EMBASSY CULTURAL HOUSE
  • Home
  • Recent News
  • Community
    • Advisors & Editorial Team
    • Contributors
    • Governor General Laureates
    • In Memoriam
  • Exhibitions
  • Projects
  • Publications
  • Background
    • Past Programming >
      • Exhibitions 1983-1990 >
        • Index of Curators
        • Index of Photographers
        • Index of Visual Artists
      • Film 1983-1990
      • Music 1983-1990 >
        • Index of Musicians
      • Performances 1983-1990 >
        • Index of Performers
    • Embassy Hotel History
  • About

"No Other Land" Screening, Call for Indigenous Art, Annual Theory Centre Conference, and More!

4/14/2025

0 Comments

 
Screenings of "No Other Land" will take place on April 17 at Huron County Museum. Embassy Cultural House will be co-hosting the 2PM screening.
View this email in your browser
No Other Land Film Screening at Huron County Museum

No Other Land Film Screening 
April 17, 2025 at 2:00PM and 7:00PM with post-film discussions
Huron County Museum, 110 North Street, Goderich, ON
$12 admission

 

For half a decade, Basel Adra, a Palestinian activist, films his community of Masafer Yatta being destroyed by Israel’s occupation. He builds an unlikely alliance with a journalist from the other side, who joins in his fight.

Screenings of No Other Land will take place on April 17 at 2PM and 7PM at Huron County Museum. Embassy Cultural House will be co-hosting the 2PM screening and moderating a post-film discussion. The discussion following the 7PM screening will be moderated by David Heap, Associate Professor at the University of Western Ontario and human rights advocate.

This film is unrated. Viewer discretion advised for violence, disturbing images, and language.

Buy Tickets
Not/For The Money-- Upcoming ECH Online Exhibition
Kelly Greene, Changing Currency: Prototype Kanata 151 $10 Bill, 2018. Image courtesy of the artist

Money is a very urgent issue for many artists. An aspect of this issue is the general public’s inability to value the arts and cultural workers’ vital role and impact within any community. There is a lack of understanding in the way cultural workers survive and build meaningful lives, often with a minimum of resources. The issue of money, the impact of economic disparity, and insecurity dominates many of our lives. Without a stable income, most people struggle to afford basic necessities that are required for quality of life.

The theme of money is addressed frequently within the art world, but usually it is in the context of the art “market,” commercial auctions, and wealthy collectors. Many artists work to imagine and engender new relationships, value systems, and ways of being. As journalist Eric Reguly wrote in The Globe and Mail business section, “You don’t necessarily need buckets of money to succeed. Sometimes imagination and the courage to break the rules can do the trick.

The Centre for the Study of Theory and Criticism
 Annual Theory Conference 2025
The Centre for the Study of Theory and Criticism
 Annual Theory Centre Graduate Conference: Worlding beyond the end of the world

Friday, April 25 – Saturday, April 26, 2025
Western University, University College, London, ON

Hosted by the Centre for the Study of Theory and Criticism, this year’s Annual Theory Conference gathers scholars and artists to explore the possibilities of world-making amid ecological, social, and political collapse. The theme, Worlding Beyond The End Of The World, invites critical reflections on how theory, art, and activism can imagine futures beyond dominant narratives of crisis and despair.

We are pleased to share that Dr. Qanita Lilla, curator and researcher, will be presenting and attending the conference.

 
For more information, please visit Centre for the Study of Theory and Criticism website. 
The Last Song? A Tonal Exchange

The Last Song? A Tonal Exchange
April 26, 7:30PM/Sundown

Ball's Bridge, 38199 Little Lakes Road, Goderich, ON

The frogs are too cold to sing this weekend. They’re waiting for warmer weather. Please join us in singing for the frogs! 

We will gather together in chorus, welcoming the awakening of the frogs

Joining them in their seasonal trance

We will show our love to our amphibian neighbours and their threatened home

Through reciprocating song 

The Little Lakes community has been fighting hard for 5 years to protect this habitat from an open pit below water level aggregate mine. In the centre of the proposed gravel mine there is a fertile and thriving wetland, home to a variety of species. If the mine is approved, this complex ecosystem that is the home of an abundance of frogs will dry up and become uninhabitable, resulting in the death of these frogs and countless other creatures.

This project has been coordinated by Rebecca Garrett and Liv Kanoa Hussey interdisciplinary artists working with the Friends of Ball’s Bridge and Little Lakes community.

Big Ideas in Art & Culture with Wanda Nanibush

ArtsEverywhere Festival 2025
Big Ideas in Art & Culture with Wanda Nanibush: May 3, 6:30–8:00PM

River Run Centre, Woolwich Street, Guelph, ON


Join the ArtsEverywhere Festival on Saturday evening for a Big Ideas Lecture with curator and community organizer Wanda Nanibush. Nanibush is an Anishinaabe-kwe image and word warrior from Beausoleil First Nation, Canada. Based in Toronto, Nanibush is the founding director of aabaakwad, an international yearly gathering of over 80 Indigenous curators, writers and artists for talks and performances that recently met at Venice Biennale. She has published widely on Indigenous art, politics, history, feminism and sexuality.
 

For more information, please visit the ArtsEverywhere website. 

UP with ART—Culture, Compassion and Community
UPwithART – Culture, Compassion, and Community
Arty-party Launch: Saturday, May 10, 2024
May 1 to May 10, 2025
Museum London, 421 Ridout Street North, London, ON

 
The arty-party silent art auction launches online May 1 with a weeklong exhibition of artworks leading up to the lively celebration of culture, compassion and community at Museum London on May 10, 2025.
 
For more information, please visit Museum London website. 
Hanny Hassan to receive Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Victoria University
Hanny Hassan before receiving his Honorary Doctorate at Western University in 2023.
Photo courtesy of Western University

Victoria University Convocation Graduation in the University of Toronto
Thursday, May 15, 2025 at 3:00PM

The Isabel Bader Theatre, Victoria University, 93 Charles St. W, Toronto, ON

RSVP Required
 

Hanny Hassan, BESc’64, has had an enduring career in consulting engineering and is a long-time dedicated university volunteer and philanthropist promoting understanding between cultures and religions.  

Hassan was the founder and president of Alef Consulting Inc, an independent consulting engineering practice in London, ON. and has been involved in interfaith and community service for the past 60 years. He was honoured by Western’s Alumni Association in 2019 with the Dr. Ivan Smith Award, its highest award to an alum for significant and sustained contributions to the university and society. 

In 2011, Hassan was named to the Order of Canada for his community service work. Western’s Faculty of Engineering conferred the L. S. Lauchland Engineering Alumni Medal on Hassan in 2013 for outstanding contributions to the engineering profession, business leadership and service to the community.

Hassan was appointed by Western’s Alumni Association to the university’s Board of Governors in 2009, where he served on several committees and as the chair of the Board from 2016 to 2017. He retired from the Board in April 2018. In 2023, Hanny also received an Honorary Doctorate from Western University. 

For more information, please visit the Victoria University website. 

RSVP Here
Indigenous Art 2025: Call for Submissions
Indigenous Art 2025 at Woodland Cultural Centre
June 21–September 30, 2025
Woodland Cultural Centre, 184 Mohawk Street, Brantford, ON

 
The Indigenous Art 2025 exhibition at Woodland Cultural Centre, now in its 49th year, showcases multidisciplinary works by Indigenous artists from across Turtle Island. Featuring painting, sculpture, textiles, and digital media, the show highlights themes of personal history, language, land, and cultural resilience—continuing an ongoing dialogue around decolonization and Indigenous creativity.
 
Submissions for the upcoming exhibition are now open, and the deadline for submissions is May 10, 2025. 

For more information, please visit the Woodland Cultural Center website. 

Ecologies in Practice Podcast: Now Streaming
Season 1 of Ecologies in Practice brings together thinkers, makers, and doers from art, science, theory, and practice to explore today’s most urgent environmental issues.

Hosted by Ashar Mobeen and produced by Amanda White and Elysia French, the podcast features lively conversations on soil regeneration, Indigenous land stewardship, water, textiles, plastics, and more. This public program is inspired by the 2024 book Ecologies in Practice: Environmentally Engaged Arts in Canada (Wilfrid Laurier University Press), edited by Elysia and Amanda.

Whether you're an artist, researcher, or engaged listener, this series offers powerful reflections on the intersections of creativity and ecology.

 
For more information, please visit the Ecologies in Practice website. 
Thank you to ECH Contributing Editors Mireya and Venus!
Over the past five years, the Embassy Cultural House has worked with many students through the internship program with Western University's Visual Arts Department. This winter semester, we are grateful to Mireya Seymour and Venus Tsao for the significant work and energy that they have brought to ECH programs  We appreciate their continued work with ECH and we look forward to their continued cultural work in Canada and abroad! 
Relevant and Related Links
  • From London Environmental Network: Earthfest London 2025 at CitiPlaza and Central Library, London, ON
  • From CBC News London: Fanshawe fine art students say program cut will hurt city, emerging artists by Kendra Seguin
  • From The National: Location of Scottish Palestine Museum revealed—see the opening date by Laura Pollock
  • From Mondoweiss: Yemen is acting responsibly to stop genocide and the U.S. is bombing them for it by Craig Mokhiber
  • From CBC Music: Nemahsis wins Breakthrough Artist of the Year - 2025 Juno Awards
  • Call for articles for on site review issue 47: stand still and fix things
  • From CBC News: Fashion History Museum in Cambridge packs up as city terminates lease by John Dalusong
Visit the ECH Website
Embassy Cultural House is located on the traditional lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnaapéewak, and Chonnonton peoples, at the forks of Deshkan Ziibi (Antler River), an area subject to the Dish with One Spoon Covenant Wampum and other treaties, colonized as London, Ontario. The ECH strives to create meaningful relationships between the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island and our contributors. The ECH honours the stewardship of the many Indigenous peoples who have resided on these lands since time immemorial.

Copyright © 2025 Embassy Cultural House. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address:
514 Pall Mall Street, London, ON, N5Y 2Z6, Canada

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
0 Comments

Spring has arrived! March updates with Embassy Cultural House

3/28/2025

2 Comments

 
As spring arrives in London, Ontario, the Embassy Cultural House is blooming with activity—both literally and figuratively.
View this email in your browser
As spring arrives in London, Ontario, the Embassy Cultural House is blooming with activity—both literally and figuratively. With yellow buttercups now carpeting the garden at 514 Pall Mall, we are reminded of renewal, growth, and connection.

This month, we continue to build community through art, culture, and collaboration. From the launch and distribution of our annual review tabloid, to the preparation of our upcoming online exhibition Not/For The Money, to participating in upcoming conferences and public events, our team of contributors remains actively engaged in highlighting voices and visions that matter. We invite you to explore what’s happening and join us in celebrating creativity and community this season.
Left: Buttercups begin to bloom across the garden at 514 Pall Mall Street, March 18, 2025.
Right: ECH editorial meeting with Venus Tsao, Jamelie Hassan, and 
Mireya Seymour, March 25, 2025.
Photo credits: Ron Benner
Not/For The Money-- Upcoming ECH Online Exhibition

Kelly Greene, Changing Currency: Prototype Kanata 151 $10 Bill, 2018. Image courtesy of the artist

Money is a very urgent issue for many artists. An aspect of this issue is the general public’s inability to value the arts and cultural workers’ vital role and impact within any community. There is a lack of understanding in the way cultural workers survive and build meaningful lives, often with a minimum of resources. The issue of money, the impact of economic disparity, and insecurity dominates many of our lives. Without a stable income, most people struggle to afford basic necessities that are required for quality of life.

The theme of money is addressed frequently within the art world, but usually it is in the context of the art “market,” commercial auctions, and wealthy collectors. Many artists work to imagine and engender new relationships, value systems, and ways of being. As journalist Eric Reguly wrote in The Globe and Mail business section, “You don’t necessarily need buckets of money to succeed. Sometimes imagination and the courage to break the rules can do the trick.

“Portraits of Sam Hallick” reviewed in Arab Studies Quarterly
We are pleased to share that Portraits of Sam Hallick: Modern Arab Presence in Early Twentieth-Century North America, published in September 2023 by Embassy Cultural House, was recently reviewed by Katie Kane in Arab Studies Quarterly. This thoughtful review offers critical reflections on the visual and political layers of the publication:

Portraits of Sam Hallick offers its readers a corrective to narratives of immigration to the Great Plains as primarily white and Christian while examining and highlighting an equally important record of Arab-speaking immigrants and Muslims who were participants in the region’s history. In doing this work of historical restoration and reconstruction, Hassan’s book joins the slim but expanding ranks of similarly focused and important works.

To read the full review, please visit ScienceOpen. 
What We're Reading: Desmond Cole and Omar El Akkad
The Skin We're In by Desmond Cole
 
"This smart, powerful, essential book is an act of radical generosity-one we should all be grateful to receive, hold, share and revisit." –Alicia Elliott
One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This by Omar El Akkad
 
"Every page contains a sentence or a paragraph I wanted to tear out and nail to the wall. I wish I could send a copy of El Akkad's moral call to arms to every person in America, every person in the West." –Dan Sheehan
In Conversation: Theo Jean Cuthand & Wanda Nanibush
In Conversation: Theo Jean Cuthand & Wanda Nanibush
Saturday, March 29, 2025, 2PM–3PM
Ralph Campbell Lounge, University of Toronto Scarborough, ON
 
Join a thought-provoking conversation between artist and filmmaker Theo Jean Cuthand and curator and scholar Wanda Nanibush. This special event will explore themes of Indigenous identity, resistance, and storytelling through contemporary art and film. 

To register for the event, please visit eventbrite. 

The Centre for the Study of Theory and Criticism
 Annual Theory Conference 2025
The Centre for the Study of Theory and Criticism
 Annual Theory Centre Graduate Conference: Worlding beyond the end of the world

Friday, April 25 – Saturday, April 26, 2025
Western University, University College, London, ON

Hosted by the Centre for the Study of Theory and Criticism, this year’s Annual Theory Conference gathers scholars and artists to explore the possibilities of world-making amid ecological, social, and political collapse. The theme, Worlding Beyond The End Of The World, invites critical reflections on how theory, art, and activism can imagine futures beyond dominant narratives of crisis and despair.

We are pleased to share that Dr. Qanita Lilla, curator and researcher, will be presenting and attending the conference.

 
For more information, please visit The Centre for the Study of Theory and Criticism website. 
ECH Abroad: Lorraine Klaasen in South Africa
Lorraine Klaasen with monumental Nelson Mandela statue
Nelson Mandela Square, Johannesburg, South Africa, March 1, 2025
 
South African-Canadian artist Lorraine Klaasen, daughter of jazz legend Thandi Klaasen, visits the iconic Nelson Mandela statue during her trip to Johannesburg. The photo marks a meaningful moment connecting her roots in South Africa with her life and work in Canada.
Congratulations to Little Wren Books!
We’re excited to welcome Little Wren Books, a newly opened independent bookstore at 502 Adelaide St. North, London, Ontario, dedicated to fostering a love for literature and community connection. With a carefully curated selection of books and a cozy atmosphere, it’s the perfect place for book lovers to gather, discover new reads, and support local literary culture. 
 
For more information, please visit Little Wren Books instagram.
Ecologies in Practice Podcast: Now Streaming
Season 1 of Ecologies in Practice brings together thinkers, makers, and doers from art, science, theory, and practice to explore today’s most urgent environmental issues.

Hosted by Ashar Mobeen and produced by Amanda White and Elysia French, the podcast features lively conversations on soil regeneration, Indigenous land stewardship, water, textiles, plastics, and more. This public program is inspired by the 2024 book Ecologies in Practice: Environmentally Engaged Arts in Canada (Wilfrid Laurier University Press), edited by Elysia and Amanda.

Whether you're an artist, researcher, or engaged listener, this series offers powerful reflections on the intersections of creativity and ecology.

 
For more information, please visit the Ecologies in Practice website. 
UP with ART – Culture, Compassion and Community
UPwithART – Culture, Compassion, and Community
Arty-party Launch: Saturday, May 10, 2024
May 1 to May 10, 2025
Museum London, 421 Ridout Street North, London, ON

 
The arty-party silent art auction launches online May 1 with a weeklong exhibition of artworks leading up to the lively celebration of culture, compassion and community at Museum London on May 10, 2025.
 
For more information, please visit Museum London website. 
Indigenous Art 2025: Call for Submissions
Indigenous Art 2025
June 21–September 30, 2025
Woodland Cultural Centre, 184 Mohawk Street, Brantford, ON

 
The Indigenous Art 2025 exhibition at Woodland Cultural Centre, now in its 49th year, showcases multidisciplinary works by Indigenous artists from across Turtle Island. Featuring painting, sculpture, textiles, and digital media, the show highlights themes of personal history, language, land, and cultural resilience—continuing an ongoing dialogue around decolonization and Indigenous creativity. Submissions for the upcoming exhibition are now open, and the deadline for submissions is May 10, 2025. 
 

For more information, please visit the Woodland Cultural Center website. 

Relevant and Related Links
  • From London Review of Books blog: "Not Conducive to the Public Good: 
    Rayan Fakhoury on the Palestine Exception
    "
  • From Mondoweiss: "ICE arrests Palestinian activist for involvement in Columbia protests" by Michael Arria 
  • From CBC News: Fashion History Museum in Cambridge packs up as city terminates lease by John Dalusong
  • From The Breach: Ontario’s rent allowance isn’t a safety net—it’s a poverty trap by Desmond Cole
  • From The Guardian: Israeli police raid Jerusalem bookshops and arrest Palestinian owners by Emma Graham-Harrison and Quique Kierszenbaum
Visit the ECH Website
Embassy Cultural House is located on the traditional lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnaapéewak, and Chonnonton peoples, at the forks of Deshkan Ziibi (Antler River), an area subject to the Dish with One Spoon Covenant Wampum and other treaties, colonized as London, Ontario. The ECH strives to create meaningful relationships between the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island and our contributors. The ECH honours the stewardship of the many Indigenous peoples who have resided on these lands since time immemorial.

Copyright © 2025 Embassy Cultural House. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address:
514 Pall Mall Street, London, ON, N5Y 2Z6, Canada

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
2 Comments

February Updates with the Embassy Cultural House!

2/11/2025

0 Comments

 
Happy Lunar New Year! □ The Embassy Cultural House welcomes the Year of the Wood Snake and the opportunity for revival, renewal and creativity.
View this email in your browser
Lunar New Year in Taiwan. Photo credit: Venus Tsao
Happy Lunar New Year! The Embassy Cultural House welcomes the Year of the Wood Snake and the opportunity for revival, renewal, creativity, and the shedding of bad energy.  The start of this year has yielded difficult news (Trump’s inauguration and deranged threats to Canada’s sovereignty) and welcome news (a temporary ceasefire in Gaza), but we are continuing our cultural work despite these turbulent circumstances. Our current focus is on the fourth issue of the Embassy Cultural House tabloid, our annual year-in-review with featured articles, news from the community, and a recipe! This issue will be launched at PS Guelph’s Rock / Paper / Scissors Book & Print Fair at the Art Gallery of Guelph on Sunday, February 23, 2025. We hope to see you there! 
Left to right: Ron Benner, Stephanie Kelly, David Heap, and Sara Rans. 470 Days Too Late, Palestinian Solidarity Celebration, Victoria Park, London, ON, Sunday, January 19, 2025.
Photo credit: Rahaf Abuzarifa
Congratulations to Dr. Ira Kazi!
On February 7, 2025, Dr. Iraboty Kazi succesfully defended her thesis, Beautiful People in Beautiful Places, Pastoral Landscapes as Heterotopias in Early Modern Art and Queer Cinema. Congratulations to Ira on her incredible doctoral lecture and the inspiring work that she has accomplished at Western University and abroad. 
Omar El Akkad: In Conversation
Omar El Akkad: In Conversation
Hosted by Sarah Marie
Tuesday, February 18, 2025, 7:30PM
Online Zoom Webinar

Join Words for a visit with award-winning novelist and journalist Omar El Akkad to talk about his new book, One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This, a powerful reckoning with what it means to live in a West that betrays its fundamental values. The host for the afternoon will be Sarah Marie, who organizes a live Instagram book series.

One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This is El Akkad’s nonfiction debut, his most raw and vulnerable work to date, a heartsick breakup letter with the West. It is a brilliant articulation of the same breakup we are watching all over the United States, in family rooms, on college campuses, on city streets; the consequences of this rupture are just beginning. This book is for all the people who want something better than what the West has served up. This is the book for our time.

 
For more information, please visit the Words website. To register for the event, please visit Eventbrite. 
In Conversation: Curator Qanita Lilla and 
Artists Jessica Karuhanga and Winsom Winsom
In Conversation:
Curator Qanita Lilla and Artists Jessica Karuhanga and Winsom Winsom
Saturday, February 22, 2025, 2:00PM-3:00PM
Museum London, 421 Ridout Street North, London, ON
 
Enjoy a conversation and Q&A with Ukutula: Our Timeless Journeys guest curator, Qanita Lilla, and artists Jessica Karuhanga and Winsom Winsom. Together, they discuss the exhibition, its development and their works featured in the exhibition. 

