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DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20210417T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20210524T180000
DTSTAMP:20260421T041736
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LAST-MODIFIED:20210312T203941Z
UID:6680-1618653600-1621879200@www.massybooks.com
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Nicholas Tay - Amateur Cartography
DESCRIPTION:Nicholas Tay\nAmateur Cartography \nCurated by Pennylane Shen\nApril 17 – May 24\, 2021\nMassy Books\n229 East Georgia Street \n“It starts with my mother’s hands. Her delicate skin\, lined and creased\, as she tenderly traces the plump cheek of my youngest son. Her lines\, folding into rivers\, creasing into ravines\, dotting out into borders. The snowy smoothness of my son’s cheek\, undulating and open to promise.” \nMy mother’s hands are the map of her immigrant experience. My son still remains uncharted. I think of the journey that took my parents away from home. The journey that brought me from East to West. I think about the journeys my children may have to make. In time\, I feel we will all become part of the immigrant majority – ending far away from where we began with many stops in between. We will all know what it is to be alien. Our ideas will flow freely through borders\, our identities will uproot from earth\, and we will change and be changed by every new place. \nAmateur Cartography is a visual exploration of immigrant identity. What it is when one idea arrives upon another idea and the destruction and beauty that occurs in the dialogue. \nAbout the Artist: \nNicholas Tay likens his arrival and upbringing in the Pacific Northwest from the age five to falling in love. He dove into the freshness of the air\, the ice crystals that crunched beneath gravel fields\, street hockey in the freezing wet\, the stories of our First Peoples whisking him away on the wings of Raven and Thunderbird\, and later the liberal ideal of the multi-cultural mosaic. \nExploring multi-cultured identity is at the core of Tay’s artistic practice\, wherein vastly divergent ideas can be represented with emotional honesty in a single work of art: “I used to feel that being Chinese Canadian was akin to being lost between houses of separated parents\, or being an alien guest of a gracious host. Through the exploration of my art\, I have found that both cultures are truly at home in me and in my work.” \nEver flexible with his approach\, Tay’s choice of medium suits the stories and cultural forms he explores. Charcoal or paint lets him offer sensuous luxury as a contrast to our increasingly digital experience. At other times\, while he is wary of the seductive cleverness of digital processes\, these modern modes are ideal. Traditional forms carry immediacy\, and arrest creator and viewer alike in their visceral presence and the abstract\, emotional truth inherent in their mark making. Conversely\, using 3D software brings machine algorithms to every pixel. Through his training at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena\, California\, and his years working in Visual FX and video game development\, Tay became interested in the possibilities of working with technology as his collaborator. Through its interpretation of the artist’s instructions\, the technological mediator separates the creative output from potential artistic biases. \nArt has been a dominant part of Tay’s life since his earliest memories. Beyond words or numbers\, it has been the most clear\, honest\, and comforting means of expression. Identifying as an introvert\, and amalgamating diverse lines of heritage between China and Canada\, Tay embraces art to tell honest\, deeply personal stories in a way that would be daunting in other formats\, bridging the awkward and profound\, or in Tay’s words\, “the profoundly awkward”. \nTay received his formal art education at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena\, California. His current series\, Amateur Cartography\, explores the clash of cultures through a visual dialogue between representation and abstraction. \nAccessibility\n \nThis event takes place upstairs in the Massy Gallery\, which is only accessible by a flight of stairs. Unfortunately\, no audio tours are available at this time. \nMassy Books is easily accessible by transit! Close to the 22\, 3\, 8 and 19 bus lines at Main and Georgia/Gore and Georgia. There is metered street parking along Georgia\, or lot parking at the Sun Wah Centre around the corner (268 Keefer).
