screaming, noise-makers noise-making – yes, Canada is in the gold medal final on Sunday.

Today was another golden day, this time for the Canadian boys: gold in men’s curling for the Martin rink, gold in men’s snowboard parallel giant slalom from Jasey-Jay Anderson, and gold for the men’s long-track team pursuit in the 5,000. In bobsleigh Canada 1 took bronze, missing silver by the slimmest of margins at .01 of a second to the Germans.

Below, Canada’s Charles Hamelin (L) celebrates his gold medal with bronze medallist Canada’s Francois-Louis Tremblay after the men’s 500 metres short track speed skating final at the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics, February 26, 2010.

Today the animals were out in force downtown, along with the Silver Elvis, the mostly-naked underwear dude Spandex Andy, and cardboard Don Cherry.

See more pictures here.

Canada’s Charles Hamelin (L) celebrates his gold medal with bronze medallist Canada’s Francois-Louis Tremblay after the men’s 500 metres short track speed skating final at the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics, February 26, 2010.

Jon Montgomery, Canada’s Golden Boy

Posted in Current Events on February 26th, 2010 by Lisa

By Jeff Blair, The Globe and Mail Posted Sunday, February 21, 2010

WHISTLER – They are worth watching, those who walk down the road less travelled – or, in this case, slide down it at 145 klicks per hour. So keep an eye on Jon Montgomery, Canada. You never know where this gold medal of his will take him.

Friday night, it was the centre of Whistler Village, like some kind of roving street party. People spilled out of the pubs – or, more accurately, vacated their place in line – as word spread that the guy they had been watching on television was coming down the mountain.

Clutching his turtle and thunderbird First Nations motif helmet, the automobile auctioneer who grew up playing baseball with Theo Fleury’s family in Russell, Man., Montgomery stopped to guzzle beer, accept hugs and sign autographs. “Sign the stick … sign the stick … sign the stick,” a crowd yelled outside the CTV stage where he had just been interviewed, as a small hockey stick was passed up to him. Deed done.

About the only thing Montgomery didn’t do was crowd surf but that’s no surprise. Because while his wild-man antics after his exhilarating and, for Canada, desperately needed win on a track that up to then accounted for one more death than Canadian medal, there is much more to the moppy, red-haired Montgomery than simply being a dude. One of the first things he did in the post-race news conference was apologize to silver medalist Martins Dukurs of Lativa for the over-exhuberance of his celebration. It was extended good-naturedly and accepted thusly. There is much, much more to Eldon and Joan Montgomery’s kid than meets the eye.

“Sometimes you feel like you’re floundering around on the roads of Europe,” Montgomery said on Saturday, at a reception at the Whistler Brewing Company about seven hours after he’d shut down the partying in the wee hours of an alpine morning.

“That it doesn’t really matter. That what you’re doing is insignificant. But to see the pride others share in our success here … it means everything to us as athletes. A large portion of this goes to all of Canada.”

See, this is why gold looks so good on a guy who admits that the first time he saw a skeleton go down the track at Canada Olympic Park in Calgary he figured he’d just stumbled on a luge accident. Because at a time when there are those among our chattering classes who feel our inner hoser has somehow been violated by the medal-lust of Own The Podium, it is important we celebrate simple, unbridled passion. “I’m the luckiest boy in the world,” he told a TV audience after his win.

“And I don’t give a lick.”

Ah, but there is time for him to use the podium as a bully pulpit of sorts, and don’t be surprised if Montgomery does. There are weighty issues to be advocated – and as he did at a news conference before training began, Montgomery once again Saturday pushed the cause of a 24-hour amateur sports channel whose revenues might help replace funding that will be lost.

“It’s gathering a lot of dust in the CRTC,” Montgomery said, “and through our efforts at the Olympic Games, maybe we can urge Canadians to put some momentum behind this and stick in a few elbows. That would be probably the biggest benefit of this. We wouldn’t be just a flash in the pan, then.”