Ukutula: Our Timeless Journeys centres on a display of sixteen extraordinarily diverse traditional West African masks. These masks, part of the Agnes’ Justin and Elisabeth Lang Collection, appear in chorus with the contemporary work of five Canadian artists from the African and Asian diasporas. A travelling exhibition developed by AGNES and hosted by Museum London, Ukutula runs from November 21, 2024, to May 11, 2025.

This program is free, and all are welcome to attend. Donations upon admission are graciously accepted. Registration is required.
 

For more information, please visit Museum London website. To register for the event, please visit this link. 

Launch of the fourth Embassy Cultural House tabloid at
PS Guelph's Rock / Paper / Scissors Book & Print Fair!
Launch of the Fourth Embassy Cultural House Annual Tabloid
PS Guelph's Rock / Paper / Scissors: Book & Print Fair

Sunday, February 23, 2025, 11AM-4PM

Art Gallery of Guelph, 358 Gordon St, Guelph, ON

Set to be launched at Rock / Paper / Scissors, the newest issue of the Embassy Cultural House tabloid will include feature articles by Sarah Kendzior and Dr. Qanita Lilla, an interview by Jessica Irene Joyce with Michelle Wilson and Mikaila Stevens, a recipe by Jamelie Hassan, and more! 

PS Guelph’s annual Rock / Paper / Scissors: Book & Print Fair is back on Sunday, February 23, from 11 am to 4 pm at the Art Gallery of Guelph. The event is free! Rock / Paper / Scissors is devoted to small-scale publishing and the social life of the book. This year, local zinesters, printmakers, artists, poets, and publishers from across Ontario and further afield will join us for a print media lover’s dream. 
​
Rock / Paper / Scissors is co-presented by PS Guelph, Musagetes, and Art Gallery of Guelph. The Book & Print Fair event space is accessible by both a ramp and stairs leading to the front entrance, with stair and elevator access to the washrooms. Masks are encouraged, and some will be available at the door. 
 
For more information, please visit Akimbo. 
Clissold Lecture featuring Nahlah Ayed
Clissold Lecture featuring Nahlah Ayed
Thursday, February 27, 2025, 5PM-6PM
Western University, University College, Conron Hall or Zoom
Register Now

The Faculty of Information and Media Studies is pleased to invite you to the Clissold Lecture featuring guest speaker Nahlah Ayed, host of CBC's IDEAS. Ayed will explore the challenges facing international journalism today in her talk, "It Takes a Village: Covering the World in the Post-Truth Age."
 
As long-standing models of journalism became outdated and discarded, the foreign correspondent has become an easy target. Nahlah Ayed speaks in defence of a reinvented version and the enduring necessity of international coverage in the post-truth age.

This event is open to the public, and all are welcome to attend. A livestream will be available.

 
For more information about the lecture, please visit the Western Alumni website. 
Palestine and International Law with Michael Lynk
Palestine and International Law:
Developments at the International Criminal Court
and the International Court of Justice

Friday, February 28, 2025 at 1:30PM
Western University, Social Science Center 1004, 1151 Richmond St. London, ON

For more information about the presentation, please contact this email. 
Protect Canadian Cultural Sovereignty:
Recommendations for the Government of Ontario
The Provincial Arts Service Organizations of Ontario represent and support creative workers, artists, and organizations engaged in all artistic disciplines that create and disseminate the arts in Ontario. These organizations work together to strengthen the arts and culture environment to benefit the millions of Ontarians, Canadians, and visitors from around the world who experience the arts across the province. 
 
In 2022, Ontario had a large cultural trade deficit of $1.3 billion, one of the largest provincial cultural trade deficits in Canada.  Beyond the sector’s economic impact, the arts are central to fostering social and cultural cohesion. They bolster a sense of belonging, and they facilitate community connection and engagement. In response to potential tariffs placed on Canadian exports, and to resist the American cultural imperialism that has grown with the digital age, it’s critical that the Government of Ontario address the situation with the urgency it demands, and protect the future of Canadian cultural sovereignty.  
 
For more information, please visit CARFAC Ontario's website.
Congratulations to Sharmistha Kar on her Canadian Citizenship!
We are happy to share the news that artist Sharmistha Kar, a contributor to the Embassy Cultural House and GardenShip and State, has officially become a Canadian citizen! Congratulations Sharmistha!
Left: Sharmistha becomes a Canadian citizen! Right: Sharmistha and Anindita Chakraborty celebrate the occasion of Sharmistha's Canadian citizenship. Montreal, QC, November 19, 2024. 
From Sharmistha: "I am very happy when I think of the journey until here, and our future with you all in this country. However, it is a feeling that I never felt before and may not feel again! Just bless us so that we can move ahead!”
 What on Earth is Asian Canadian? at the University of Toronto
 What on Earth is Asian Canadian?
Interdisciplinary Space Asiancy Symposium

Friday, February 28, 2025, 9AM-5PM

University College, 15 King's College Circle, Toronto, ON
 
For more information, and to reserve a spot, please visit Eventbrite. 
Relevant and Related Links
  • From Democracy Now!: "American Historical Assoc. Votes Overwhelmingly to Support Resolution to Oppose Scholasticide in Gaza"
  • From The Globe and Mail: "Biden was a failure, Trump is a catastrophe" by Omar El Akkad
  • From Independent Jewish Voices: Report: Under the Guise of Charity - Canadian Funding for War Crimes in Occupied Palestine
  • From Globalisation, Societies, and Education: "Academia in a time of genocide: scholasticidal tendencies and continuities" by Basma Hair and Mezna Qato
  • TRIPLE BURNER FLOWER FIELD by SF Ho: 15 January - March 8, 2025 at Oxygen Art Centre, Nelson, B.C. 
  • From Monthly Review (Volume 75, Issue 7, December 24): Notes from the Editors 
  • From the National Gallery of Canada: Jeff Thomas: Origin by Rachelle Dickenson
Visit the ECH Website
Embassy Cultural House is located on the traditional lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnaapéewak, and Chonnonton peoples, at the forks of Deshkan Ziibi (Antler River), an area subject to the Dish with One Spoon Covenant Wampum and other treaties, colonized as London, Ontario. The ECH strives to create meaningful relationships between the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island and our contributors. The ECH honours the stewardship of the many Indigenous peoples who have resided on these lands since time immemorial.

Copyright © 2025 Embassy Cultural House. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address:
514 Pall Mall Street, London, ON, N5Y 2Z6, Canada

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
0 Comments

ECH Response to Donald Trump's Christmas Message

1/8/2025

0 Comments

 
A prescient response from 50 years ago...
View this email in your browser

A prescient response from 50 years ago to Donald Trump's Christmas message:

Greg Curnoe, Map of North America, 1972, india ink on paper
Dalhousie Art Gallery, Dalhousie University, Halifax
Relevant and Related Links
  • From Democracy Now!: Imperialist Fantasy: Historian Greg Grandin on Trump Threat to Retake Panama Canal, Invade Mexico
  • Update from Dar Yusuf Nasri Jacir for Art and Research: December 24, 2024
  • From the London Review of Books blog: 'How has this year been for you?' by Selma Dabbagh
  • From The Walrus: The Day Assad Fled by Samia Madwar
  • From The National Gallery of Canada: Jeff Thomas: Origin by Rachelle Dickenson
  • Inside. Outside. Of.: January 25, 2025 - April 13, 2025 at the Art Gallery of Mississauga, Ontario. Includes work by Ella Gonzales, David Merritt, Émilie Régnier, and Shanie Tomassini
Visit the ECH Website
Embassy Cultural House is located on the traditional lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnaapéewak, and Chonnonton peoples, at the forks of Deshkan Ziibi (Antler River), an area subject to the Dish with One Spoon Covenant Wampum and other treaties, colonized as London, Ontario. The ECH strives to create meaningful relationships between the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island and our contributors. The ECH honours the stewardship of the many Indigenous peoples who have resided on these lands since time immemorial.

Copyright © 2024 Embassy Cultural House. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address:
514 Pall Mall Street, London, ON, N5Y 2Z6, Canada

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
0 Comments

Winter Break and Final Update of 2024

12/6/2024

0 Comments

 
The Embassy Cultural House team will be on a winter break from December 8, 2024 to January 13, 2025. 
View this email in your browser
The Embassy Cultural House team will be on a winter break from December 8, 2024 to January 13, 2025. Best wishes to you, our community, for a safe, healthy, and happy holiday. 
Embassy Cultural House mourns the loss of Patricia Deadman
"Reconciliation is about co-existence after all,
and a relationship of mutual respect." 

This quote by The Honourable Murray Sinclair rings true of our relationships with Patricia Deadman who passed away on Friday, November 29, 2024. Patricia Deadman was a good friend to the Embassy Cultural House and a mentor to many.

Patricia Deadman (1961–2024) was a celebrated lens-based visual artist, curator, and writer at the Woodland Cultural Centre (WCC) (Brantford, ON). Born in Ohsweken, Ontario, her passion for art played an instrumental role in the preservation and evolution of Indigenous Art. With a Fine Art Diploma from Fanshawe College (London, ON) and a BFA from the University of Windsor (Windsor, ON), she brought over twenty years of curatorial practice to the WCC. Beginning as Curatorial Intern at the Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery (Toronto, ON); Curator-in-Residence at Museum London (London, ON); Curator at MacKenzie Art Gallery (Regina, SK) and former Director/Curator at Woodstock Art Gallery (Woodstock, ON). She curated numerous independent projects and was selected for the Aboriginal Curators Delegation to the Sydney Biennale, Venice Biennale, and Basel Art Fair awarded by the Canada Council for the Arts. In 2000, she co-curated Dust on the Road with Ron Benner for Hoopoe Curatorial and the McIntosh Gallery in London, Ontario.

She participated in numerous artist residencies, including Banff, Alberta; Paris, France; Merida and Oaxaca, Mexico. She exhibited since the 1980s, most recently in Changing Hands: Art Without Reservation 3/Contemporary Native North American Art from the Northeast and Southeast, Museum of Arts and Design, New York, New York (2012–15), Reading the Talk, organized and circulated by the Robert McLaughlin Gallery (2015), Resilience, The National Billboard Exhibition Project, Mentoring Artists for Women's Art (MAWA), Winnipeg, Manitoba (2018). Her works are in numerous public and private collections.

Since 2021, Patricia had been involved in the Embassy Cultural House as an important contributor to our programs. ​She has contributed work to various Embassy Cultural House exhibitions, including Intercambio/Exchange (2021), Pandemic Gardens: Resilience Through Nature (2022), and Embassy Cultural House: Celebrating 40 Years of Cultural History (2023). From 2021 to present, delegation visits to the Woodland Cultural Centre were organized by Ron Benner with WCC curator Patricia Deadman. Delegations involved visits to the grounds, the collection and temporary exhibitions at the WCC. 

For more information on Patricia's life and work, please visit her page on the Embassy Cultural House website. 

To read an update about Patricia by Heather George, Executive Director of the Woodland Cultural Centre, please visit the WCC 
website. 

For Patricia's obituary and funeral details, please visit this
link. 

A candle lit for Patricia Deadman. Photo credit: Jamelie Hassan
Forest City Gallery's Members' Show and Sale:
In support of FCG and Embassy Cultural House
Forest City Gallery Members' Show and Sale 
November 22, 2024 to December 20, 2024
1025 Elias Street, London, ON

Forest City Gallery (FCG) is excited to announce the opening of its Members' Show and Sale, the longest-running annual exhibition at the gallery, in partnership with Embassy Cultural House. This highly anticipated exhibition, serves as a cornerstone fundraising initiative for the gallery, supporting vital programming that fosters artistic innovation and community engagement.

Join the FCG and the ECH in celebrating the creativity and vision of our local arts community while supporting the continued growth of Forest City Gallery and Embassy Cultural House’s programming. This is an opportunity to connect with artists, discover unique works of art, and contribute to the cultural vitality of London. We look forward to seeing you at this year’s Members’ Show and Sale, in FCG’s 51st year!


Featuring artists: Ian Indiano, David Merritt, Ale, Eric Mummery, Will Maclean, Mary Donlan, kerry ferris, Robert Fones, Jamelie Hassan, Ron Benner, Larry Towell, Ann Towell, Jared Hendricks-Polack, Jenna Rose Sands, Jessica Irene Joyce, Anna Da Silva, Stephen Andrews, Jessie Amery, Maria Awaraji, Doug Mitchell, Jade Williamson, Stephen Best, Patricia Deadman, Ingrid Mayrhofer, Mireya Seymour, Emmy Meredith, Mona Hatoum, Jeff Wilmore, Doug Mitchell, Michaela Lucio, Patrick Mahon, Nanta Dumont, Amythly, Jadhen Pangilinan, Genevieve Buchanan, Kelly Greene, Ryan Pierce, Catherine Morrisey, Niloufar Salimi, Brad Boug, Clark MacDougall, Diana Tamblyn, Joan Brennan, Jennifer Plourde, Alayna Hryclik, Adi Berardini, Sarah Lanteigne, Chloe Serenko, Emil Stoetzer, Kim Ewin-Goebel, Kris Popiolek, Luiza Kaminska, Michael Czupryna, Mike Sloane, Nic Bautista, Steve DeBruyn, Anindita Chakraborty, Sharmistha Kar, Bernice Vincent, Greg Fischer, Moira Hayes, Natali Bravo, Anda Marcu, Vladimir Marcu, Cheri Robinson, Adora Valizadeh, Reilly Knowles, Sebastian Evans, Leigh Jeneroux, Sarah Cowling, Keith Shearsby, Julianna Thompson, Gwenda Dieleman, Samuel Riley Moro, Ben Benedict, Michelle Wilson, Susan Scott, Jay Hodgson, Benjamin E. Robinson, Beth Stewart, Abel Gingerich, Sammy Orlowski, Wyn Geleynse, Zoe Pantazopoulos, Fran Whitney, Georgina Lennard, Rebecca St. Pierre, and Maggie Shook


For more information, please visit the FCG website or contact [email protected]. 
Ukutula: Our Timeless Journeys at Museum London
Ukutula: Our Timeless Journeys
November 21, 2024 to May 11, 2025
Museum London, 421 Ridout Street North, London, ON

In Conversation: Jessica Karuhanga, Winsom Winsom, and Curator Dr. Qanita Lilla
Saturday, February 22, 2025 at 2:00 PM

Museum London, 421 Ridout Street North, London, ON

Register Now
 
Guest curated by Dr. Qanita Lilla, Associate Curator, Arts of Africa, Agnes Etherington Art Centre, developed by the Agnes Etherington Art Centre (Kingston, Ontario) and hosted by Museum London (London, Ontario), Ukutula: Our Timeless Journeys centres on a display of sixteen extraordinarily diverse traditional West African masks. These masks, part of the Agnes’ Justin and Elisabeth Lang Collection, appear in chorus with the contemporary work of five Canadian artists from the African and Asian diasporas: Anthony Gebrehiwot, Jill Glatt, Jessica Karuhanga, Camille Turner, and Winsom Winsom.

Employing photography, new media and video, textile installation and more, the artists of Ukutula: Our Timeless Journeys reflect on diasporic roots by exploring themes of identity, transformation, the body, belonging, place and regional histories. The exhibition collectively invites us to explore the relationship between the past and present, and how our physical and spiritual journeys shape who we are.

For more information about the exhibition, please visit the Museum London website. 

In addition, check out Agnes' recent video on artist Winsom Winsom below. This video is part of the series Artists at Agnes, which spotlights the work of artists in the Agnes Etherington Art Centre collection. 

Henna Magazine launches Issue One:
Resilience and Renaissance of Iraqi Art
We are delighted to share the news of Henna Magazine, a new Independent Iraqi Art Magazine. The first issue, Resilience and Renaissance of Iraqi Art was recently launched on June 27 at the French Institute in Baghdad, Iraq. Henna is a magazine that is dedicated to exploring the richness of art, culture, history, and climate change in Iraq, including the pressing challenges facing Iraq's vibrant art scene and cultural community, 

To purchase a copy, please reach out to Henna Magazine on
Instagram. 
FIMS Seminar Series: Archiving the Present with Tania Cañas
Archiving the Present:
Memory as creative practice, multi-local, and site-specific creative memory work

Presented by Postdoctoral Fellow Tania Cañas
FIMS Seminar Series 2024/2025

Wednesday, December 11, 2024, 12:00 PM–1:00PM
FNB Room 4130 or
Register on Zoom

 
Public memory practices are continual sites of struggle and contestation on unceded lands as the nation-state continually functions to relegate and dispossess memory. Archiving the Present (AtP) is a multi-site digital community archive project of "remembering as insurgent practice" (Cusicanqui 2020, p.xxxii) and memory as creative practice, from a Central American, site-specific, and multi-local perspective. The project is made up of artists and community members who are primarily of the Australian Salvadoran community, having arrived in Australia through the refugee and humanitarian program in the 80s and early 90s. Archiving the Present is a grass-roots initiative that seeks to develop alternative practices of remembering in ways that do not conform to whiteness and aesthetics of colonial forms of remembering (i.e. plaques, statues). Archiving the Present asks: who gets to be remembered and what gets to be preserved in settler-colonial Australia? How does memory and embodied archiving occur for sites deemed to have no “heritage significance” by national and state-level heritage organisations? What does it mean to engage in acts of creative remembering that sit outside of heritage regimes? How do we remember within displacement and in the context of ongoing dispossession?

For more information, please visit the Western Events Calendar here. 
Relevant and Related Links
  • aabaakwad 2024: December 5-7, 2024 co-presented by the aabaakwad collective and the Art Museum at the University of Toronto
  • From The National Gallery of Canada: Jeff Thomas: Origin by Rachelle Dickenson
  • Zeinab Dghaim—Doctoral Public Lecture: A New Method for the Digital Activation of Museum Collections: the Andalusia Collection at the Aga Khan Museum at Western University, hosted by the Department of Arts and Humanities
  • Inside. Outside. Of.: January 25, 2025 - April 13, 2025 at the Art Gallery of Mississauga, Ontario. Includes work by Ella Gonzales, David Merritt, Émilie Régnier, and Shanie Tomassini
  • From The Breach: "In Canada, UN expert slams Israeli cleansing of Gaza, 'They said it, and they've done it'"—Desmond Cole in conversation with Francesca Albanese
Visit the ECH Website
Embassy Cultural House is located on the traditional lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnaapéewak, and Chonnonton peoples, at the forks of Deshkan Ziibi (Antler River), an area subject to the Dish with One Spoon Covenant Wampum and other treaties, colonized as London, Ontario. The ECH strives to create meaningful relationships between the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island and our contributors. The ECH honours the stewardship of the many Indigenous peoples who have resided on these lands since time immemorial.

Copyright © 2024 Embassy Cultural House. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address:
514 Pall Mall Street, London, ON, N5Y 2Z6, Canada

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
0 Comments

November Updates with the Embassy Cultural House!

11/21/2024

0 Comments

 
Forest City Gallery Members' Show and Sale, Museum London Winter Launch, and the 401 Holiday Open House!
View this email in your browser
Forest City Gallery's Members' Show and Sale:
In support of FCG and Embassy Cultural House
Forest City Gallery Members' Show and Sale 
November 22, 2024 to December 20, 2024
Opening Reception: Friday, November 22 from 7PM - 9PM 
1025 Elias Street, London, ON

Forest City Gallery (FCG) is excited to announce the opening of its Members' Show and Sale, the longest-running annual exhibition at the gallery, in partnership with Embassy Cultural House. This highly anticipated event, taking place Friday, November 22 from 7-9 pm, serves as a cornerstone fundraising initiative for the gallery, supporting vital programming that fosters artistic innovation and community engagement.

The Members' Show and Sale is an important fundraiser that enables FCG to continue offering dynamic exhibitions, provide essential artistic resources, and cultivate meaningful dialogue between local, regional, and international artists. The funds raised through this event directly support the gallery's year-round activities and initiatives. This year's event will feature the work of over 50 talented local artists, including FCG members and contributors from Embassy Cultural House. It promises to be a vibrant celebration of creativity, showcasing a diverse range of artistic expressions that reflect the rich cultural fabric of our community.

Join the FCG and the ECH in celebrating the creativity and vision of our local arts community while supporting the continued growth of Forest City Gallery and Embassy Cultural House’s programming. This is an opportunity to connect with artists, discover unique works of art, and contribute to the cultural vitality of London. We look forward to seeing you at this year’s Members’ Show and Sale, in FCG’s 51st year!

For more information, please visit the FCG website or contact [email protected]. 
Museum London's 2024 Winter Launch Party!
Museum London Winter Launch Party
Thursday, November 21 from 7PM - 10PM

421 Ridout Street North, London, ON
Pay-what-you-can 
 
Explore all three floors of the Museum, meet artists and curators, and get creative with hands-on activities. Grab refreshments and sweet treats from Culinary Catering and Yaya’s Kitchen. Enjoy performances by DJ Ames and Eleanor & more!

Gather with us to celebrate our latest exhibitions:

Baapaagimaak: Weaving Endurance is new digital artwork by Anishinaabe artists Katie Wilhelm and Summer Bressette that challenges colonial perspectives and embraces the radical endurance of nature itself. 