URL:https://www.massybooks.com/event/nicholas-tay-amateur-cartography/
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20210430T160000
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CREATED:20210325T042721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210325T042813Z
UID:6715-1619798400-1619802000@www.massybooks.com
SUMMARY:Christian Allaire: The Power of Style - Book Launch
DESCRIPTION:Style is not just the clothes on our backs–it is self-expression\, representation\, and transformation. \nAs a fashion-obsessed Ojibwe teen\, Christian Allaire rarely saw anyone that looked like him in the magazines or movies he looked to for inspiration. Now the Fashion and Style Writer for Vogue\, he is\nworking to change that–because clothes are never just clothes. Men’s heels are a statement of pride in the face of LGTBQ+ discrimination\, while ribbon shirts honor Indigenous ancestors and keep culture alive. Allaire takes the reader through boldly designed chapters to discuss additional topics like cosplay\, make up\, hijabs\, and hair\, probing the connections between fashion and history\, culture\, politics\, and social justice. \nPurchase The Power of Style from Massy Books: https://bit.ly/3fc0Rfb \nHow to Attend\nEvent details arrivals shortly! \nAbout the Author\nAbout the Author Christian Allaire is an Ojibwe writer who grew up on the Nipissing First Nation reserve in Ontario\, Canada. His writing has appeared in ELLE\, FLARE\, and VOGUE\, among other outlets. He is based in New York City.
URL:https://www.massybooks.com/event/the-power-of-style-book-launch/
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20210430T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20210430T173000
DTSTAMP:20260421T041736
CREATED:20210420T050454Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210420T050604Z
UID:6773-1619798400-1619803800@www.massybooks.com
SUMMARY:Book Launch: The Power of Style - Panel & Drag Performance
DESCRIPTION:Style is not just the clothes on our back—it is self-expression\, representation\, and transformation. Join NYC-based Word Up Community Bookshop\, Indigenous-owned Massy Books\, and Annick Press in celebrating The Power of Style with a panel of the book’s contributors—Christian Allaire\, Jamie Okuma\, Henry Bae and Shaobo Han\, and Halima Hossinzehi\, moderated by Korina Emmerich—followed by a drag performance by the great Ilona Verley. \n*Registration Mandatory* Register here: https://bit.ly/3e9DyQY \nPurchase the book from Indigenous owned Massy Books: https://bit.ly/3eb6NmE \nAs a fashion-obsessed Ojibwe teen\, Christian Allaire rarely saw anyone that looked like him in the magazines or movies he looked to for inspiration. Now the Fashion and Style Writer for Vogue\, he is working to change that–because clothes are never just clothes. Men’s heels are a statement of pride in the face of LGTBQ+ discrimination\, while ribbon shirts honor Indigenous ancestors and keep culture alive. Allaire takes the reader through boldly designed chapters to discuss additional topics like cosplay\, make up\, hijabs\, and hair\, probing the connections between fashion and history\, culture\, politics\, and social justice. \nKorina Emmerich is the founder of EMME Studio\, a small\, ethical\, slow fashion brand located on occupied Canarsee territories in greater Lenapehoking. Her work combines expression\, art\, and culture with a strong focus on social and climate justice. Her colorful work is known to reflect her patrilineal Puyallup tribal heritage. \nChristian Allaire is an Indigenous (Ojibwe) writer from Nipissing First Nation. He is the author of The Power of Style\, his debut book. Currently\, he is also the Fashion & Style Writer for Vogue. \nJamie Okuma is an Indigenous (Luiseño/Shoshone-Bannock) Fashion Artist based on the La Jolla Indian reservation in Pauma Valley\, California. \nHenry Bae and Shaobo Han are the co-founders of SYRO\, a footwear brand based in Brooklyn\, New York that creates “femme footwear for everyone.” \nIlona Verley is an Indigenous (Nlaka’pamu) Two-Spirit drag queen and makeup artist. She appeared on Canada’s Drag Race\, the first Indigenous queen to do so. \nHalima Hossinzehi is a Baloch-Canadian student who is currently pursuing a master’s in neuromechanics at the Ontario Tech University. \n\n\n\n\n\nFriday\, April 30\, 2021 – 7:00pm\n\n\n\n\n\n\nvia ZOOM\n\nNew York\, NY 10032
URL:https://www.massybooks.com/event/the-power-of-style/
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