Montgomery aims to defend his medal in Sochi in 2014, and hopes his girlfriend Darla Deschamps, who is also part of the Canadian program, is with him. So there’s an element of selfishness to his stand. But somebody’s got to step up, no?

And who better than a guy who says competing at home didn’t mean more pressure, but more support; who knows the first thing the true king of the hill does is come down and walk among the people.

Montgomery said he came upon this sport at a time when he was looking for something to be passionate about.

“When your eyes are open and you’re receptive to new opportunities, that’s when things will find you,” he said. “When you’re sitting around at home and saying to yourself: ‘Well, if there’s something out there it will come to me,’ that’s not how it’s going to happen.

“You have to get out there. Have a little zest in life. You have to find things and seek out new challenges and push yourself – and that’s when you find something that piques your interest and makes you passionate. That’s how I found skeleton.”

Lucky for Canada, it’s how we found Jon Montgomery, too.

Birds on a Musical Wire

Posted in Animals, Art on February 26th, 2010 by Lisa

Birds called Zebra Finches fly to and from an electric guitar at an art installation in the Barbican’s Curve Gallery, London, on February 26, 2010. The installation is a walk through aviary in gallery space inhabited by 40 Zebra Finches, created by French artist Celeste Boursier-Mougenot. The birds fly freely from bass guitars, guitars and cymbals as they feed and perch creating sounds as they move along the instruments which amplify the sounds through loudspeakers.

Canadian Women’s Hockey win Gold in 2010 Olympics

Posted in Current Events on February 26th, 2010 by Lisa

The Canadian women’s hockey team defeated Team USA for their third straight Olympic gold medal. Let’s hope the men’s team can do the same!

A great day for Canadian women at the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Games

Posted in Current Events on February 24th, 2010 by Lisa

Clara Hughes gets the bronze in the last speed skating race of her career – a great performance at Vancouver 2010 before the home crowd.

Canadian women take gold and silver in the two “man” bobsleigh – fantastic runs for both teams.

Gold medalists Kaillie Humphries and Heather Moyse race below

Silver medalists Helen Upperton and Shelley-Ann Brown below

Canadian women’s short track team takes silver

Olympic Sunday

Posted in Current Events on February 22nd, 2010 by Lisa

Sunday dawned sunny, blue skies and warm. While Ty spent the afternoon watching the Russia v Czech Republic (I think) game from the dark confines of The Corner bar, I strapped on the inline skates for another cruise around the seawall. As soon as it gets warm, the siren song of the inline skates captures me and it’s off around the Park I go. This day was more crowded by quite a bit than Thursday so not quite as pleasant a ride but still lovely out. The north side of the Park never sees the direct sunlight in the winter because the sun doesn’t rise high enough; as a result, the bike path is slick and wet and difficult to skate on. On bikes, these conditions don’t matter but on skates they sure do so I always take that part of the wall with caution. On Thursday I’d seen a shirtless man in shorts running along Third Beach; today it was bocce ball players and more joggers in summer attire.

After returning to the ranch with tired legs after a last ditch sprint around Wainborne Park to get home, I met Ty for a coffee at Coo Coo, which was packed; people seem finally to have discovered this little gem of a coffee shop with its best cappuccino in town. Later we watched the disappointing performance of Team Canada in the hockey loss against the US from the comfort of our downstairs lounge, saving ourselves the money, and calories, that a trip to one of the local establishments would have cost. Some of the bars and restaurants here have jacked up their prices quite high – greed lives on – and I think we’ve given them enough business to date.

So far, I’ve seen long and short track skating events, a bit of the women’s aerials, pairs skating, bobsleigh and Canada’s great win in curling over the UK, on the TV. To me, the best moment, by far, has been Jon Montgomery’s gold medal win in the men’s skeleton and his post-race interview with CTV. It’s not every Olympian who can auction off a gigantic pint of beer with billions around the world watching. The guy’s great – good for him!

On another note, I find it incongruous, to say the least, that these Olympics are sponsored by, among others, Coke and Mcdonalds, two of the world’s largest purveyors of diabetes and obesity – talk about a disconnect!