Ukutula: Our Timeless Journeys is inspired by African dance and music. Curated by Qanita Lilla, the show invites us to move among an extraordinary diversity of traditional West African masks from the Justin and Elisabeth Lang Collection of African Art at Agnes Etherington Art Centre. They appear in chorus with five, multi-generational Canadian artists from the African and Asian diasporas: Winsom Winsom, Camille Turner, Jessica Karuhanga, Anthony Gebrehiwot and Jill Glatt. 

Esmaa Mohamoud: Glorious Bones is a sculpture made of repurposed football helmets adorned with vivid African Kente patterns. These powerful works, which are part of a larger series that has been exhibited across the country, speak to issues of race, identity, gender and sports culture.

Fore more information about the launch, please visit the Museum London website. 

RSVP HERE
Embassy Cultural House joins the 401 Holiday Open House
401 Richmond's Holiday Open House
Thursday, November 28, 2024, 5PM - 8PM
401 Richmond Street West, Toronto, ON

 
Start and finish your shopping at 401 Richmond this festive season including 20+ open artist studios, 17 galleries, 2 shops, and a licensed café with gourmet pantry! Find artwork, objects, books, toys, clothing, accessories, cards and much more. Embassy Cultural House will have publications and multiples available by ECH artists and contributors. 

For more information, contact [email protected]. To learn more about 401 Richmond, please visit their website. 

Looking for gift ideas? Give the gift of local history! Portraits of Sam Hallick: Modern Arab Presence in Early Twentieth-Century North America by Salah D. Hassan is currently featured at Attic Books in London, Ontario. Photo credit: Jamelie Hassan
Thank you to our newest ECH Contributors! 
Over the past three months, the Embassy Cultural House has added three new contributing editors to our team through the internship program with Western University's Visual Arts Department. We are grateful to Jessica Joyce, Mireya Seymour, and Anna Da Silva for the significant work and energy that they have brought to ECH programs this fall. 
Relevant and Related Links
  • From The Breach: "In Canada, UN expert slams Israeli cleansing of Gaza, 'They said it, and they've done it'"—Desmond Cole in conversation with Francesca Albanese
  • Obituary for Duncan de Kergommeaux (1927-2024)
  • From The London Free Press: "Longtime Indigenous Broadcaster Dan Smoke mourned: 'Transformative'" by Jennifer Bieman
  • From CBC News: "Murray Sinclair, former senator who led Truth and Reconciliation commission, dead at 73" by Peter Zimonjic
  • From A Space Gallery: In Loving Memory of Carole Condé
  • From Simon Fraser University, Department of English: "In Memoriam: Roy Miki, professor emeritus" by Clint Burnham
  • Obituary for Christopher Edward Smith Gittings (1962–2024)
Visit the ECH Website
Embassy Cultural House is located on the traditional lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnaapéewak, and Chonnonton peoples, at the forks of Deshkan Ziibi (Antler River), an area subject to the Dish with One Spoon Covenant Wampum and other treaties, colonized as London, Ontario. The ECH strives to create meaningful relationships between the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island and our contributors. The ECH honours the stewardship of the many Indigenous peoples who have resided on these lands since time immemorial.

Copyright © 2024 Embassy Cultural House. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address:
514 Pall Mall Street, London, ON, N5Y 2Z6, Canada

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
0 Comments

We Remember: Duncan de Kergommeaux, Dan Smoke, Murray Sinclair, Roy Miki, Carole Condé, and Chris Gittings

11/8/2024

0 Comments

 
It continues to be a heavy year for the ECH community and beyond.
View this email in your browser
It continues to be a heavy year for the ECH community and beyond. With wars raging across the globe, criminals elected into office, and the passing of cultural icons and artists, it can be hard to find light and purpose. We are turning inward this week, closer to home, to reflect on the important work that has been accomplished by many legendary artists, writers, and Elders in our community.

We are mourning the passing of Duncan de Kergommeaux, Dan Smoke, Murray Sinclair, Roy Miki, Carole Condé, and Chris Gittings, but we are cherishing and celebrating their incredible lives lived.
Ron Benner's photographic/garden installation "As The Crow Flies" at Museum London,
November 5, 2024. Photo credit: Jamelie Hassan
Embassy Cultural House mourns the loss of Dan Smoke
Elders and Knowledge Keepers Dan and Mary Lou Smoke at Museum London for Ron Benner's Maiz Barbacoa/Corn Roast in September 2022. Photo credit: Studio Kuefner Photography. 
 
Our sincere condolences to Mary Lou Smoke and family and all their relations on the recent passing of Dan Smoke. Dan was a good friend to us and always gave generously to all—sharing his knowledge to those who cared to listen.

Now he is making his journey to the spirit world. We are profoundly grateful for all the work he and Mary Lou have done together. The Faculty of Information and Media Studies at Western University is working on archiving the Smoke Signals Radio program beginning in the 1990’s, which will ensure that his voice will continue to be heard.

As Elders, they were both active in many communities and on university campuses and with the Wampum Learning Centre at Western. They were always happy and ready to work with us and our team at the Embassy Cultural House and our events were enriched by the knowledge he shared together with Mary Lou. May he rest in peace.

— Jamelie Hassan and Ron Benner --

 
For information regarding the sacred fire and funeral details, please visit his obituary on the RHB Anderson Funeral Homes website. 
Dan and Mary Lou Smoke attending the Embassy Cultural House publication launch for "An Alternative Cultural History of London, Ontario" at Museum London, September 22, 2024. Left to right: Ron Benner, Lorraine Klaasen, Olivia Mossuto, Dan Smoke, and Mary Lou Smoke. Photo credit: Jamelie Hassan
 
My heart goes out to the families, friends, and communities that today lost three amazing souls. I can only imagine how the loss of Amanda Kennedy, Dan Smoke, and Murray Sinclair is being felt in hearts and homes across this region and beyond. You are all in my thoughts—I am so grateful for the gifts of truth and knowledge that each of these leaders shared so generously.

— Tom Cull --
 
ECH Delegation to the Woodland Cultural Centre, May 12, 2022. Left to right: Lucas Kopp, Shelley Kopp, Bruno Sinder, Ira Kazi, Dan Smoke, Jamelie Hassan, Ron Benner, Patricia Deadman, and Mary Lou Smoke. Photo credit: Olivia Mossuto
Beneath the Sun: A Public Celebration of Artist Carole Condé
Carole Condé and Karl Beveridge, Carole's Garden, 2021

A Space Main Gallery
401 Richmond St W, Toronto, ON
November 9 – December 7, 2024
Public celebration of artist Carole Condé November 9, 2024, 2:00 pm–5:00 pm

 

Join A Space for a public celebration of the life and work of Carole Condé (1940 – 2024) on Saturday, November 9, 2024, 2 – 5 pm at A Space Gallery in Toronto. The exhibition runs November 9 – December 7, 2024 in the Main Gallery.

Carole Condé was a visual artist who, along with partner and collaborator Karl Beveridge, challenged the assumptions and practices of contemporary art and the international art market. Over the past 50 years she worked in collaboration with various trade union and community organizations in the production of her elaborately constructed narrative photographs portraying the lives and issues faced by working people.

Carole was among the founding members of the Mayworks Festival in Toronto in 1986 and the Workers Arts and Heritage Centre in Hamilton, Ontario, in 1996. She was also active in A Space Gallery over the past 40 years.

Carole received the Cultural Award, Ontario Federation of Labour, in 1997, honourary degrees from OCADU in 2010, and NASCAD in 2015, the Prix au mérite artistique, Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) in 2013, and the Governor General’s Award in the Visual and Media Arts (Canada), in 2022.
 

For more information, please visit the A Space website. 

As we prepared to send out this newsletter, we also received the sad news that artist, dear friend, and educator, Duncan de Kergommeaux passed away in Ottawa. Duncan was born in British Columbia in 1927. From 1970–1993 he taught in the Visual Arts Department at the University of Western Ontario where he was Chair of the Department from 1981–1984. During his years working in London, Ontario, Duncan was a dedicated supporter of artists and became involved in the ECH when our programs began in 1983 at the Embassy Hotel. He continued his enthusiastic connection when the ECH relaunched the 2020 online initiative. 

Duncan had maintained a rigorous studio practice since 1953 with over 60 solo exhibitions and several major museum retrospectives and over 100 group exhibitions since 1953 including exhibiting at various Biennials of Canadian Art and a solo show at the National Gallery of Canada. His work is in the Ottawa Art Gallery, National Gallery of Canada, Art Gallery of Ontario, Museum London, McIntosh Gallery and the Canada Council Art Bank. Duncan de Kergommeaux lived and maintained a studio in Ottawa. He was appointed to the Royal Canadian Academy (RCA) and in 2023, Duncan was awarded a life-time achievement award from the Ottawa Art Gallery which celebrated the influence of 5 established artists and their impact on the Ottawa art scene and beyond. 

More details to follow in our next ECH newsletter. 
Relevant and Related Links
  • From The London Free Press: "Longtime Indigenous Broadcaster Dan Smoke mourned: 'Transformative'" by Jennifer Bieman
  • Smoke Signals Radio Show Archive: A Welcome by Dan and Mary Lou Smoke
  • From CBC News: "Murray Sinclair, former senator who led Truth and Reconciliation commission, dead at 73" by Peter Zimonjic
  • From Lake Chapala Artists: Duncan de Kergommeaux and "Winter Days" in San Juan Cosalá, Lake Chapala by Tony Burton
  • From A Space Gallery: In Loving Memory of Carole Condé
  • From Simon Fraser University, Department of English: "In Memoriam: Roy Miki, professor emeritus" by Clint Burnham
  • From London Review of Books: "Lest We Forget" by Loubna El Amine
  • Obituary for Christopher Edward Smith Gittings (1962–2024)
  • From Democracy Now!: "Genocide as Colonial Erasure": U.N. Expert Francesca Albanese on Israel's "Intent to Destroy" Gaza
  • From n+1: "The Last Days of Mankind" by Pankaj Mishra
  • From The Walrus: "In Gaza, Language is All We Have Left" by Pacinthe Mattar
Visit the ECH Website
Embassy Cultural House is located on the traditional lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnaapéewak, and Chonnonton peoples, at the forks of Deshkan Ziibi (Antler River), an area subject to the Dish with One Spoon Covenant Wampum and other treaties, colonized as London, Ontario. The ECH strives to create meaningful relationships between the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island and our contributors. The ECH honours the stewardship of the many Indigenous peoples who have resided on these lands since time immemorial.

Copyright © 2024 Embassy Cultural House. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address:
514 Pall Mall Street, London, ON, N5Y 2Z6, Canada

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
0 Comments

TODAY: Universities Art Association of Canada (UAAC) Conference begins!

10/24/2024

0 Comments

 
The 2024 programme is hosted by Western University in London, Ontario, and many ECH contributors will be present as guests, hosts, and speakers.
View this email in your browser
Today, the Universities Art Association of Canada (UAAC) Conference begins! The 2024 programme is hosted by Western University in London, Ontario, and many ECH contributors will be present as guests, hosts, and speakers. UAAC (AAUC) provides a national voice for its membership, composed of university and college faculty, independent scholars, and other art professionals in the fields of art, art history, and visual culture. The keynote conversation, moderated by Sheri Osden Nault, brings together Emelie Chhangur, Director of the Agnes Etherington Art Centre, and Jamelie Hassan, artist, activist, and ECH Co-founder. 

This year, The Embassy Cultural House has collaborated with UAAC to present a screening of Ali Kazimi's 1997 film, Shooting Indians: A Journey with Jeffrey Thomas. This screening coincides with ECH contributor Jeff Thomas' survey exhibition, "Stories My Father Couldn't Tell Me: Jeff Thomas Origin" at the Ottawa Art Gallery and the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa until March 16, 2025.
Universities Art Association of Canada (UAAC) Conference 2024
Clockwise from top left: Jamelie Hassan with grandchildren, twins Alec and Emily, Iraboty Kazi,
Blessy Augustine, and Sharmistha Kar.
We are happy to share a range of events in which ECH contributors are involved as speakers, guests, and hosts! Check out the events below! 
 
Art Now! Speakers' Series and UAAC
Keynote Conversation 

Thursday, October 24, 2024 at 7:00 PM
Emelie Chhangur and Jamelie Hassan
Moderated by Sheri Osden Nault 
Free and open to the public
In-Person: Room 141, Talbot College Western University
Via Zoom: https://westernuniversity.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_2cPeJUoeTKq-MBCba9ciRg
 / Webinar ID: 936 7990 7969

Annual Hanny and Najet Hassan Lecture in the Faculty of Arts and Humanities
"Globalization in the Medieval World: Chinese and Central Asian Artistic Inspirations in the Islamic Mediterranean"
Dr. Fahmida Suleman
Friday, October 25, 2024 at 6:00 PM

Free and open to the public
Conron Hall, Rm 3110, University College
For more information and to RSVP online, please click here. 

____
 
A.1 Ragpickers: Refusal, Margins and the Body
Friday, October 25, 2024 at 8:30 AM
Room 247, 2nd floor, John Labatt Visual Arts Centre
Chaired by Karen Kraven and Swapnaa Tamhane

Speakers: Kate Ritchie, Erika Stocking, Jeppe Ugelvig, Sharmistha Kar

B.5 19th- and 20th-Century Ecclesiastical Art in North America:
Stained Glass, Sculpture, and Architecture

Friday, October 25, 2024 at 10:30 AM
Room 247, 2nd floor, John Labatt Visual Arts Centre
Chaired by Cody Barteet
Speakers: Shirley Ann Brown, Vajdon Sohaili, Iraboty Kazi, Jessica Ziakin-Cook


C.2 Queer Cripping, Art, and Resistance
Friday, October 25, 2024 at 2:00 PM
Room 234, 2nd floor, John Labatt Visual Arts Centre
Chaired by Ana Moyer and Iraboty Kazi
Speakers: Bracy Appeikumoh, Lucy MacKenzie Howie, Casper Sutton-Fosman


E.6 Art and the Politics of Care I
Saturday, October 26, 2024 at 8:30 AM
Room 100, 1st floor, John Labatt Visual Arts Centre
Chaired by Sarah Bassnett 
Speakers: Jennifer Orpana, Blessy Augustine, Dan Adler, Victoria MacBeath
 
Clockwise from top left: Soheila K. Esfahani, Michelle Wilson, Ashar Mobeen, and Jessica Irene Joyce.
B.8 Diasporic Bodies 2:
Diverse Experiences of Culture, Alternative Narratives Through Research Artifacts

Friday, October 25, 2024 at 10:30 AM
Room 100, 1st floor, John Labatt Visual Arts Centre
Chaired by Faseeh Saleem and Soheila K. Esfahani
Speakers: Racquel Rowe, Erika Blomgren, Jessica Karuhanga

C.1 Breaking Down: Tracking Extraction in the Museum and Gallery

Friday, October 25, 2024 at 2:00 PM
Rm 100, 1st floor, John Labatt Visual Arts Centre
Chaired by Kirsty Robertson
Speakers: Gwenyth Chao, Hailey Becker, Imogen Clendinning, Nicole Burisch

 
D.5 Public Art in Canada: 
(Re)storying the Landscape as Sites of Contemporary Insurgence/Resurgence

Friday, October 25, 2024 at 4:00 PM
Room 247, 2nd floor, John Labatt Visual Arts Centre
Chaired by Michelle Wilson
Speakers: Honoure Black, Anna Binta Diallo, Lins Demchuk, Conner Singh VanderBeek

F.1 Ecologies in Practice: Creative Response in Urgent Times

Saturday, October 26, 2024 at 10:30 AM
Room 100, 1st floor, John Labatt Visual Arts Centre
Chaired by Amanda White and Elysia French
Speakers: Camille Georgeson-Usher, Ashar “Usher” Mobeen, Leah Decter,
Lois Klassen, Natalie Doonan

F.8 Curatorial Pedagogy and Practice II

Saturday, October 26, 2024 at 10:30 AM
Room 249, 2nd floor, John Labatt Visual Arts Centre
Chaired by Elyse Longair 
Carolyn Jervis, Robin Willey, Mélika Hashemi, Soheila K. Esfahani, Ingrid Jones

G.1 Ethos of materiality: balance, bodies, branches and beinghood
Saturday, October 26, 2024 at 2:00 PM
Outdoor session, please meet at the front doors of the John Labatt Visual Arts Centre
Chaired by Clara Laratta and Stephanie Florence
Speakers: Catherine (Cathy) Chan, Jessica Irene Joyce
Ali Kazimi's Shooting Indians: A Journey with Jeffrey Thomas

Saturday, October 26, 2024 at 4:00 PM
Free at Western University
Room 137 E, 1st floor, John Labatt Visual Arts Centre


Co-presented by Embassy Cultural House and the Jarislowsky Institute for Studies in Canadian Art, Concordia University, we are happy to present a free screening of Ali Kazimi's Shooting Indians: A Journey with Jeff Thomas. Spanning over a decade, from 1984 to 1996, Shooting Indians: A Journey with Jeffrey Thomas is a documentary journey full of quiet insights and surprising twists. Starting the film as a foreign student in 1984, director Ali Kazimi begins to unravel the hidden history of the land that he has chosen as his home.

Ali Kazimi is a filmmaker, author and media artist whose work deals with race, social justice migration, history and memory. In 2019, he received a Doctor of Letters, honoris causa from the University of British Columbia. His award winning and critically acclaimed documentaries include Narmada: A Valley Rises (’94), Shooting Indians: A Journey with Jeffrey Thomas (’97), Documenting Dissent (’01), Continuous Journey (’04), Runaway Grooms (’06), Rex versus Singh (’09), Random Acts of Legacy (’16), and Beyond Extinction: Sinixt Resurgence (’22)

Ali Kazimi and Jeff Thomas are recipients of the 2019 Governor General’s Award for Visual and Media Arts. They both, independently, received this honour at the same time for their contributions to Canadian culture.

We thank VTape for their ongoing commitment over the decades to Canadian filmmakers and for making this film available for a free public screening in London, Ontario.
Now Available: An Alternative Cultural History of
London, Ontario: Art and Activism 

An Alternative Cultural History of London, Ontario: Art and Activism, 2024
Edited by Jamelie Hassan and Ron Benner 
$25.00 CAD (+ postage), 240 pages, full colour offset printing


The most recent Embassy Cultural House publication is an anthology that reveals the vibrant yet often overlooked cultures of London, Ontario. The history of collective action within the city is narrated through essays, conversations, poetry, and archival images. It includes texts and images by 36 contributors including Lillian Allen, Robin Cary Askew, Blessy Augustine, Christina Battle, Ron Benner, Carl Cadogan, Tom Cull, Greg Curnoe, Stan Denniston, Omar El Akkad, Robert Fréchette, Wyn Geleynse, John Greyson, Janice Gurney, Jamelie Hassan, Salah D. Hassan, Tariq Hassan Gordon, Iraboty Kazi, David Neil Lee, Tarek Loubani, Miriam Love, Michael Lynk, Olivia Mossuto, Shelley Niro, Kim Ondaatje, Andy Patton, James Stewart Reaney, Christopher Régimbal, Judith M. Rodger, Jenna Rose Sands, John Scully, Ruth Skinner, Dan Smoke, Mary Lou Smoke, Diana Tamblyn, and Don Vincent.

Their writings and accompanying images add to the previous histories written about London, Ontario. The emphasis in this anthology is on art and activism and presents a historical perspective beginning in the 1950s through to the present. 

To order a copy, please email the [email protected]. Copies are also available for purchase at Forest City Gallery, Attic Books, Brown and Dickson Bookstore, and Shop Museum London. 

Mireya Seymour (left) and Emmy Meredith (right) at the book launch for "An Alternative Cultural History of London, Ontario: Art and Activism" at Museum London, September 22, 2024. Photo credit: Sarah Munro
Relevant and Related Links
  • A Tribute to Lebanon: Resilience in the Face of Adversity: Exhibition and Call for Support, October 15, 2024 - October 31, 2024 at Contemporary Art Platform (CAP), Kuwait 
  • In Search of a Loss of Self: The Language of Alterity: September 20 - December 7, 2024 at The McIntosh Gallery, Western University, London, ON
  • From Elsewhere to Here: Sanaz Mazinani: September 20 - December 7, 2024 at The McIntosh Gallery, Western University, London, ON
  • Letter from Michelle Chawla, Director and CEO of the Canada Council for the Arts, "It's Time to Change the Story of the Arts," October 17, 2024
  • From n+1: "The Last Days of Mankind" by Pankaj Mishra
  • From The Walrus: "In Gaza, Language is All We Have Left" by Pacinthe Mattar
  • From The Maple: "Are Canadian Journalists Accomplices to Israel's Genocide?" by Davide Mastracci
  • From Hyperallergic: "Nan Golden Among 200 Jewish Activists Arrested at NYC Protest for Palestine" by Maya Pontone
  • Light: Visionary Perspectives: July 13, 2024 – March 17, 2025 at the Aga Khan Museum, Toronto, ON
  • From Accenti: "To Seize the World: A Review of Carmela Circelli's Novel 'Love and Rain'" by Andy Patton
Visit the ECH Website
Embassy Cultural House is located on the traditional lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnaapéewak, and Chonnonton peoples, at the forks of Deshkan Ziibi (Antler River), an area subject to the Dish with One Spoon Covenant Wampum and other treaties, colonized as London, Ontario. The ECH strives to create meaningful relationships between the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island and our contributors. The ECH honours the stewardship of the many Indigenous peoples who have resided on these lands since time immemorial.

Copyright © 2024 Embassy Cultural House. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address:
514 Pall Mall Street, London, ON, N5Y 2Z6, Canada

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
0 Comments

JOIN THE LAUNCH: “An Alternative Cultural History of London, Ontario: Art and Activism"

9/20/2024

0 Comments

 
Launch parties for Embassy Cultural House's newest publication, corn roasts, exhibition openings, and more!
View this email in your browser
Welcome back to the Embassy Cultural House newsletter! Our team has had quite the busy schedule throughout the summer—working hard on our latest publication, which will be launched THIS SUNDAY!

We can hardly believe it—all 240-pages of "An Alternative Cultural History of London, Ontario: Art and Activism" will be available on Sunday, September 22, 2024. It is a very special occasion, as this book has been in production for over a year and includes essays, poems, and artworks from 36 contributors. The launch of the publication will happen in tandem with Ron Benner's annual Maiz Barbacoa corn roast, which will take place at Museum London in collaboration with Doors Open.

If you are unable to make the in-person launch event, we are happy to share that there will be an online launch event scheduled to take place on Saturday, September 28, 2024 at 1PM ET. To RSVP for the online launch, please email [email protected]! We will send along the Zoom link.
Ron Benner's Maiz Barbacoa Corn Roast and
Embassy Cultural House Book Launch
Ron Benner roasting corn at Museum London, 2022. Photo credit: Studio Kuefner Photography

DOORS OPEN: Live. Work. Play: In the Forest City
Sunday, September 22, 2024 | 1:00 – 4:00 PM
Free at Museum London

421 Ridout Street N, London, ON


Join London artist and ECH Co-founder Ron Benner at his garden installation, As The Crow Flies. This annual community gathering features fresh roasted corn on the cob with butter, salt, Mexican chili powder, and fresh lime juice. Part sculpture, part installation, and part performance, this event will feature Benner’s roving corn-roasting wagon, Maiz Barbacoa. Maiz Barbacoa includes images of corn roasters from around the world and the names of corn in over 50 languages.

An Alternative Cultural History of London, Ontario: Art and Activism Book Launch
An Embassy Cultural House Publication
Special Launch Price – $20.00 (Regular $25.00)

 

An Alternative Cultural History of London, Ontario: Art and Activism, 2024
Edited by Jamelie Hassan and Ron Benner and designed by Olivia Mossuto
Published by the Embassy Cultural House, 240 pages, full colour

This anthology reveals the vibrant yet often overlooked cultures of London, Ontario. The history of collective action within the city is narrated through essays, conversations, poetry, and archival images. It includes texts and images by 36 contributors:

Lillian Allen | Robin Cary Askew | Blessy Augustine | Christina Battle | Ron Benner | Carl Cadogan | Tom Cull | Greg Curnoe | Stan Denniston | Omar El Akkad | Robert Fréchette | Wyn Geleynse | John Greyson | Janice Gurney | Jamelie Hassan | Salah D. Hassan | Tariq Hassan Gordon | Iraboty Kazi | David Neil Lee | Tarek Loubani | Miriam Love | Michael Lynk | Olivia Mossuto | Shelley Niro | Kim Ondaatje | Andy Patton | James Stewart Reaney | Christopher Régimbal | Judith M. Rodger | Jenna Rose Sands | John Scully | Ruth Skinner | Dan Smoke | Mary Lou Smoke | Diana Tamblyn | Don Vincent

Their writings and accompanying images add to the previous histories written about London, Ontario. The emphasis in this anthology is on art and activism and presents a historical perspective beginning in the 1950s through to the present.

An Alternative Cultural History of London, Ontario: Art and Activism is the Embassy Cultural House’s ninth printed publication since 2020. The ECH is grateful to the following for the financial support of the ECH’s programs and for this publication: the London Arts Council, the City of London, Ontario Arts Council, the Province of Ontario, the Canada Council for the Arts, Ottawa, the Forest City Gallery, Arts & Humanities, Western University, London, Ontario, Faculty of Information & Media Studies, Western University, London, Ontario and Museum London.

The editors express their gratitude to the dedication of the ECH team and all the contributors and supporters from across Canada and internationally who are an integral and essential part of the work that has been accomplished. This publication is a tribute to the collective effort of “what solidarity looks like”.

McIntosh Gallery Fall Exhibition Schedule Opening Reception: 
In Search of a Loss of Self: The Language of Alterity and
Sanaz Mazinani: From Elsewhere to Here
Jamelie Hassan, The Copyist, 1995. Mixed media including black and white photograph, copper, ceramic tablet, ceramic slippers, 18th century manuscript Arabic/ Persian grammar, wooden bookstand, child's pencil sharpener, cotton cloth and wooden platform. McIntosh Gallery Collection, Western University. Purchase, The Walter and Duncan Gordon Charitable Foundation, 1996

Friday, September 20, 2024 from 6:00 to 8:00 PM
Remarks @ 6:30 PM
Free | Open to the public

McIntosh Gallery, Western University, London, ON
 

Join the McIntosh Gallery in celebrating the launch of their fall exhibition schedule among campus partners and community members. 

Expanding on Edward Said’s original thesis in Orientalism (1978), which focused primarily on the colonial [re]imagining of the East, In Search of a Loss of Self: The Language of Alterity curated by Soheila Esfahani and Mélika Hashemi is a journey of self-discovery. First and second-generation Muslim-Canadian artists and scholars, Esfahani and Hashemi perform a survey of the McIntosh Gallery Permanent Collection, yet fail to see themselves reflected in collected works or under database search keywords. Consequently, they argue that Islamic art and artists fall into the cracks of collection acquisition practices.  

Sanaz Mazinani: From Elsewhere to Here curated by Helen Gregory, brings together elements of Mazinani’s art practice that are taken from multiple previous exhibitions, creating an archaeological survey of the past and present. Vision, perception, conflict, and war have been important themes in Mazinani’s practice for two decades, and still resonate within her practice and the broader socio-cultural landscape today.
 

Ron Benner's Maiz Barbacoa Corn Roast at
Corn = Life: The Power of Naming
Corn = Life, June 25, 2024. Photo credit: Olivia Mossuto
Monday, September 30, 2024, 11AM - 4PM
248 Steelcase Road East, Markham, ON
 

Industrial Arts Sculpture Garden presents a unique fusion of two artists’ visions that interweaves living native plants with evocative historical imagery. Curated by Yuluo Wei and presented by Steelcase Art Projects from June 23 to October 26, 2024, this artwork is a tribute to Indigenous peoples’ agricultural and cultural heritage.

At its heart lies a striking white-purple trellis, an homage to the 1613 Two Row Wampum Treaty—a foundational agreement between Dutch settlers and Jeff Thomas’ Haudenosaunee ancestors. Ron Benner plants a rich tapestry of culturally significant native American plants and corn, including varieties Peruvian Purple Maize, Mandan Bride, Assiniboian Flint, and Iroquoian Rainbow, which grow to embrace the structure. These are accompanied by tomatoes, chilli peppers, marigolds, sunflowers and many others, creating a rich flora that honours its Indigenous origins.

On Monday, September 30, 2024, join artist Ron Benner for an afternoon of roasted corn—an opportunity to honour the very plant that both Benner and Thomas pay homage to in their installation.

GardenShip and State and the Hibernaculum Collective 
at Thames Art Gallery

GardenShip and State
Curated by Jeff Thomas and Patrick Mahon
August 23 – October 20, 2024
Thames Art Gallery, Chatham, ON

 

Artists: Ron Benner, Lori Blondeau, Sean Caulfield, Anindita Chakraborty, Paul Chartrand, Tom Cull, Amelia Fay, Michael Farnan, Joan Greer, Jamelie Hassan, Sharmistha Kar, Jessica Karuhanga, Mark Kasumovic, Patrick Mahon, Olivia Mossuto, Quinn Smallboy, Ashley Snook, Adrian Stimson, Jeff Thomas, Andres Villar, Michelle Wilson

This exhibition brings together 21 artists and writers who engage in decolonial critique, environmental activism, and twenty-first century artistic practices to address what is arguably the problem of our times: environmental catastrophe. Inspired and aided by the living Two Row Treaty, originated between the Haudenosaunee and the Dutch in 1613, the project asks how we can work together and create together as a global community to restore the planet – while respecting differences and seeking to repair divisions and address injustices brought about by colonialism.


Co-curated by Jeff Thomas and Patrick Mahon, the exhibition features a vast array of works, many produced over a two-year period and originally shown at Museum London in 2021-22. The results of conversations between the artists and writers, as well as with members of local communities, those artworks are being presented at the Thames Art Gallery alongside new and updated projects, offering a multi-sensory experience that inhabits the main gallery, and moves upward into the mezzanine space. Comprising textiles, photography, sculpture, video, gardening, and installation, the show invites gallery participants to see, to hear and to engage with aesthetically rich and culturally complex artworks that are simultaneously provocative and challenging—and also sources of hope.

For this version of GardenShip and State, environmental projects by artists and activists from the Chatham region are being highlighted on the mezzanine, as well. Engaged in tree planting, pollinator gardens, harvesting and creating with wild clay, organic gardening, and working to understand and protect habitats, the contributions of the Hibernaculum Collective enhance the important visual conversation that GardenShip brings to the Thames Art Gallery.

For more information about GardenShip and State please visit the project website or view the project’s Instagram. GardenShip and State exhibition catalogues are available for purchase at the Thames Art Gallery or through Museum London website.

Hibernaculum Collection: Troubled Critters & Healing Spells. Photo credit: Alia Fortune Weston

Hibernaculum Collective: Troubled Critters & Healing Spells
Presented in collaboration with GardenShip and State

 

Collective members: Andrea Nickerson, Alia Fortune Weston, Faye Mullen, Joce Tremblay, Nat Tremblay, and Sarah Couture-McPhail in collaboration with Amy Soberano, Mike & Deb Tremblay, Rashel Tremblay, Emily, Oddy, Saria, Magnolia, the land, wilds and waters.

Troubled Critters & Healing Spells is an ever-evolving eco-art project by the Hibernaculum Collective, a diverse group of artists, storytellers and earth workers using the Tremblay family farm as their base of operations. This project is included as a locally based component of the GardenShip and State exhibition at the Thames Art Gallery in Chatham, exploring land and water decolonization, restoration, relationship and reciprocity through traditional wild clay processes.

For this exhibition the collective foraged wild clay, exploring how honourable harvest might differ from its historical use as a commodity for settling, farming and industrially producing clay tiles by some of their ancestors. Gatherings and feasts were held with family and friends throughout the project to process the clay, fire their forms, and discuss what decolonization and healing the land and waters means to them, generated through artistic and collaborative processes.

New Roles! Ruth Skinner and Adi Berardini

Congratulations to Ruth Skinner, SASAH's new Community Engagement and Outreach Coordinator, and Adi Berardini, Forest City Gallery's new Executive Director!
 

We are happy to share that Dr. Ruth Skinner has taken up the position of Community Engagement and Outreach Coordinator for SASAH at Western University. Many of you will know Ruth, who recently completed her PhD in Western's Department of Visual Arts. She has been teaching SASAH's Digital Literacies Course since 2020. In her most recent role as Executive Director of the Forest City Gallery she has revitalized engagement with programming that is inclusive, impactful, and generative. 

We are also very happy to congratulate Adi Berardini on her new role as Forest City Gallery's Executive Director. Forest City Gallery is excited to welcome Londoner Adi Berardini to the role of Gallery Executive Director. Adi is an artist, writer, and editor. She has an MA in Art History from Western University and a BFA in Cultural + Critical Practice from Emily Carr University. She is the founder and editor of the publication Femme Art Review, which provides space for women and LGBTQ2S+ writers to reflect on art and culture. You can find more of her writing through Femme Art Review, VANDOCUMENT, LIVE Biennale, and Issue Mag. 

Artcite is moving to Ford City!

Artcite Inc. is a non-profit, artist-run centre for the contemporary arts located in Windsor, Ontario, dedicated exclusively to expanding the visibility of contemporary arts within the region and advancing the professional presentation, promotion, and animation of contemporary art forms.

Artcite’s move to Ford City is a crucial step in the mission to continue offering innovative programs and exhibitions that inspire and engage the community.

The new location will offer many benefits: 
  • It will be fully wheelchair accessible and will allow Artcite to offer consistent year-round programming. 
  • A new reception area and front office will enable Artcite to offer public access to the physical archives, which will function as a reference library.
  • There will also be two gallery spaces: one for major juried exhibitions and related programming, and one for local exhibitions, residencies, workshops, and community events.
For this move to be successful, however, Artcite will need considerable help from the community. Artcite is aiming to raise $20,000 to fund necessary renovations, including new interior walls, track lighting, flooring, archive storage, and more. Your support is invaluable in helping Artcite achieve their mission and continue their work.

Thank you for considering a donation to Artcite Inc. Together, we can foster a vibrant, creative community, and expand the visibility of contemporary arts within our region.

Relevant and Related Links
  • Helen Haller (1943-2019), owner and operator of the Embassy Hotel for nearly 30 years, is inducted into the London Music Hall of Fame at the 2024 Forest City London Music Awards: "London Music Hall of Fame Class of 2024"
  • Congratulations to Dot Tuer, Professor of Visual and Critical Studies at OCAD University and ECH contributor, on her appointment as Massey OCAD U Fellow 
  • From The Walrus: "Why Did Canada's Top Art Gallery Push Out a Visionary Curator?" by Jason McBride  
  • From The Walrus: "How the Giller Prize Became Associated with Genocide" by Josiah Neufeld
  • From Accenti: "To Seize the World: A Review of Carmela Circelli's Novel 'Love and Rain'" by Andy Patton
  • Light: Visionary Perspectives: July 13, 2024 – March 17, 2025 at the Aga Khan Museum, Toronto, ON
  • Congratulations to bill bissett and Susie Matthias on receiving the Order of Canada in June. From CBC News "Poets bill bissett, Sylvia D. Hamilton, author Solomon Ratt among new Order of Canada appointees" and London Free Press "London mouth artist named to Order of Canada"
  • Not By Andy Warhol: June 23 - October 13, 2024 at Gallery Stratford, Stratford, ON
Visit the ECH Website
Embassy Cultural House is located on the traditional lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnaapéewak, and Chonnonton peoples, at the forks of Deshkan Ziibi (Antler River), an area subject to the Dish with One Spoon Covenant Wampum and other treaties, colonized as London, Ontario. The ECH strives to create meaningful relationships between the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island and our contributors. The ECH honours the stewardship of the many Indigenous peoples who have resided on these lands since time immemorial.

Copyright © 2024 Embassy Cultural House. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address:
514 Pall Mall Street, London, ON, N5Y 2Z6, Canada

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
0 Comments

June Updates with the Embassy Cultural House!

6/10/2024

1 Comment

 
*|MC_PREVIEW_TEXT|*
View this email in your browser
Corn = Life: The Power of Naming
Ron Benner and Jeff Thomas at Steelcase Art Projects
Zein Saadani-Gordon and Ron Benner working on Corn = Life. Photo credit: Olivia Mossuto
Corn = Life: The Power of Naming
Ron Benner and Jeff Thomas

June 23 - October 26, 2024
Opening Event: June 23, 2024, 2-4 PM
248 Steelcase Road East, Markham, ON
 

Industrial Arts Sculpture Garden 2024 presents a unique fusion of two artists’ visions that interweaves living native plants with evocative historical imagery. Curated by Yuluo Wei and presented by Steelcase Art Projects, this artwork is a tribute to Indigenous peoples’ agricultural and cultural heritage.

At its heart lies a striking white-purple trellis, an homage to the 1613 Two Row Wampum Treaty—a foundational agreement between Dutch settlers and Jeff Thomas’ Haudenosaunee ancestors. Ron Benner plants a rich tapestry of culturally significant native American plants and corn, including varieties Peruvian Purple Maize, Mandan Bride, Assiniboian Flint, and Iroquoian Rainbow, which grow to embrace the structure. These are accompanied by tomatoes, chilli peppers, marigolds, sunflowers and many others, creating a rich flora that honours its Indigenous origins.

Jeff Thomas’s photographs connect deeply with Ron Benner’s garden and serve as personal and collective contemplation on the environmental and societal ramifications of broken promises. The Two Row Treaty symbolizes mutual recognition and autonomy. Reflecting this spirit, both artists contribute to the garden with a sense of mutual respect and peaceful coexistence.

"The Art of Banksy Without Limits: The Exploitation of an Artist" by Shelley Kopp

Facade of The Art of Banksy "Without Limits" exhibition in London, ON. Photo credit: Jamelie Hassan

The Art of Banksy "Without Limits": The Exploitation of an Artist
Shelley Kopp, ECH Contributing Editor


"The Art of Banksy 'Without Limits' debuted in London on April 18 and ran until June 2 at 140 Dundas Street, a vacant space that holds the exhibition comfortably. We went on a Monday, around lunch, and were surprised at the number of people who were also there. The tickets range in price from about $27 for children and seniors on a weekday to $72 for a premium adult ticket on a Saturday, which also gives you a book on Banksy and a 'paint-your-own' t-shirt. The exhibition begins with a video summary of Banksy’s work, especially films and documentaries he has participated in. It is hard to hear but visually interesting. Next up is a hologram room that effectively depicts a life-size Banksy spray painting works, sneaking around back alleys, and running from the police. Indeed, as the voice narrates, 'police response time' is his thematic impulse, like 'Monet had light'...

Read More

FRAMES: Before Stonewall by Greta Schiller & Robert Rosenberg

Friday, June 14 at 7PM 
TAP Centre for Creativity, 203 Dundas St., London, ON

$10 admission 
(no one turned away for lack of funds) 
Projected on 16mm film

In partnership with Western University's Film Studies Program, FRAMES presents a 16mm screening of Greta Schiller & Robert Rosenberg's landmark 1984 documentary, Before Stonewall, a passionate cultural history of America's Queer activist community and the fight for liberation during the first half of the 20th Century. 

Preceded by two short films by the legendary filmmaker, Kenneth Anger (1927-2023).

Program: 

Kustom Kar Kommandos 
Kenneth Anger | 1965 | USA | 3 minutes 

Puce Moment 
Kenneth Anger | 1949 | USA | 6 minutes 

Before Stonewall: The Making of a Gay & Lesbian Community 
Greta Schiller & Robert Rosenberg | 1984 | USA | 87 minutes

Amnesty International Book Club presents Omar El Akkad

Amnesty International Book Club: Omar El Akkad
World Refugee Day
June 20, 2024, 7:00-8:30PM on Zoom


Join award-winning author, Omar El Akkad, in conversation with host, Keosha Love. Don't miss your chance to win one of ten signed copies of his award-winning book, What Strange Paradise. This exclusive event will take place on Zoom on World Refugee Day, June 20 from 7-8:30 PM EDT.
 

  • Win Free Signed Books: Enter to win one of ten signed copies of What Strange Paradise!

  • □️ Download the Discussion Guide: Get ready for this event with the Book Club Discussion Guide, available now for download.

Register Now

Museum London Launch Party: Summer Solstice Edition

Ron Benner's photographic garden installation, "As The Crow Flies," summer 2022. 

Season Launch Party: Summer Solstice Edition
Thursday, June 20, 7-10 PM
Museum London, 
421 Ridout Street North, London, ON
pay-what-you-can at the door!   


Museum London is kicking off the summer by celebrating eight new exhibitions, a line-up of fantastic activities, announcing a thrilling new curatorial project and funding partnership, and launching a new artist-designed t-shirt and a book hot off the press… 

All three floors will be open to explore, get creative in the studio with a hands-on project, enjoy musical sets by DJ Deem J and special guests Juice Joint, sip on a refreshment, take in the view from the terrace, and connect with hundreds of close friends, including artists and program contributors. 

The summer highlight is Christina Battle: Under Metallic Skies, which sets video and multimedia installations made in the last decade in dialogue with ongoing video series, new textile-centered artworks, and web-based, participatory projects. Battle encourages critical thinking, solidarity, and action on the issue of our time: the destruction of the environment and the natural world. With a mix of deep research and social activism, Battle’s work is relevant, urgent, and pushes the boundaries of contemporary art and the role of the artist. A new book designed by Lauren Wickware with texts by Cassandra Getty (ML Curator of Art), Geneviève Wallen, and Scott Miller Berry accompanies the exhibition and will be released at the event! For more information on the event, please visit Museum London's website. 

cornfield cosmography: Nick Johnson at the St. Thomas–Elgin Public Art Centre

June 22 to August 10, 2024
Opening Event: Saturday, June 22, 2024, 1-3 PM
St. Thomas–Elgin Public Art Centre, 301 Talbot St., St Thomas, ON
Gallery One & Two

 
Almost all of Nick Johnson's drawings since the 1980's, not counting the stones, have been done in cornfields, or rather, on the edges of cornfields. That is to say, up until 2007, the perspective represented in the drawings was usually that of someone looking at the cornfield from outside. But beginning in that year he moved fully into the cornfield, looking for openings where he could be surrounded, where there was nothing but the ground to sit on, and the sun, and the corn, in motion from any breeze, growing into the sky on all sides. For more information, please visit the St. Thomas–Elgin Public Art Centre website. 
From the Archives of Jamelie Hassan: May 30, 1998

Introduction (excerpt) for Lillian Allen
Victoria Park, London, Ontario

 
A few months ago Barbara MacQuarrie approached me to work with her and the Sexual Assault Centre London on a program called Celebrating Survival. She said she wanted to bring Lillian Allen to London for this year’s 4th annual event. My response to her was that anyone that was trying to bring Lillian Allen to London was someone I would want to work with.

Since the first time I witnessed Lillian read/perform at the Forest City Gallery around 1983, I recognized a powerful spirit. Originally from the Caribbean, Lillian has lived in Canada since the mid 70's. She is one of Canada’s most compelling & inspiring artists and is a creative force that has motivated artists, community activists & people of conscious both in Canada and internationally “to recreate and transform ourselves and the values that are part of us”. On another occasion in 1990, Lillian returned to London to be part of the Siting Resistance series of exhibitions & events organized by Ron Benner for the Embassy Cultural House in cooperation with the Cross Cultural Learner Centre & Forest City Gallery. Lillian’s energy and her ability to change communities wherever she goes makes her visit here to London today in this context of the Celebrating Survival program especially significant.
Jamelie Hassan (left) and Lillian Allen (right) at Ron Benner's photographic garden installation, "As The Crow Flies" at Museum London, London, ON, fall 2022. Photo credit: Ron Benner
In 2024, the Ontario Arts Council (OAC), in partnership with the League of Canadian Poets (LCP), recently announced the creation of the Lillian Allen Prize and the Lillian Allen Emerging Artist Prize, which recognizes and celebrates spoken word poetry artists working in English or French. Two prizes will be awarded annually: one to an established artist and one to an emerging artist, based on their respective bodies of work. 
Sheltering as Radical Care: Cleaning, Stitching, and Gathering around the Antler River with Mikaila Stevens and Michelle Wilson

Announcing "Sheltering as Radical Care: Cleaning, Stitching, and Gathering around the Antler River," a new Embassy Cultural House project led by Michelle Wilson and Mikaila Stevens. Throughout the summer of 2024, Michelle and Mikaila will offer six two-hour bi-weekly drop-in workshop sessions at Indwell's Embassy Commons building.

The Deshkan Ziibi, or Thames River, is an artery that connects communities, human and more than human, in the London area. Unfortunately, the River and its banks have become a site of contention as unhoused community members have made their homes upon its banks. Some organizations, such as Indwell and Antler River Rally, have taken up the responsibility of providing care for the River and those who face housing and mental health challenges. As part of this initiative, Michelle and Mikaila have partnered with these organizations to create artwork that builds connections from these points of contention. They plan to collaboratively generate a gathering shelter using reclaimed plastic collected during river cleanups.

At a time when some of this city's leaders are demonizing marginalized people and their structures, this shelter will be a silent protest against their denigration. The partnership intends for the shelter to be hung in Indwell's Embassy Commons building as a tapestry when not in use. We look forward to gathering beneath it for years to come.

This project is funded by the Ontario Arts Council's Artists through the Community Project Grant, and we thank the government of Ontario for its support. 

Eric Stach Interviewed for Jazz on the Rideau by Ian MacKenzie
"On April 23, 1974, four musicians recorded an avant garde classic in a studio in London, Ontario. For many years, the album Invisible Roots, was what vinyl collectors term 'a white whale'—and selling for upwards of 100 dollars. Fortunately for the rest of us, the album was reissued in 2021 and is now also available as a digital download. 

The London Experimental Jazz Quartet (LEJQ) was a little known band from London, Ontario. The driving force behind the band was Eric Stach. 

Eric Stach came to London in 1966. He reports that he fell under the influence of the Nihilist Spasm Band shortly after arriving and hearing them play at the York Hotel, 'soon to fall hopelessly into the depths of free improvisation music'..."

Read More
Relevant and Related Links
  • From CBC News London: "Hundreds attend solemn vigil 3 years after London, Ont., truck attack" by Alessio Donnini and Isha Bhargava 
  • From the Bonavista Biennale: "Dr. Heather Igloliorte announced as 2025 Bonavista Biennale Curator" 
  • Light: Visionary Perspectives: July 13, 2024–March 17, 2025 at the Aga Khan Museum
  • From Sarah Kenzior's Substack: "Red Lines" 
  • From The Indigenous Curatorial Collective / Collectif des commissaires autochtones (ICCA): Let Wanda Speak (Update), June 4, 2024
  • Marlene Creates receives an Honorary Doctorate from Memorial University, St. John's, Newfoundland
  • Don McKay receives The Lifetime Recognition Award from The Griffin Poetry Prize 
  • Madweyàshkà / Like a Wave: June 18, 2024–May 19, 2025 at the Âjagemô Art Space at the Canada Council Art Bank
  • From the Ontario Arts Council: Arts For All Ontarians
Visit the ECH Website
Embassy Cultural House is located on the traditional lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnaapéewak, and Chonnonton peoples, at the forks of Deshkan Ziibi (Antler River), an area subject to the Dish with One Spoon Covenant Wampum and other treaties, colonized as London, Ontario. The ECH strives to create meaningful relationships between the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island and our contributors. The ECH honours the stewardship of the many Indigenous peoples who have resided on these lands since time immemorial.

Copyright © 2024 Embassy Cultural House. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address:
514 Pall Mall Street, London, ON, N5Y 2Z6, Canada

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
1 Comment

​“The Art of Banksy Without Limits:” The Exploitation of an Artist

6/9/2024

1 Comment

 
Shelley Kopp, ECH Contributing Editor

​
The Art of Banksy
“Without Limits" debuted in London on April 18th and has been extended until July 28th at 140 Dundas Street, a vacant space that holds the exhibition comfortably. We went on a Monday, around lunch, and were surprised at the number of people who were also there. The tickets range in price from about $27 for children and seniors on a weekday to $72 for a premium adult ticket on a Saturday, which also gave you a book on Banksy and a “paint-your-own” t-shirt. The exhibition begins with a video summary of Banksy’s work, especially films and documentaries he has participated in. It is hard to hear, but visually interesting. Next up is a hologram room that effectively depicts a life-size Banksy spray painting works, sneaking around back alleys, and running from the police. Indeed, as the voice narrates, “police response time” is his thematic impulse like “Monet had light”.
​
That is where my problems began. While the 3-D Banksy is effective in seeing what he does, when someone asked me, “is this Banksy talking?”, the answer must be “no.” 
Picture
Facade of “The Art of Banksy: Without Limits" in London, Ontario. Photo credit: Jamelie Hassan
The voice is not British. While little is known about Banksy, we do know he is now about 50 years old and originally from Bristol, UK (or at least that is where he pops up in 1990 as part of a group of underground artists), so a voice without an English accent is likely not Banksy’s voice. The voice actually had the cadence of an artificially-generated narrator but there is no way to know since there is no description of what this is. Which highlights the main concern.
​

​The show, while giving lots of information about Banksy, including a comprehensive timeline of this work across several walls, fails to explain the things that usual museum-goers might expect. From where does the exhibition information come? What is the material of the images on display—are they works on papers? On canvas? Are they digitized images? Is the stencil on the wall actual paint and who did it? Some wall labels were informative as to the historical context of the image, but very few describe the material form of the image itself. A few works were archival prints; several are signed, limited-edition prints; the majority do not convey in what form the object is. Yes, it is a Banksy “image” or “object,” but Banksy mostly spray paints on walls in exotic locales far from London, Ontario, so what exactly are we looking at?

The exhibition did a fine job of complicating matters of “originality” in our current age of digitally immersive experiences, artificially generated images, and non-fungible token (NFTs—the craze where digital rights to digital imagery and video are sold for astronomical prices in online auctions). Most people attending the show are led to believe, by carefully crafted wording on the ticket website, to believe they are seeing “original” works by Banksy, but in fact the word “original” applies to the fact that the works are created for this exhibit and so they are original to this experience. It is a meticulously constructed description that avoids litigation. If one goes to the production’s website, not just Budweiser Garden’s ticketing website, there is a clear stamp on the main page stating, “unauthorized exhibition” but that is not where search engines take you.

The fact is that Banksy has nothing to do with creating this travelling show, nor the other touring companies displaying his art, nor did he sanction any of them. Indeed, he has implored people not to support them. For an artist that spent a large portion of his early career lampooning commercialism, consumerism, and capitalism (see the documentary Banksy produced from 2010, Exit Through the Gift Shop) this use of his material is deeply ironic and the show pulses with paradoxical moments. For example, there is an image of Banksy’s illustration of the commodification of Jean-Michel Basquiat entitled, BanksyTM Banksquiat that was sold in Banksy’s pop-up shop, “Gross Domestic Product” in 2017. Banksy understood the absurdity of marketing the already marketed, but do we? In paying to attend a show that centres on a living artists’ images, we support a production company touring the world with no benefit to the artist. Banksy receives nothing from any of the touring companies bearing his name. They also make a lot of money using images and objects that are not “original” – in that the majority of items displayed are neither limited edition prints sold to collectors nor museum pieces but rather created by the production company for the exhibition. In Seoul, when the public found out that the show was mostly replicas, the production company apologized and offered a refund. The company says fewer than one percent of attendees asked for one.

This made me wonder as I wandered, how many of the exhibition visitors around me understood what they were seeing and whether they would care if they did know. They were certainly learning a lot about Banksy and street art, but would the fact that the artist was not benefiting in any way from the money flowing through the show give pause? Would it even be a concern to the average audience member?

I would like to think it would matter because we are, after all, in the hometown of the original movement to pay visual artists an equitable amount for their work and give them a share in the profits. In 1968, London artists including Jack Chambers, Tony Urquhart, and Kim Ondaatje organized collectively to demand recognition for artists’ copyright and to produce an annual fee schedule. This came to be known as CARFAC (Canadian Artists’ Representation/Le front des artistes canadiens). Nearly sixty years later, London’s citizens should care about the source of images they are looking at and to whom the money goes when art is shown. Especially here in this city, we must celebrate and defend the right of artists to be paid when their artwork is exhibited.

Picture
​
​
Shelley Kopp earned  a Ph.D.  from the Visual Arts Department at the University of Western Ontario in the summer of 2023. Her area of research focuses on the movement of  traditional artwork to digital media. She examines the concerns and advantages of these forms of representation for the museum which both hosts the original works and disseminates digital copies to their website and to social media.
1 Comment

Michelle Owusu-Ansah, Misha Bower, Midswim, and Embassy Cultural House at Innovation Works

4/26/2024

0 Comments

 
*|MC_PREVIEW_TEXT|*
View this email in your browser
Michelle Owusu-Ansah, Misha Bower, Midswim, and Embassy Cultural House at Innovation Works!
Saturday, April 27, 2024
Innovation Works, 201 King Street, London, ON
Doors 6:30PM / Show 7:00PM
$13 in advance / $15 or PWYC at the door

An evening of spoken word and music featuring musical headliner MIDSWIM of Guelph, with local acts Michelle Owusu-Ansah of Spoken Culture, and musician and storyteller Misha Bower. Also featuring a regional spotlight with Emmy Meredith, showcasing the current exhibition from Embassy Cultural House: A Community of Trees. Presented by Pillar Nonprofit Network, this is a multi-arts community collaboration you won't want to miss! To buy tickets in advance, click the link below! 
 

Midswim is the project of Claire Whitehead, a musician based in Guelph ON, who has been collaborating and touring with bands (Forest City Lovers, Blimp Rock, Kelly McMichael) for the past 15 years. Whitehead writes lyrical and melody-driven songs on guitar, occasionally using the violin to create a background of atmospheric loops. Her songs provide a safe harbour for longing, loneliness and reflection and have been described by listeners as “elemental” and “alive”.

Misha Bower is a writer and musician based in London, Ontario. Her work, literary and musical, is character-driven and often focused on the idiosyncratic ways people cope with and internalize life experience. Her main literary work is a short story collection called Music for Uninvited Guests, and in 2019, she released a full-length album called Trying to Have it All. Misha will be joining this lineup with a blend of music and storytelling, accompanied by guitarist Will Kidman.

Michelle Owusu-Ansah is a second-year law student at Western Law and the founder of Spoken Culture, an organization dedicated to providing a platform for spoken word artists to showcase their craft. With a lifelong passion for poetry, she has been weaving words and performing since childhood. Michelle's poetic prowess shines particularly in her historical compositions, where she effortlessly intertwines the past with the present, captivating audiences with her evocative storytelling.

Embassy Cultural House (ECH) is a virtual artist-run space and community website. The latest online ECH exhibition, A Community of Trees, highlights the versatility of trees' existence and how they are an important and essential part of the ecosystem. This exhibition has been curated by ECH Contributing Editor Emmy Meredith, with the assistance of ECH Curatorial Advisors Ron Benner and Jamelie Hassan. Selected works from A Community of Trees will be on display at the show and Emmy will be joining the lineup with a brief talk about the exhibition.

Buy Tickets
Sheltering as Radical Care: Cleaning Stitching and Gathering around the Antler River with Mikaila Stevens and Michelle Wilson

Announcing "Sheltering as Radical Care: Cleaning, Stitching, and Gathering around the Antler River," a new Embassy Cultural House project led by Michelle Wilson and Mikaila Stevens. Throughout the summer of 2024, Michelle and Mikaila will offer six two-hour bi-weekly drop-in workshop sessions at Indwell's Embassy Commons building.

The Deshkan Ziibi, or Thames River, is an artery that connects communities, human and more than human, in the London area. Unfortunately, the River and its banks have become a site of contention as unhoused community members have made their homes upon its banks. Some organizations, such as Indwell and Antler River Rally, have taken up the responsibility of providing care for the River and those who face housing and mental health challenges. As part of this initiative, Michelle and Mikaila have partnered with these organizations to create artwork that builds connections from these points of contention. They plan to collaboratively generate a gathering shelter using reclaimed plastic collected during river cleanups.

At a time when some of this city's leaders are demonizing marginalized people and their structures, this shelter will be a silent protest against their denigration. The partnership intends for the shelter to be hung in Indwell's Embassy Commons building as a tapestry when not in use. We look forward to gathering beneath it for years to come.

This project is funded by the Ontario Arts Council's Artists through the Community Project Grant, and we thank the government of Ontario for its support. 
 

Michelle Wilson is an artist, researcher, and mother who identifies as queer and neuro-divergent. Her work focuses on artistic collaboration as anti-colonial care work, which means that she rejects individualistic conceptions of the artist and instead prioritizes working at the periphery and making space for a diversity of hands to come together through creation. 

Mikaila Stevens is a Mi'kmaq contemporary beadwork artist, graphic designer, printmaker, and storyteller. She currently resides on Deshkan Ziibi (London, ON). In 2019, she launched Flourish and Grow, where she creates one-of-a-kind contemporary-style beaded accessories, artwork, and apparel.

UPwithART 2024 in support of Unity Project and Museum London

Online Auction: April 25 – May 4, 2024
Arty-Party: Saturday, May 4, 6:30 – 11:00PM


The annual UPwithART fundraiser brings together art-lovers to celebrate culture, compassion, and community. Your support helps Unity Project for Relief of Homelessness provide housing and support services and allows Museum London to continue to keep admission free and programs available at a low cost to the community.

Please join us on Saturday, May 4, 6:30 pm – 11:00 pm for an arty-party on all floors at Museum London. Not able to make it? You can place your bids online for the 60+ artworks from Thursday, April 25 at 7:00 pm until Saturday, May 4 at 9:00 pm. Please register and view the art at UPwithART.ca to support those who need the most help during this very difficult time.

The online silent auction features artworks by renowned national artists, emerging talents, and pieces donated by collectors. Explore artworks and bid to support two great causes! All works are framed and wall-ready — view them all here.

The art will also be on view in an exhibition at Museum London from Friday, April 26 to Friday, May 3.


The art auction goes live online starting April 25 at 7 pm. Bid on the art you love from a stellar roster of renowned and emerging artists, alongside artworks by Unity Project participants, and historical and contemporary works donated by notable London area collectors. View the art online at UPwithART. 

Excited to view the art in person? Visit Museum London (admission is free) from April 26 to May 3 for a sneak peek! For more information, please visit the UPwithArt website. 

Get your tickets now!
Ontario Arts Council and League of Canadian Poets announce Lillian Allen Prizes for spoken word poetry
Lillian Allen (Photo credit: Randall Edwards) 
The Ontario Arts Council (OAC), in partnership with the League of Canadian Poets (LCP), recently announced the creation of the Lillian Allen Prize and the Lillian Allen Emerging Artist Prize, which recognizes and celebrates spoken word poetry artists working in English or French. Two prizes will be awarded annually: one to an established artist and one to an emerging artist, based on their respective bodies of work. 

The prize is named after Canadian poet, spoken word artist, educator and activist Lillian Allen. Lillian is the author of several books of poetry (including her newest collection Make the World New), plus books and recordings for children and young people. She is a globally recognized poet and recording artist who performs, lectures and gives workshops internationally, and founded the Toronto International Dub Poetry Festival, as well as a variety of cultural and youth-empowerment organizations such as Toronto Arts Council’s Fresh Arts. She’s a two-time winner of the Juno Award for Best Reggae / Calypso Recording, a creative writing professor at Ontario College of Art and Design University (OCAD U), and has held the post of distinguished Writer-in-Residence at Queen’s University and the University of Windsor. She was appointed to a three-year term as Toronto Poet Laureate in 2023.  

Allen’s distinctive approach to poetry through language, music and social consciousness continues to capture attention and make change. She embodies the excellence, creativity and professionalism she has brought to the form. The OAC, through consultation with the LCP, is recognizing her legacy of community building and generosity of spirit by naming this prize in her honour. 

To learn more about the awards, visit the Ontario Arts Council's website here. 
Ontario Art Council and Arts for all Ontarians
What do the arts in Ontario look like, sound like, feel like? The Ontario Arts Council has aimed to provide an answer in just 60 seconds, with Arts for All Ontarians – a video that provides a whirlwind tour of what Ontario Arts Council (OAC) funding has helped make possible since its founding in 1963. Featuring grant recipients from across the province and the decades, the video is a highlight reel of how OAC’s investments have benefited Ontario’s communities, economy, quality of life and identity as a province. To learn more about the artists, organizations and projects featured in the video, visit the OAC website. 

The Embassy Cultural House gratefully acknowledges the support of the Ontario Arts Council for their generous funding of ECH projects and programs. 
Relevant and Related Links
  • From Jazz on the Rideau: "Rabble Without A Cause, April 24: Invisible Roots at 50; the Eric Stach story, part 1" by Ian McKenzie
  • From Akimbo: "Holly Ward & Kevin Schmidt at the Varley Art Gallery of Markham" by Yuluo Anita Wei
  • From Sarah Kendzior's Substack: "2020 Vision" 
  • From Strategic Culture Foundation: "Brutal, chaotic war – norms, conventions and laws of conduct are being erased" by Alastair Crooke
  • From London Review of Books: "My Encounter with Sartre" by Edward Said
Visit the ECH Website
Embassy Cultural House is located on the traditional lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnaapéewak, and Chonnonton peoples, at the forks of Deshkan Ziibi (Antler River), an area subject to the Dish with One Spoon Covenant Wampum and other treaties, colonized as London, Ontario. The ECH strives to create meaningful relationships between the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island and our contributors. The ECH honours the stewardship of the many Indigenous peoples who have resided on these lands since time immemorial.

Copyright © 2024 Embassy Cultural House. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address:
514 Pall Mall Street, London, ON, N5Y 2Z6, Canada

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
0 Comments

March Updates with the Embassy Cultural House!

3/25/2024

0 Comments

 
Happy spring ECH community! It has been a strange turn of weather events as we approach the total solar eclipse on April 8, 2024. Make sure to secure your ISO certified eclipse glasses from your local public library or from The Monarch Butterfly Eclipse Project. 

Our work continues on the forthcoming ECH anthology, An Alternative Cultural History of London, Ontario: Art and Activism, which includes over 20 contributors from London, Ontario, and abroad. 

RI 9 Space of Memory, Corrientes, Argentina
by Dot Tuer and Alberto Gomez

Picture
The commission for the RI-9 Space of Memory, June 2, 2023, for a book launch in the Casino. Photo courtesy of Alberto Gomez.

​For many years ECH contributor Alberto Gomez has worked with a group of human rights activists to establish the RI 9 Space of Memory, a memory site and cultural centre in Corrientes, Argentina. A former political prisoner and survivor of Argentina’s military dictatorship, Gomez is a core member of the Commission for the Promotion of the RI 9 Space of Memory, founded in 2017, and key negotiator for securing official state recognition of the RI 9 Space of Memory in 2022. His creative collaborator and partner Dot Tuer has documented many of the events held in the Space of Memory. In their article, recently featured in the newest ECH tabloid, Tuer and Gomez tell the story of and pay tribute to the struggle of human rights activists and the survivors and families of victims of state terror in Corrientes to realize the RI 9 Space of Memory.
Read Now

Soheila Esfahani featured on Art Lives Episode 2

​
​Contemporary artist Soheila Esfahani explores themes of transition, translation, and transformation in this episode of Art Lives, focusing on her recent installation, Cultured Pallets at the Aga Khan Museum (2023). Join Esfahani as she guides you through an in-depth exploration of the installation's inception, its intricate painting process, innovative laser-cutting techniques, and placement within the Aga Khan Permanent Collection Gallery. Esfahani discusses her captivating journey from Iran to Canada, offering insight into her process and the inspiration she encounters within the “in-between.”

Produced in partnership with TVO, Art Lives is a short docuseries that offers an intimate look into the working practices and conceptual approaches of individual living art practitioners connected to the Middle East, North Africa, South and Central Asia, and Ontario, Canada. The series goes behind-the-scenes, illuminating the personal stories that drive their creative processes. Learn more at the Aga Khan website.

“A Community of Trees" Now Online!

Picture
Roland Schubert, “Bowen Island," 2021

​Though it is not widespread knowledge, trees have the ability to communicate with each other through a variety of means. Their elaborate root systems contain fungi, which can send messages to nearby connected trees to warn of dangers or other predators. Just as humans function best when working together as a collective and a community, trees are best able to thrive when they are a part of a forest, connected to other trees.

A Community of Trees is an Embassy Cultural House online exhibition that highlights the versatility of trees' existence and how they are an important and essential part of the ecosystem.  

This exhibition has been curated by ECH Contributing Editor Emmy Meredith, with the assistance of ECH Curatorial Advisors Ron Benner and Jamelie Hassan. Contributors to the exhibition include Maria Awaraji, José Bedia, Ron Benner, Marlene Creates, Patricia Deadman, Selwyn Dewdney, Richelle Forsey, Alexis Green, Jamelie Hassan, Fern Helfand, Lisa Hirmer, Penn Kemp, Miriam Love, Don McKay, Emmy Meredith, Catherine Morrisey, David Merritt, Olivia Mossuto, Monica Joy, Judith Rodger, Roland Schubert, Ashley Snook, Heather Steinhagen, Diana Tamblyn, and Larry Towell. View the full exhibition on the ECH website. 

14th Annual UPwithART: Tickets Now On Sale!

Picture
The Embassy Cultural House is once again proud to support UPwithART's art party and silent auction in support of the Unity Project for Relief of Homelessness and Museum London. Get ready for the fundraising event of the season! Grab your tickets for the 14th annual UPwithART event on May 4 at Museum London. 

Show your love for Unity Project for Relief of Homelessness and Museum London by buying a Supporter Ticket $60, or level up your support with a Premium Ticket $160 (includes two drink tickets and an $80 charitable tax receipt).All attendees can enjoy:
​
  • 🎨 60+ artworks on auction 
  • 🚲New auction lots (experiences, a bike, quilts, and more)
  • 🏆 Door prize
  • 🛍️ Limited edition tote bag
  • 🎙DJ and poetry performances
  • 🧶 Interactive quilting activity
  • 🍸 Bar and h’ors d'oeuvres
  • 📸 Photo booth
  • 🤗 Funds raised support both Museum London and the Unity Project for Relief of  Homelessness

Support for UPwithArt opens more doors than you could imagine. From helping those who are struggling to escape homelessness to obtain housing, to funding programming that makes art and history freely accessible to all – your participation transforms hope into reality.

The art auction goes live online starting April 25 at 7 pm. Bid on the art you love from a stellar roster of renowned and emerging artists, alongside artworks by Unity Project participants, and historical and contemporary works donated by notable London area collectors. View the art online at UPwithART. 

Excited to view the art in person? Visit Museum London (admission is free) from April 26 to May 3 for a sneak peek! For more information, please visit the UPwithArt website. 
Get your tickets now!

Ontario Art Council and Arts for all Ontarians


What do the arts in Ontario look like, sound like, feel like? The Ontario Arts Council has aimed to provide an answer in just 60 seconds, with Arts for All Ontarians – a video that provides a whirlwind tour of what Ontario Arts Council (OAC) funding has helped make possible since its founding in 1963. Featuring grant recipients from across the province and the decades, the video is a highlight reel of how OAC’s investments have benefited Ontario’s communities, economy, quality of life and identity as a province. To learn more about the artists, organizations and projects featured in the video, visit the OAC website. 

The Embassy Cultural House gratefully acknowledges the support of the Ontario Arts Council for their generous funding of ECH projects and programs. 

Embassy Cultural House supports Writing With Light

Writing With Light is a group of individuals and organizations that advocate for authenticity and credibility in nonfiction photography. The standards provided by Writing With Light (or ones inspired by them) will be widely adopted by individuals and news organizations, and that they will help lead to a larger discussion on the integrity and future of visual journalism. Thank you to ECH contributor and Magnum photographer Larry Towell for connecting ECH to this very important initiative. Attached below is Writing With Light's statement of principles. For more information, visit the Writing With Light website. 
Picture

Shelley Niro: silent, moving, waiting, LOUD at Stephen Bulger Gallery

Picture
Shelley Niro, “Raven at Night," 2022

​Stephen Bulger Gallery presents silent, waiting, moving, LOUD, their first solo exhibition of work by Shelley Niro (b. 1954, Niagara Falls, New York, USA). Niro is a member of the Turtle Clan of the Kanien’kehaka (Mohawk) Nation, from the Six Nations of the Grand River territory. This exhibition is concurrent with her major retrospective organized and circulated by the Art Gallery of Hamilton (on view from February 10 until May 26, 2024) with the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian, New York, and the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; this travelling exhibition will also appear at the Vancouver Art Gallery and the Remai Modern, Saskatoon.
 For more information, please visit the Stephen Bulgur Gallery website. ​

Relevant and Related Links

  • From the National Gallery of Canada Magazine: "Mona Hatoum: Uncanny Space" by Amin Alsaden
  • Closed Conservation Area Report by Kee Dewdney (1941-2024): "Newport Forest"
  • From Hyperallergic: "Yong Soon Min, Intrepid Korean-American Artist, Dies at 70" by Sigourney Shultz
  • From CBC London: "London Community Foundation mourns death of former CEO" by Angela McInnes
  • From Vox: "The total solar eclipse is returning to the United States — better than before" by Brian Resnick
  • From Cultural Pluralism in the Arts Movement Ontario (CPAMO): Call for Submissions: The Gathering Divergence Spring 2024
  • From The Guardian: "Authors withdraw from PEN America festival in protest over Israel-Gaza war" by Richard Luscombe
  • Now online on London Tourism Canada: "Embassy at Nite, 417 English Street, London, Ontario" 
  • From Food Tank: "Mexico’s Precaution on GM Corn Safety Is Justified" by Elena Seeley
0 Comments

February Updates with the Embassy Cultural House!

2/22/2024

0 Comments

 
Throughout the months of February and March, the Embassy Cultural House will focus on our publications—and trees!

On Sunday, February 25, 2024 from 11AM to 4PM, ECH is set to attend the Rock / Paper / Scissors Book & Print Fair at the Art Gallery of Guelph. The newest edition of the Embassy Cultural House tabloid will be available at our booth and has already been distributed throughout London and Toronto! Our work continues on the forthcoming anthology as well--An Alternative Cultural History of London, Ontario: Art and Activism. 

On Friday, March 1, 2024 at 1 PM EST, ECH will also launch our newest online exhibition, A Community of Trees, curated by ECH Contributing Editor Emmy Meredith with the assistance of Curatorial Advisors Ron Benner and Jamelie Hassan. We look forward to celebrating this event with a Zoom Launch - all who are interested are welcome. More information below! 

“A Community of Trees" Online Exhibition and Zoom Launch

Picture
A Community of Trees  Zoom Launch
Friday, March 1, 2024 at 1:00 PM EST (10 AM PST / 2:30 PM NST)
Contact [email protected] to RSVP

Though it is not widespread knowledge, trees have the ability to communicate with each other through a variety of means. Their elaborate root systems contain fungi, which can send messages to nearby connected trees to warn of dangers or other predators. Just as humans function best when working together as a collective and a community, trees are best able to thrive when they are a part of a forest, connected to other trees. 

A Community of Trees
 will highlight the versatility of trees' existence and how they are an important and essential part of the ecosystem.  

This exhibition has been curated by ECH Contributing Editor Emmy Meredith, with the assistance of ECH Curatorial Advisors Ron Benner and Jamelie Hassan. Contributors to the exhibition include Maria Awaraji, José Bedia, Ron Benner, Marlene Creates, Patricia Deadman, Selwyn Dewdney, Richelle Forsey, Alexis Green, Jamelie Hassan, Fern Helfand, Lisa Hirmer, Penn Kemp, Miriam Love, Don McKay, Emmy Meredith, Catherine Morrisey, David Merritt, Olivia Mossuto, Monica Joy, Judith Rodger, Roland Schubert, Ashley Snook, Heather Steinhagen, Diana Tamblyn, and Larry Towell. 

To join the event on Friday, March 1, please email the Embassy Cultural House for the Zoom link required for the launch. 
​

Embassy Cultural House Tabloid: February 2024—Now Available

Picture
The most recent ECH tabloid at Art Metropole. Photo credit: Olivia Mossuto
The February 2024 edition of the Embassy Cultural House tabloid documents the ECH’s programming from January 2023 to January 2024, in addition to works, writings, and news from the local arts community in London, Ontario, and the ECH community abroad.

This edition includes a reprint of Wanda Nanibush's 2016 article About Land, tributes to Tom Hill and Raymond Moriyama, an essay on the RI 9 Space of Memory in Corrientes, Argentina, by Dot Tuer and Alberto Gomez, a recipe for risotto, and more. 

​Locations where you may or may not find the tabloid include Museum London, Colour by Schubert, Covent Garden Market, Jill's Table, Western University's Visual Arts Department, Locomotive Espresso (Pall Mall location), The Bag Lady, and The Framing and Art Centre. While quantities last! 

To receive a free copy of this tabloid, please contact [email protected]. ​

PS Guelph's Annual Rock / Paper / Scissors
 Book & Print Fair at the Art Gallery of Guelph

Picture
The Embassy Cultural House will have a table at PS Guelph's annual (and free to attend) Rock / Paper / Scissors Book + Print Fair on Sunday, February 25 from 11AM-4PM at the Art Gallery of Guelph (AGG). This annual event is devoted to small-scale publishing and the social life of the book. This year, zinesters, printmakers, poets, and publishers from across Ontario will join us for a print media lover’s dream. Peruse hand-made and locally published books and print media while supporting small bookmakers, artists, and publishers.

This event is part of a weekend of programming hosted by PS Guelph, including a series of bookmaking and writing workshops on Saturday, February 24. Details and registration information can be found at musagetes.ca/news.

The Man I Left Behind - Triple Vinyl LP by Larry Towell

Picture
Larry Towell, the Magnum photographer who has published fourteen books and covered conflicts around the world, has now released a triple vinyl LP of original ballads about photography or the places he’s photographed based on issues of justice and peace. Peter Yarrow (of Peter, Paul and Mary) writes: “Larry Towell is one of the few songwriters today who carries on the courageous tradition of Woodie Guthrie, Pete Seeger, and Phil Ochs.” The anthology also contains field recordings mixed with his arrangements and lyrics.

Larry is accompanied by musicians and friends that include Jeff Bird of the Cowboy Junkies, Mike Stevens, who was a regular contributor to the Grand Ole Opry, Anne Lindsay who tours with Blue Rodeo and Jim Cuddy, Gwen Swick of Quartette, and many others.

To purchase signed copies of The Man I Left Behind on triple vinyl, please email [email protected]. Each copy is $60+HST, shipping not included.
Picture

Shelley Niro's “500 Year Itch" at the Art Gallery of Hamilton

Picture
“The Rebel," Shelley Niro, shot in 1982, shown in 1989, Hand-tinted photograph
Shelley Niro: 500 Year Itch is the first major retrospective exhibition of the multi-media work of Mohawk artist Shelley Niro, who is based in Brantford, ON. Spanning four decades of her photography, film, painting, installation, sculpture and mixed media practice, the exhibition highlights themes she constantly returns to: Matriarchy, Past is Present, Actors, and Family Relations. Her persistent vision is to represent Indigenous women and girls, advocating for self-representation and sovereignty. Her highly empathetic approach moves viewers to understand the issues at hand through her visually impactful and politically powerful manner. She uses parody, feminism, and spirituality to examine identity, and in turn, brings political power to the realm of the personal.

The exhibition features over 70 works by Shelley Niro, some in series (totaling 136 pieces) coming from public and private collections across Canada and the US, including new work to be debuted in Hamilton.

Shelley Niro: 500 Year Itch is organized and circulated by the Art Gallery of Hamilton with the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI), with curatorial support from the National Gallery of Canada (NGC). Co-curated by Melissa Bennett, AGH Senior Curator of Contemporary Art, Greg Hill, Independent Curator, formerly Audain Senior Curator, Indigenous Art, National Gallery of Canada, and David Penney, Associate Director of Museum scholarship, Exhibitions, and Public Engagement at the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian.

The opening celebration of the exhibition at the Art Gallery of Hamilton will take place on Saturday, February 24, during the Winter Exhibition Opening Celebration. For more information, please visit the Art Gallery of Hamilton website. 

The Green Bin Program arrives in London, Ontario!

Picture
Recent visitor to 514 Pall Mall Street—observing the new green bin. Photo credit: John Riley
On January 15, 2024, the city of London, Ontario, officially adopted the Green Bin! This initiative follows cities such as Hamilton and Guelph who had adopted the waste management program many years ago. Many residents are ecstatic about this development, including London's raccoon and squirrel residents.

What is the Green Bin? A Green Bin is like a blue (recycling) bin, but for food waste such as fruit and vegetable skins, spoiled leftovers, and other inedible food waste like bones. The Green Bin would be collected from your home at the curbside much like your Blue Box is, and the materials from your Green Bin would be composted or digested.

For more information about the Green Bin program, please visit the City of London's website. ​

Relevant and Related Links

  • From CBC London: “London, Ont., doctor files defamation suit against Rebel Media owner over social media post" 
  • From CTV News Montreal: “Lorraine Klaasen reflects on strength, family ahead of Montreal show" by Lauren Fernandez
  • From CBC London: “Judge rules convicted killer of London, Ont., Muslim family committed terrorism" by Kate Dubinsky
  • From National Diamond Syndicate: “Royal Canadian Mint Celebrates Cultural Diversity With Gem-Adorned Coins" 
  • From The Conversation: “Artists bring human richness to times of strife—and need to be allowed to speak about the Israel-Hamas war" by Lowell Gasoi
  • From UK-based newspaper, Al Quds: “الفنانة التشكيلية اللبنانية الكندية جميلة حسن: الافتقار إلى سوق تجارية للأعمال الفنية يشكل تحديًا كبيرا إذا كان الفنان مثيرا للجدل" / “Lebanese-Canadian plastic artist Jamelie Hassan: Lack of a commercial market for art is a major challenge if the artist is controversial" by خالد الحمادي / Khaled Al-Hammadi (Arabic-only)
  • From Jonathan Cook: ​“Why is the media ignoring evidence of Israel's own actions on 7 October?" by Jonathan Cook
0 Comments

Welcome, Year of the Dragon! Support the Arts in 2024!

2/9/2024

0 Comments

 
Picture
2024 Year of Dragon (yangwoodgreen), Stephen Cruise, collage, 2024. To view the past iterations of Stephen's  “Year of..." series, please visit his website. 
With the Year of the Dragon set to begin on February 10th, we're pleased to share Stephen Cruise's new “Year of.." work, which celebrates the changing of the zodiac with each passing year.  Stephen began these works in the 90s and has continued each year thereafter:

Early renditions were one-of-a-kind collages of various dimensions and materials. In 2004, decided to make a print version using the proportions of a tenugui (head towel used in Kendo).

This sharing of works and ideas within our cultural community is what keeps us motivated and inspired. The value of arts and culture cannot be understated, especially as we attempt to recover from unprecedented hardships. The City of London’s draft budget proposes the biggest tax hike in years, and leaves many of the city’s arts and culture organizations struggling. The London Arts Council, Museum London, the Grand Theatre, and the London Public Library are receiving a fraction of what they've requested or their requests have been refused. We are alarmed by these developments.

For more information on the current situation and how the London arts community is responding, please visit the Forest City Gallery website, as they make a case for the arts and the necessity for an increased budget during a time where the cost of living and inflation has risen disproportionately.

The Man I Left Behind - Triple Vinyl LP by Larry Towell

Picture
Larry Towell, the Magnum photographer who has published fourteen books and covered conflicts around the world, has now released a triple vinyl LP of original ballads about photography or the places he’s photographed based on issues of justice and peace. Peter Yarrow (of Peter, Paul and Mary) writes: “Larry Towell is one of the few songwriters today who carries on the courageous tradition of Woodie Guthrie, Pete Seeger, and Phil Ochs.” The anthology also contains field recordings mixed with his arrangements and lyrics.

Larry is accompanied by musicians and friends that include Jeff Bird of the Cowboy Junkies, Mike Stevens, who was a regular contributor to the Grand Ole Opry, Anne Lindsay who tours with Blue Rodeo and Jim Cuddy, Gwen Swick of Quartette, and many others.

To purchase signed copies of The Man I Left Behind on triple vinyl, please email [email protected]. Each copy is $60+HST, shipping not included. 
Picture

Animated Frames Vol. 06: Other Abstractions

Picture
Friday, February 16, 2024 at 7PM
TAP Centre For Creativity 
203 Dundas Street, London, Ontario

$10 admission (cash only)
projected on 16mm film
total duration: 58 minutes + brief intermission

The Animated Frames series is back for volume 6! Other Abstractions includes an eclectic selection of abstract animated short films by Paul Glabicki, Jennifer Reeves, Yona Friedman, Doris Chase, Len Lye, Sonia Bridge, Alexander Stewart, and Jeff Scher. To register for the event, please visit the TAP Centre for Creativity website. 

Presented by FRAMES Film Series & London Ontario Media Arts Association (LOMAA)

This presentation is supported by the London Arts Council through the City of London's Community Arts Investment Program. ​

Andrés Garzon - Print Fundraiser

Picture
Andrés Garzon, digital print, 2023.
This artwork by London-based artist Andrés Garzon is currently available as a print edition in support of two important initiatives. The fundraiser will remain open until February 18th and 100% of the proceeds from the print will be split between two donation pages:
​
E-sims for Palestinians in Gaza, organized by Jane Shi, Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, and Alice Wong: http://tinyurl.com/yc372s7u
​

LQMA (London Queer Muslim Association): https://www.gofundme.com/f/building-safe-spaces-for-queer-muslims-in-london 

For more information regarding the print fundraiser, please visit Andrés' website. This work was also featured in the most recent edition of the ECH tabloid with the following description by Andrés: 

I made this artwork during my visit to my own homeland of Colombia for the first time since immigrating to Canada in 2001. I was constantly reminded of the Palestinians in Gaza who had violently lost their homeland so quickly, and who are either trapped in the rubble of their former homes, or may never return to find it the same. 100+ days into a globally-known genocide, and the pain continues. 20,000+ murdered and more than 2 million displaced. From a distance, I can only hope for peace, and to use my artwork to respond to the grief being felt all over the world. Free Palestine, ceasefire now, end the occupation.
Support the Fundraiser!

Rock / Paper / Scissors: Book & Print Fair at the Art Gallery of Guelph

Picture
The Embassy Cultural House will have a table at the Rock / Paper / Scissors: Book + Print Fair on Sunday, February 25 from 11AM-4PM at the Art Gallery of Guelph (AGG) and hosted by Publication Studio Guelph! This annual event is devoted to small-scale publishing and the social life of the book. This year, zinesters, printmakers, poets, and publishers from across Ontario will join us for a print media lover’s dream. Peruse hand-made and locally published books and print media while supporting small bookmakers, artists, and publishers.

This event is part of a weekend of programming hosted by PS Guelph, including a series of bookmaking and writing workshops on Saturday, February 24. For more information on specific events, visit PS Guelph's Facebook page. ​

Soheila Esfahani designs a coin for the Royal Canadian Mint: 
​
“Transcendence and Tranquility"

Picture
Congratulations to artist and professor Soheila Esfahani on her recent design for the coin series “Celebrating Canada's Diversity" by the Royal Canadian Mint. Soheila's design for the “Transcendence and Tranquility" coin, marks the fifth coin in the series since 2019.

Available in both gold (now sold out) and silver, and adorned with real and simulated turquoise, the coin's design celebrates Iranian Canadian heritage. Soheila describes her design and approach as such: 

In my art practice, I investigate notions of cultural translation within the diaspora, and “translation” in its etymology means “to carry across” or “to bring across.” I often use cultural objects and patterns that immigrants would bring with them to their new home, and those from Iran would often bring a Persian carpet with them when they move to Canada; therefore, I used traditional Persian carpet designs as my inspiration for this coin. I have also included the lotus flower motif that is prominent in the reliefs of Persepolis, to connect the past and present. As an artist, this project has been a fantastic opportunity for me to come full circle by representing my Iranian heritage within the context of Canada.

For more information and to purchase the silver version of the coin, visit the Royal Canadian Mint's website. 

Imogen Clendinning featured for Blackflash 40.3

Picture
​Cover of Blackflash 40.3. Archive on Ice by Imogen Clendinning, 2023. Courtesy of the artist and Ice Follies. Photo Credit: Liz Lott
Guest edited by Katie Lawson and Yasmin Nurming-Por, Blackflash 40.3 features work by Imogen Clendinning, Eleonor Botoman, Warren Harper, and Adrienne Huard. 

This issue of BlackFlash represents an exchange between two writer/curators who remain curious about the making and unmaking of archives. For this issue, the editors extended an open invitation to seven contributors to respond to the themes of art, archives and the environment. 
​
On the cover and within the issue, Imogen Clendinning reflects on her Archive on Ice, a solar-powered digital micro-archive created for the “Ice Follies” festival as unpredictable seasonal conditions threaten the future of this significant community event that depends on the frozen surface of Lake Nippissing. 
To purchase a physical copy or digital download of this issue, visit the Blackflash website. 

Relevant and Related Links

  • From CBC London: “Want a safer city? Fund the arts, advocate says" by Kate Dubinsky
  • From the Toronto Star: “The Conservative Party has abandoned its principles on free speech" by Julia Moussa
  • From Rungh: “AGO accused of silencing Indigenous Curator" by Zool Suleman
  • From Akimbo: “Rima Sater & Laura Acosta at Forest City Gallery, London" by Kim Neudorf 
  • From the Toronto Star: ​“How Israel's 'scholasticide' denies Palestinians their past, present and future" by Shree Paradkar
0 Comments

Embassy Cultural House welcomes 2024!

1/16/2024

3 Comments

 
As 2024 begins, Embassy Cultural House work continues. The beginning of the year will see the third edition of the ECH tabloid published on February 2nd, a new online exhibition scheduled to launch in early February, and a published anthology that centers on London history and culture over the last 70 years. The anthology, An Alternative Cultural History of London, Ontario: Art and Activism is forthcoming in Spring 2024—more information below. 

We continue to monitor the situation in Gaza as we work. January 15, 2024, marks 100 days of the continuing genocide in Gaza. In South Africa's application submitted to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in the Hague, arguing that Israel's military action and bombing of Gaza breached the Genocide Convention, there are nine pages outlining Israeli genocidal incitement. It goes without saying that South Africa represents the best interests of all those around the world. 

ECH Co-Founders Ron Benner and Jamelie Hassan
​Donate Indigenous Materials to the Woodland Cultural Centre

Picture
WCC Librarian Jane Hill with donated materials from Ron Benner and Jamelie Hassan's collection and library. Photo credit: Ron Benner

​On December 20, 2023, Ron Benner delivered 13 boxes of Indigenous books and material to Curator Patricia Deadman and Librarian Jane Hill at the Woodland Cultural Centre. From the extensive library and collection of ECH Co-founders Ron Benner and Jamelie Hassan, the materials were successfully donated to the Woodland Cultural Centre Resource Library. The Woodland Cultural Centre library is currently being renovated and moved into the newly-renovated former Mohawk Institute Residential School, which has been developed into an Interpreted Historic Site and Educational Resource. This donation represents an extensive and long-standing relationship between the Embassy Cultural House and Woodland Cultural Centre, and we are so happy to share news of this donation with the wider ECH community.

We would like to thank ECH Contributing Editors, Alexis Green and Emmy Meredith, for their extensive work in cataloguing these materials prior to donation. 
Picture

ECH Presents: A Community of Trees

Picture
“Bowen Island, B.C." by Roland Schubert, 2021.

​Though it is not widespread knowledge, trees have the ability to communicate with each other through a variety of means. Their elaborate root systems contain fungi, which can send messages to nearby connected trees to warn of dangers or other predators. Just as humans function best when working together as a collective and a community, trees are best able to thrive when they are a part of a forest, connected to other trees. A Community of Trees will highlight the versatility of trees' existence and how they are an important and essential part of the ecosystem.  

This exhibition has been curated by ECH Contributing Editor Emmy Meredith, with the assistance of ECH curatorial advisors Ron Benner and Jamelie Hassan. The exhibition will be launched in early February - stay tuned for more information! ​

Paul Walde: Glacial Resonance at McIntosh Gallery

Picture
Paul Walde, “Requiem for a Glacier," 2013. Documentation of site-specific performance. Courtesy of the Artist. Photographer: Douglas Noblet.

​January 19 - March 16, 2024

McIntosh Gallery
Western University, London, ON

Artist-led Exhibition Tour
Friday, January 19 at 6:30PM
 Registration required


Opening Reception
Friday, January 19 from 7PM to 9P
​Presenting the glacier as a central protagonist, Glacial Resonance brings the stark reality of otherwise distant mountain ranges to the forefront. A solo exhibition of ambitious projects by Canadian artist Paul Walde, Glacial Resonance shares the artist’s enduring concern about environmental crises, channelled through sound and video. Best known for his interdisciplinary performances staged in the natural environment, Walde’s work often involves music and choreography. His immersive installations materialize from projects on mountain sides and from deep in old growth forests that involve myriad volunteers and performers, and technically – and geographically – challenging logistics. The splendor and sense of awe evoked by these landscapes, emphasized through the embodied sound experience of Walde’s installations, offer alternative modes in which to traverse the overwhelming scale of climate change.

For more information on the exhibition, please visit the McIntosh Gallery website. 

​An Alternative Cultural History of London, Ontario: Art and Activism
​
forthcoming Spring 2024

The ninth printed publication to be released by the Embassy Cultural House, An Alternative Cultural History of London, Ontario: Art and Activism will be a celebration of London's unique cultural environment, as it stands presently and historically. The publication includes contributions from a range of cultural practitioners including writers, artists, and cultural workers. Editors for the anthology are Ron Benner and Jamelie Hassan; Managing Editor is Blessy Augustine; designed by Olivia Mossuto. The publication will be printed in an edition of 500 copies. ​
Picture
The Embassy Hotel in 1990, photographed by Rebecca Diederichs.

Relevant and Related Links

  • From CBC: “After days of confusion, Trudeau government says it will abide by ICJ on genocide case against Israel" by Evan Dyer
  • From The Globe and Mail: “Canada has a moral obligation to support South Africa's genocicde case against Israel" by Avi Lewis
  • From the Toronto Star: “As a journalist, I’m crushed by my industry’s silence on our Gaza colleagues" by Shree Paradkar
  • OCAD University’s Faculty of Art presents: Art Creates Change, The Kim Pruesse Speakers Series with Ali Kazimi. For more information on the artist talk and reception on January 18, and the screening and seminar on January 26, please visit OCAD University's event page. 
  • From the London Review of Books: “Talk of Genocide" by Zinaida Miller
  • From CBC: “Liberal, NDP MPs to travel to West Bank to connect with Palestinians" by Raffy Boudjikanian
3 Comments

THIS WEEKEND: Forest City Gallery Members' Show and Sale + Queer Cinema for Palestine: No Pride in Genocide

12/8/2023

0 Comments

 
This weekend, two very important cultural events are taking place back-to-back.

On Saturday, December 9, the Forest City Gallery (FCG) Members' Show and Sale featuring the ECH opens with a reception from 7-9 PM. This year marks the 50th anniversary of the FCG, and the 40th anniversary of the ECH. Artworks by FCG and ECH members will be available, and will support the operation of both the FCG and ECH. Please join us for this historic occasion!

On Sunday, December 10, International Human Rights Day, ECH will host an event for Queer Cinema for Palestine—ECH's second time participating after the inaugural festival in 2021. This year's event, programmed under the banner of No Pride in Genocide, has already taken place in London, UK, Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, Berlin, and Amsterdam. Today, QCP is taking place in Beirut, and tomorrow's event is in Seoul. The Queer Cinema for Palestine 2023 programme closes with London, ON, this weekend. Please join us for what will be a necessary event in solidarity with the people of Palestine. 

Forest City Gallery's 50th Anniversary Members' Show & Sale:
In support of FCG & the Embassy Cultural House

Picture
Featuring works by Megan Arnold, Whymark Austen, Ross Bell, Ben Benedict, Ron Benner, Adi Berardini, Rain Bloodworth, David Bobier, Marla Botterill, Dickson Bou, Brad Boug, Natalie Bravo, Joan Brennan, Mallory Butlin, Heather Carey, Anindita Chakraborty, Lauren Chipeur, Jack Cocker, Susan Day, Laura Dirk, Mary Donlan, Steve Elkerton, Seb Evans, Kim Ewin-Goebel, kerry ferris, Greg Fischer, Brenda Furhman, Wyn Geleynse, Dave Gordon, Alexis Green, Kelly Greene, Jen Hamilton, Jamelie Hassan, Moira Hayes, Alec Hodgson, Jay Hodgson, Maxwell Hyett, Ian Indiano, Luiza Kaminska, Sharmistha Kar, SiHyun Vision Kim, Sarah Lanteigne, Allan Lewis, Derek Liddington, Devon Lowrie, Patrick Mahon, Ellen Mallet, Jacob Mallett, Anda Marcu, Vladimir Marcu, Catherine Morrisey, Olivia Mossuto, Conan Masterson, Jason McLean with Devon Marinac, Emmy Meredith, David Merritt, Sarah Munro, Sheri Nault, Niloufar Salimi, Samantha Orlowski & more!

The Forest City Gallery Annual Members’ Show & Sale is an important avenue for artists in the London community to connect and develop new audiences, while offering an affordable entry point for supporting local and regional artists and collecting unique works. This is FCG’s longest-running annual exhibition, and it serves as an important fundraising event for the FCG's upcoming programming year. 2023 marks half a century of FCG supporting local and regional artists, and vice versa. 

This year, FCG has partnered with the Embassy Cultural House—ECH Members have also contributed works, with proceeds from the Members' Show and Sale going directly toward FCG's and ECH's operations. This annual fundraiser provides vital support for our capacities to program exhibitions, offer artistic resources, and promote thoughtful dialogue amongst local, regional, and international arts communities.
Picture
ECH Contributor Wyn Geleynse and ECH Co-founder Ron Benner installing the FCG Members' Show and Sale. Photo credit: Ruth Skinner

Queer Cinema for Palestine: No Pride in Genocide

Picture
As part of Queer Cinema for Palestine: No Pride in Genocide, the Embassy Cultural House (ECH) is proud to present a screening of the powerful, experimental documentary, Photo Booth (2022) by Canadian director, activist, and artist John Greyson. To follow is a conversation between Greyson and Michael Lynk, Professor Emeritus in the Faculty of Law at Western University and Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territories from 2016 to 2022. The program will also include a screening of Montreal-based, Palestinian artist and teacher, Razan Al-Salah’s 2017 short film, أبوكي خلق عمره ١٠٠ سنة، زي النك your father was born 100 years old, and so was the Nakba.
Picture
John Greyson’s ability to weave a tapestry of ideas, histories, emotions and potentials and Michael Lynk’s knowledge of and experience with Palestinian human rights issues will ensure both a compelling and critical discussion. In the words of the respected Palestinian poet, Mahmoud Darwish, “he thinks of the journey of thought across borders,” and we hope that this event will inspire further conversations about Palestine in London, Ontario, and abroad.

Photo Booth will be available for online screening during the live screening on Sunday, December 10 at 3PM EST through Toronto Queer Film Festival. The conversation following the screening will be recorded and added to the QCP and ECH website at a later date. 

This event has been organized by ECH Co-founder Jamelie Hassan and ECH Contributing Editor Ira Kazi.  Our partners for this event include the departments of Film Studies and Visual Arts at Western University, People for Peace in London, ON, Independent Jewish Voices in London, ON, and London’s Queer Muslim Association (LQMA).

Picture

Relevant and Related Links

  • From Al Jazeera: "If Christ were born today, he would be born under rubble, Israeli bombing" by Munjed Jadou
  • From Arab America: "Cancel Christmas?" by Stephanie Abraham
  • From Hyperallergic: "Citing Silencing of Arab Voices, Artists Cut Ties With Art Canada Institute" by Maya Pontone

Thank you for reading
0 Comments

44 Governor General Award Winners Protest Forced Departure of Wanda Nanibush from AGO

11/29/2023

0 Comments

 
The Embassy Cultural House continues to give attention to the tragedy unfolding in Gaza and joins with hundreds of thousands of protesters who demand a permanent ceasefire and an end to the Israeli occupation. Attempts to silence those who support Palestinian rights are front and centre. Craig Mokhiber, the former Top U.N. Official on Human Rights in the New York office, recently resigned, denouncing Israeli bombardment of Gaza and describing it as a “text-book case of genocide". Closer to home, cultural workers are being punished for their support of Palestinians. A recently circulated letter from the Israel Museum and Arts Canada (IMAAC) addressed to Stephen Jost, Director of the AGO, concerning Anishinaabe-kwe curator, artist and organizer, Wanda Nanibush is a case in point. One of the demands in the IMAAC letter was that she engage in “anti-semitism training" as a response to her empathetic work on Palestine. News of Wanda's forced departure from the AGO has provoked cultural workers from across the country to protest this public institution's failure to protect a member of their curatorial team from external pressures. Wanda, who is known for her critical and compassionate work as the AGO's inaugural curator of Indigenous Art is respected far beyond the walls of the AGO and we will support her in whatever way she decides to move forward.

In this spirit, we are sharing Wanda's article
“About Land" which was published in Canadian Art in Fall 2016, and was removed from the Canadian Art website shortly after it appeared. This article is an important example of Wanda's vital work. To download the article, please click the button below.  

The Embassy Cultural House will continue to keep our focus on Gaza and the Occupied West Bank, and the severe consequences on individuals and communities who are profoundly affected by the traumatic events that are unfolding. While moving forward with our programming and publishing schedule, upcoming is ECH's participation in the next iteration of the international program Queer Cinema for Palestine (QCP), which will coincide with Human Rights Day on December 10, 2023. More information on this event can be found in this newsletter. 
Download "About Land" by Wanda Nanibush

44 Governor General Award Winners Protest
Forced Departure of Wanda Nanibush from AGO

(Le texte en français suit)
 
In an open letter released today, 44 recipients of Governor General's Awards in Visual and Media Arts condemn the forced departure of Curator of Indigenous Art Wanda Nanibush from the Art Gallery of Ontario last week.

After noting her outstanding accomplishments, they call her exit “shocking."  Their letter states: “The forced departure of Wanda Nanibush is an act of political censorship with shades of a new McCarthyism."

Co-signators are drawn from coast-to-coast, and include such celebrated artists as Ruth Cuthand, Paul Wong, Jamelie Hassan, Vera Frenkel, Robert Houle, Louise Déry, Jayce Salloum, Cheryl L'Hirondelle, and Deanna Bowen. 

They continue: “Wanda Nanibush’s forced departure severely damages the reputation and credibility of the AGO and sets a dangerous precedent in Canadian art that demands protest."
 
View the full letter and signatories by clicking the button below.
 
Dans une lettre ouverte publiée aujourd'hui, 44 lauréat.e.s des Prix du Gouverneur général en arts visuels et en arts médiatiques condamnent le départ forcé, la semaine dernière, de la conservatrice des arts autochtones, Wanda Nanibush, du Musée des beaux-arts de l'Ontario. 

Les lauréat.e.s jugent son départ « choquant », alors même que la direction du Musée reconnait les réalisations  et l’apport exceptionnels de Wanda Nanibush].  

La liste des cosignataires inclut des artistes d'un bout à l'autre du pays, parmi eux et elles des artistes aussi connu.e.s et célébré.e.s que Ruth Cuthand, Paul Wong, Jamelie Hassan, Vera Frenkel, Robert Houle, Louise Déry, Jayce Salloum, Cheryl L'Hirondelle et Deanna Bowen. 

​Leur lettre ajoute ajoute que : « Le départ forcé de Wanda Nanibush porte gravement atteinte à la réputation et à la crédibilité du Musée des beaux-arts de l’Ontario, et crée un dangereux précédent dans le domaine de l'art canadien qui exige protestation » .
 
Consultez la lettre complète et les signataires, joints à cet e-mail.
Download Full Letter and Signatories PDF

Open Letter to the AGO from Artists, Writers, Curators,
​and Cultural Workers

An open letter to the Art Gallery of Ontario is being circulated by artists, writers, curators, and cultural workers, expressing concerns about the situation regarding Wanda Nanibush's forced departure from the institution. Currently, the letter has generated more than 1,000 signatures from individuals in the arts and cultural community in Canada. We are sharing this letter with the Embassy Cultural House community, and encourage anyone who is interested in signing, to do so. Many ECH members have already signed this letter and the signatories can be viewed at the bottom of the letter. To sign and view the open letter, please click the link to the Google document below. ​
Link to the Open Letter to the AGO

Queer Cinema for Palestine: No Pride in Genocide

Picture
As part of Queer Cinema for Palestine: No Pride in Genocide, the Embassy Cultural Houseis proud to present a screening of the powerful, experimental documentary, Photo Booth (2022) by Canadian director, activist, and artist John Greyson. To follow is a conversation between Greyson and Michael Lynk, Professor Emeritus in the Faculty of Law at Western University and Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian Territories from 2016 to 2022. The program will also include a screening of Montreal-based, Palestinian artist and teacher, Razan Al Salah’s 2017 short film, أبوكي خلق عمره ١٠٠ سنة، زي النك your father was born 100 years old, and so was the Nakba.  
​
John Greyson’s ability to weave a tapestry of ideas, histories, emotions and potentials and Michael Lynk’s knowledge of and experience with Palestinian human rights issues will ensure both a compelling and critical discussion. In the words of the respected Palestinian poet, Mahmoud Darwish, “he thinks of the journey of thought across borders,” and we hope that this event will inspire further conversation of Palestine in London, Ontario, and abroad. 

This event has been organized by ECH Co-founder Jamelie Hassan and ECH Contributing Editor Ira Kazi in collaboration with Queer Cinema for Palestine. For this event, our partners include Film Studies and Visual Arts at Western University, People for Peace in London, ON, Independent Jewish Voices in London, ON, and London’s Queer Muslim Association (LQMA). ECH/QCP poster design by Aronno Kazi.

Relevant and Related Links

  • Story from Democracy Now!: “Text-Book Case of Genocide': Top U.N. Official Craig Mokhiber Resigns, Denounces Israeli Assault on Gaza."
  • From Hyperallergic: “Questions Arise as Indigenous Curator Suddenly Departs Toronto Museum" by Maya Pontone
  • From The Globe and Mail: “Indigenous curator’s departure from AGO underscores tensions over Israel-Hamas war at art institutions" by Josh O'Kane
  • An important opinion piece in The Guardian: “Is it too much to ask people to view Palestinians as humans? Apparently so" by Arwa Mahdawi
  • From the National Council on Canada-Arab Relations: ​“NCCAR Condemns the Tragic Killing of Reporters in Lebanon" by Rania Hamdan
Picture

Thank you for reading
0 Comments

November Updates with the Embassy Cultural House!

11/10/2023

0 Comments

 
This week, we want to focus on the range of work that is being done in solidarity with the people of Palestine. The wider community is doing the work that—we are hopeful—will lead to change. 

The Embassy Cultural House will also be participating in the next iteration of Queer Cinema for Palestine (QCP), which will coincide with Human Rights Day on December 10, 2023. More updates on this event will follow.

Solidarity for Palestine

Picture
Picture
Picture
Top left: Group photo from the discussion “Is Palestine Facing Another Nakba?" with Israeli authors Eitan & Eléonore Bronstein about their book Nakba: The struggle to decolonize Israel. This event was hosted by Independent Jewish Voices London (IJV London) at Reimagine Co. in London, ON, and co-sponsored by Canadian Palestinian Social Association (CPSA) and People for Peace London. From left to right: Eitan Bronstein, Éléonore Bronstein, Nehal Al Tarhuni of CPSA London, Sara Rans of IJV London, Chava Finkler of IJV London, and Palestinian-Canadian poet Nadine Alaloul. For more information on Eitan and Eléonore's book: https://www.nomad-publishing.com/nakba.html. Photo credit: Jamelie Hassan

Top right: “Stop the Genocide in Palestine" graffiti. Viva Palestina! Love and courage from Oaxaca, Mexico, November 7, 2023. Photo credit: Marnie Fleming

Bottom: Artists in solidarity for #CeasefireNow at SAW Gallery, Ottawa, on Sunday, November 5, 2023. Photo credit: Éloïse Mutombo

Forest City Gallery echos the call for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza

Picture
We applaud the Forest City Gallery Board of Directors and Staff for their critical and empathetic statement on the crisis in Gaza, released on November 4, 2023. To read the full statement, please visit their website.

Dreaming Palestine by Nadine Alaloul

I dream to see a falasteen free-
where the land is filled with rooted olive trees-
Where we see our flags proudly high-
​
Where Muslim’s, Christian’s, & Jews live together in peace like we used to. 
Where Zionism ideology does not exist-
Where it is forbidden to see yourself superior above the rest

I dream to see a falasteen free-
To feel the wind of Mediterranean Sea,
To sip on babonij, chamomile tea 
as I watch children play simo, hide & seek

Where we eat fresh oranges from yaffa trees-
Where we can go back home & live by our seas-
Where we rejoice in Eid, Passover, & Christmas feasts 

I dream of a falasteen that knows peace-
a falasteen where love is what we teach-
for our land-
for our neighbours
for all our brothers & sisters no matter their beliefs. 

I dream of a falasteen that does not know Zionism hate-
but it be a faint memory of what evil creates
I dream of a falasteen 
liberated, free from hatred 
free from dehumanization.

I dream of a falasteen 
where every child is seen as our own-
where each tear that falls from their eyes-
is felt as our own

& I dream of a falasteen where laughter fills the streets 
as we eat knafe sweets,
as we hear tabley beats 
& we finally can say falasteen is free.


 
​
For more of Nadine's work, please visit her Instagram account @nadinethepoet. 

Embassy Cultural House stands with CPSA

Picture
Join CPSA for a rally on Sunday, November 12 at 12:00 PM at Victoria Park in downtown London. 

The Embassy Cultural House stands with the Canadian Palestinian Social Association and is united with numerous groups in London for the
“Ceasefire NOW!" pan-Canadian day of action. CPSA's diverse coalition represents people from various backgrounds and faiths to call for a ceasefire.

This family-friendly peaceful rally and march invites everyone who cares about peace and justice to stand with us.

Twenty years ago, a mass movement kept Canada out of the Iraq war. Today, we need another mass movement to stop the Canadian government from funding genocide, and supporting Israeli war crimes in Gaza. It begins with a ceasefire, but we must also call on the Canadian government to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza and lift the 16-year-long siege. We must also continue to insist that the Canadian government utilize its influence to facilitate the safe return of Canadian Palestinians trapped in Gaza to their families here. 

“Black Life: Untold Stories" premieres on CBC Gem

Black Life: Untold Stories is an eight-part documentary project that reframes the rich and complex histories of Black experiences in Canada, dispelling commonly accepted myths and celebrating the many, and often unrecognized, contributions of Black Canadians who helped to shape our country. The series is now available on CBC Gem. 

We would like to congratulate ECH contributor, Juan Bello, for his work as the archival producer on the episodes: “Northern Beats” and “More than a Game.” Juan notes that, "One of the main challenges across episodes, from a visual research perspective, was the lack of archival and preservation policies in connection with Black communities and individuals. It is a project that addresses systematic injustice, and the lack of equity, diversity, and inclusion in connection with 'archival' and 'broadcast' practices. That makes the series unique, it brings to light historical records that had remained unseen and unheard."

For more information: blacklifeseries.com 

Embassy Cultural House to participate at the
Ottawa Small Press Book Fair

The Ottawa Small Press Book Fair, autumn 2023 edition will be held on Saturday, November 18, 2023 at Tom Brown Arena, 141 Bayview Station Road (note new location). The fair is open from 12 - 5PM. 

The fair contains exhibitors with poetry books, novels, cookbooks, posters, t-shirts, graphic novels, comic books, magazines, scraps of paper, gum-ball machines with poems, 2x4s with text, etc, including regular appearances by publishers.

The Ottawa Small Press Fair is held twice a year (apart from pandemic silences), and was founded in 1994 by rob mclennan and James Spyker. Organized/hosted since by rob mclennan.

Come on by and see some of the best of the small press from Ottawa and beyond! 

Forest City Gallery's 50th Anniversary Members' Show & Sale

Picture
Detail view of Forest City Gallery's original 432 Richmond St. sign (c. 1973), recovered by a local community member. Original logo design by artist Robert Fones.
December 9 - 20
Opening Reception Saturday, December 9, 7-9PM

Forest City Gallery is pleased to announce the 50th Anniversary Members' Show & Sale Fundraiser. The Annual Members’ Show & Sale is an important avenue for artists in the community to connect and develop new audiences, while offering an affordable entry point for supporting local and regional artists and collecting unique works. This is FCG’s longest-running annual exhibition, and it serves as an important fundraising event for the upcoming programming year. 2023 marks half a century of FCG supporting local and regional artists, and vice versa. Exhibiting artists can opt to split the sale of their works with the gallery, or donate full proceeds of the sale of their works to support our programs. FCG issues charitable tax receipts to artist donors.

For more information on the show and submissions, please visit their website. 

Relevant and Related Links

  • Robert Fones' Six-Grid Paintings opens at Olga Korper Gallery from November 18, 2023 to December 21, 2023. For more information, visit the Olga Korper website. 
  • Check out the newest edition of the Old East Villager which includes a write-up about the Embassy Hotel by Marty Kolls. The front cover features Jamelie Hassan's watercolour painting, Embassy at Nite, 1978.
  • The 10th Anniversary of Words: London's Literary and Creative Arts Festival continues through to November 18. To view upcoming events, please visit the Words website. 
  • On October 20, 2023, Jamelie Hassan, Co-founder of the Embassy Cultural House, received an Honorary Doctorate from Western University. To watch the Convocation address and thoughtful introduction by David Heap, view the video here (address begins at 00:37:50). ​

Thank you for reading
0 Comments

Embassy Cultural House partners with Words!

10/31/2023

0 Comments

 
Since 2021, Embassy Cultural House has partnered with Words: The Literary and Creative Arts Festival in London, Ontario, to collaborate on a range of events that have been timely and inspiring. This year, Words is celebrating its 10th anniversary, with an amazing lineup on the way! Congratulations to Josh Lambier, Artistic Director of Words and the volunteer team for their commitment and efforts to bring this creative interdisciplinary program to London.

Words returns to Museum London for the 10th anniversary festival, featuring a hybrid program of onsite and online events to build resilience as we confront the crises of our moment with creativity and care. Embassy Cultural House (ECH) has partnered with Words on some key events, in order to highlight Canada’s finest artists, performers, and authors.

Taking place in November of 2023, the festival will host over 40 writers and artists and will revolve around the theme of “Crisis, Creativity & Care."

Words is open to everyone, and most events are either free or by donation.
Picture
With Words, we're pleased to host bestselling author and Globe and Mail health columnist André Picard at our November 3rd opening event. André is a leading voice on the impact and consequences of COVID-19 in Canada. He has reported on the pandemic from a wide range of perspectives concerning public health. How strong is our healthcare system? What challenges can it withstand? What lessons have we learned from COVID-19? Journalist and filmmaker Janice Zolf will join André to talk about his award-winning coverage of the coronavirus pandemic and its aftermath.

On Saturday morning, November 4th, we are also pleased to feature a conversation between Don McKay and Sally McKay on their new children's book, The Rock Box. Larry Towell will join us for a performance, accompanied by Mike Stevens and Anne Lindsay, in Museum London's auditorium later that night at 7 PM. Sunday afternoon, November 5th, Don McKay will join Jane Munro for a poetry reading and conversation.

There is an exciting lineup of readings, interviews, talks, and other interactive events with some of Canada’s most recognized thinkers, writers, and artists. While some events are either strictly online or onsite, the majority have a hybrid option for in-person or online participation! Follow the appropriate registration links below to join ECH and Words!

Get Your Tickets for Opening Night!
Picture
Embassy Cultural House and the Words Festival are pleased to present an evening performance with acclaimed photographer, poet, and performer Larry Towell, who will be joined by harmonica virtuoso Mike Stevens and award-winning fiddler Anne Lindsay!

This one-hour performance of original ballads employs Larry’s photographs, video, and songs of protest and conflict from Central America, Palestine and Afghanistan to Ukraine, Standing Rock and Mexico, tied together by the theme of dispossession.

Mike has played at the Grande Ole Opry more than 300 times and toured with world renowned musicians from Nashville’s Jim and Jessie to Canada’s Matt Anderson. He is founder of ArtsCan Circle bringing music to First Nations children in the north.

Anne Lindsay is an award winning fiddler/violinist, vocalist, and a master of diverse styles who has recorded and toured with bands and musicians from Led Zeppelin to James Taylor, Jim Cuddy, Blue Rodeo and others in a long and diverse career. She brings a breath of her own fresh air to the stage of live music.

The event is also a book signing for The Mennonites, the recent re-print of Larry’s classic book, as well as "The Man I Left Behind", a three vinyl record set of original songs. It is also the name of his soon to be released feature length film.

Larry is the only Canadian member of Magnum Photos, founded in 1947 by Henri Cartier-Bresson and Robert Capa.

Register on EventBrite to Attend In-Person Free
Picture
Embassy Cultural House and Words are pleased to present a visit with acclaimed poet Don McKay and artist and illustrator Sally McKay, who will join us for a lively discussion of their collaboration on a new children's book, The Rock Box.

You might be surprised by a piece of quartz next to the butter in the fridge, or a lump of peridotite between the cushions on the sofa. There was sandstone in the hall and lava in the bathroom. It was, Petra thought to herself, a lavatory, after all.

Petra loves rocks, and collects them with a passion. She keeps them in her bedroom, in the kitchen cupboards, between the cushions of the living-room sofa, even in the bathroom medicine cabinet. Petra’s parents do not love rocks. At least, not as much as Petra does. To convince her to winnow down her collection, her parents offer her a wonderful treasure—a rock box, with a selection of the rocks and minerals found in her home province of Newfoundland and Labrador. But, wait, is one of those rocks winking at her? Acclaimed Canadian poet Don McKay creates a charming tale of geology, deep time, and connection in his first children’s book.

Register on EventBrite to Attend In-Person Free

Register to Attend Online Free: Zoom Webinars
Picture
Words and Embassy Cultural House are pleased to host a visit with the artists and curators of GardenShip & State for a launch of their exhibition catalogue.

GardenShip and State: A Book is a World
Featuring: Patrick Mahon, Jeff Thomas (Co-curators),
Katie Wilhelm (Designer); Ruth Skinner (Editor) Tom Cull, Michelle Wilson (Contributors), and Marlene Creates, Patricia Deadman (Respondents)

How do art book publications represent worlds and propose world-making? This gathering of curators, artists, designer/editors and writers will address the ways art projects can lead to the production of catalogues and books as archives of cultural materials that act as references and touchstones for ongoing work towards positive change and transformation. Curators Patrick Mahon and Jeff Thomas will be joined by collaborators and book producers, Tom Cull, Ruth Skinner, Katie Wilhelm and Michelle Wilson, to trace the journey from the GardenShip and State exhibition to its published iterations as a book and an almanac. The conversation will be enhanced by responses and stories from Newfoundland-based artist, Marlene Creates, and Curator of the Woodland Cultural Centre, Patricia Deadman, who will share some of their own tales and evidence of other publication-making journeys.

For the full program of GardenShip and State events, please visit the event page!

Register on EventBrite to Attend In-Person Free

Register to Attend Online Free: Zoom Webinars
0 Comments

Essay on Gaza by Riwaa Abuquta

10/17/2023

1 Comment

 
We have received a range of responses from the community in regards to the ongoing catastrophe in Gaza, and are grateful to everyone that has reached out to share their concerns, critiques, and support. ECH received this statement by Riwaa Abuquta, a young writer from Gaza, who sent her statement to Deborah Root here in Canada.

From Deborah Root
October 17, 2023

Riwaa Abuquta is a 29-year-old writer in Gaza, living in Rafah along with her family. She became a writing mentee a few years ago and we've since become friends, staying in regular touch. We’ve continued to speak over the last few days, via What’sApp (when she’s able to get a signal). Conditions are increasingly dire, with some people trying to desalinate water by soaking potato pieces to draw out the salt (it doesn't work). She wrote in a message: "Every morning we get up feeling like we're drowning." Yesterday Riwaa asked me what people in Canada are saying about Gaza, so I sent her the October 16 ECH statement. That ECH statement is giving her and others in Rafah the hope that they are not as alone as they feel in the midst of the siege. Last night she wrote her own statement, an amended version of her Facebook post of October 12, editing the piece through the sound of falling bombs. She asked me to pass it along to ECH, so we can understand how someone on the ground in Gaza is thinking. For Riwaa, writing is a way of giving, and of communicating with people outside Gaza as she does her best to survive.

Essay on Gaza by Riwaa Abuquta
October 16, 2023

As we mourn, we are committed to educating and raising awareness about our challenges.
What would happen if you built a refuge for persecuted people in a place where other people already live?

In the next few minutes, you'll understand why this moral dilemma lies at the root of the struggle. The moral dilemma of building a refuge for persecuted people in an already inhabited place leads to conflicts like the Israeli-Palestinian situation. In this case, the foundation of Israel as a Jewish state resulted in the displacement of indigenous Palestinians. The conflict continues today with millions of Palestinian refugees longing to return to their homeland.

Historical Overview
Many Jews fled harsh persecution in anti-Semitic Europe, notably during the Nazi Holocaust. Zionists encouraged massive immigration to Palestine, at that time a British colony where Jews had an age-old connection and where small Jewish communities had long existed among larger groups of other indigenous peoples. When the UN offered the Jewish immigrants the majority of the land for a new state called Israel, for the indigenous Palestinians who already lived there, it was the massive destruction of life. They rejected the UN's partition plan, and several Arab states invaded the newly established Israel. By the end of the struggle, Israeli forces had erased over 400 Palestinian villages and towns. Israel controlled 78% of Palestine.

When over three-quarters of a million Palestinians who fled or were expelled during the fighting tried to return to their homes, the Israelis permanently barred them. Over 100,000 of their relatives and neighbors who had not left became second-class citizens of the new state called Israel, alongside the new Jewish majority. Today, the number of Palestinian refugees and their descendants is in the millions, with most residing in the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, and Jordan. Many are dispersed across the world, with millions still living in refugee camps, longing to return to their homeland. To sum up, while one group of Zionists founded their home as they claim, in the process, a new group of refugees was created.

Now, here's the second thing to understand:

The Vision of Palestine
Israel was founded as a Jewish state, but now ask yourself! What exactly does that mean? People had lots of ideas about what a Jewish state should look like. Some called for equality for all citizens, but what was created in practice was institutional discrimination against non-Jews. In other words, Israel ended up being built on a blueprint of exclusion; the Israeli government wants maximum land and resources for Jews but not the Palestinians living already there. That's why inside occupied Palestinian lands, Jews get special privileges including rights to land and housing that are denied to the Palestinian citizens who already live there. This exclusionary blueprint also led Israel to avoid defining its borders. It continues to hold on to the West Bank and Gaza, occupied in the 1967 war. Since then, Israel has built Jewish settlements throughout the occupied West Bank, building Jewish-only cities and supplying them with infrastructure like; roads, army camps, schools, and colleges.

Military occupations are meant to be temporary, yet after over 70 years, this one appears permanent and unjust. In the West Bank, Israeli Jewish settlers and Palestinians share the same land but live under two entirely separate and unequal systems of Israeli law. Jewish settlers dominate natural resources, such as water and agricultural land, with the support of the Israeli army, while Palestinians experience the demolition of homes, land confiscation, and subjugation in Gaza. Resistance is met with raids, arrests, and assassinations, all aimed at; expanding land while making life so difficult for Palestinians that they will either leave or be too afraid to resist.

Palestinian Resistance and the Quest for Peace
Palestinians have fought back for decades, they tried to achieve national liberation through armed struggle. Some support popular protest instead of fighting and see this cycle of control, repression, and violence deeply harmful to Palestinians living under occupation. To reach a peaceful and secure future for us as Palestinians, they want this cycle to be broken.

Now that we have explored the problem, what about the solution, What about peace talks!
So far, over two decades of US-backed peace talks have actually made things worse by supporting Israel to continue the occupation. It's been years of talking while Israel massively expanded the Jewish settlements and literally redrew the map. Peace talks are good if they're real, but not when they're a theatre to cover land confiscation.
 
So, what's next?
The United States has been a terrible friend, enabling Israel's expansion onto Palestinian land by funding the Israeli military—the world's largest recipient of US foreign aid.
However, there's another superpower that can make a difference—You. Hundreds of thousands worldwide are engaging in protests, education, divestment, and boycotts.
 
Gaza's Humanitarian Crisis
Since the 7th of October, a dire situation has engulfed the people of Gaza. The region has been plunged into darkness as electricity remains cut off, making daily life an arduous challenge. Access to the internet is limited, water is scarce, and life-saving supplements are out of reach. Amidst this grim reality, a mass evacuation has been initiated, with many from the northern areas seeking refuge in the south. The streets have become makeshift bedrooms for countless families, exposed to the ever-changing weather conditions. What makes this ordeal even more heart-wrenching is that most of these displaced individuals have no relatives in the south to turn to for support.
 
Schools, now overflowing with people seeking shelter, offer a meager six bathrooms each, an unimaginable predicament given the sheer number of occupants. In these cramped spaces, men, women, elderly citizens, children, pregnant women, and the sick all share these facilities. Adding to the misery, there is no water or electricity in these overcrowded sanctuaries, and food is in short supply. Despite the adversity, there is a glimmer of hope as people rally to help one another. Neighbors and communities surrounding the schools are pooling their resources, scraping together money and food to provide nourishment for those in need. Certainly, it's impossible to fathom the situation in the coming days. The uncertainty and challenges continue to mount. In the face of these hardships, people are displaying remarkable resilience and solidarity. They're sharing whatever little they have with one another, whether it's food, water, or any available resources. However, as the supplies deplete, the situation becomes even more critical. When the limited resources are exhausted, and desperation deepens, the community comes together with a collective plea for help.

It's a heart-wrenching reality where the people of Gaza find strength in unity, knowing that their survival depends on the compassion and assistance of others. In previous attacks, the UNRWA (United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees) had taken control of the situation and provided assistance, but this time, their resources are severely constrained, leaving the people of Gaza more vulnerable than ever. The struggle for basic necessities has become a daily battle. Families must spend entire days searching for water, even finding just a small gallon is a victory. In previous conflicts, aid and support arrived quickly once hostilities commenced, but this time, it seems that the flow of assistance has been stifled, leaving the people of Gaza in a precarious and dire situation.

Your Contribution
Please try to educate yourselves before posting/sharing viewpoints or being
“Pro-peace." While advocating for peace is a universal desire, it is crucial to recognize that everyone shares this aspiration. It does not require an exceptional level of insight. However, it is vital not to engage in discussions without a comprehensive understanding of the matter at hand. The primary aim should be to enlighten the global community about the historical context and the events that have unfolded over the past seven and a half decades.

Don't stay silent or neutral‌.
Plan to keep reading and continue to educate yourself as well before making statements. Concerns about potential limitations imposed by social media algorithms, the possibility of posts being restricted, or the risk of losing followers should not dissuade individuals from voicing their support for the Palestinian cause. The paramount goal is to raise awareness and disseminate knowledge about the historical injustices that have been inflicted upon the Palestinian people for decades. These collective efforts are aimed at exerting international pressure to address and rectify the severe human rights violations that Palestinians experience. The ultimate aim is to advocate for justice and a lasting resolution to halt human rights violations against Palestinians.
1 Comment

Statement on Palestine/Israel: October 16, 2023

10/16/2023

0 Comments

 
As the crisis in Gaza rapidly deteriorates, we condemn the ongoing violence against innocent Palestinians in Gaza and the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem. 

From Jewish Voice for Peace, comes this alarming news;
“In the past week, Israel has dropped more bombs on Gaza than the U.S. did in a year of war on Afghanistan." The continued siege of Gaza and the withholding of food, water, electricity, and humanitarian aid is in total violation of international law. These acts amount to an imminent genocide that must be stopped. 
​

We stand in solidarity with the people of Gaza. 
We stand in solidarity with the people of Palestine. 

We continue to receive news on this issue and we would like to highlight this statement from Dar Yusuf Nasri Jacir for Art and Research, a grass-roots independent artist–run initiative based in Bethlehem:

Vigils, marches and protests are taking place on our street on a daily basis which are met with violent aggression incurred by Israel’s army and their war machines. Our space has sustained damages as a result of this. We have secured Dar Jacir for the time being and remain off-site. The situation in the West Bank remains under lockdown, with Israeli incursions nightly, and settlers roaming around armed and killing innocent people. 

At this time all the focus and solidarity must be with Gaza. We urge you all to support Gaza. For those asking for trusted organizations to support our people in Gaza, we recommend looking through this list.


and these poignant lines by Palestinian poet, Mahmoud Darwish (1941-2008):

Where should we go after the last frontiers?
Where should the birds fly after the last sky?

(From
“The Earth is Closing On Us")

We encourage further reading to give context to this catastrophe: 

- From Yumna Patel and Mondoweiss Palestine Bureau at Mondoweiss: 
“'Operation Al-Aqsa Flood' Day 9: Water is running out in Gaza, Israel continues to prevent humanitarian aid"
- From Faisal Bhabha, Faisal Kutty, Muneeza Sheikh, contributors to Toronto Star:
“The right side of Mideast crisis is that of humanity and international humanitarian law"
- From Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East (CJPME):
“Responding to Misinformation and Hatred"
- From Jewish Voice for Peace:
“Jewish Voice for Peace calls on all people of conscience to stop imminent genocide"
- From Al Jazeera:
“Which countries have criticised Israeli attacks on Gaza?"
- From Friends of Sabeel North America:
“Statement from the Sabeel Ecumenical Palestinian Liberation Theology Centre"
- From Jewish Voice for Peace:
“Genocide, ethnic cleansing, and another Nakba in Palestine"
- From On Canada Project:
“Israel's apartheid against Palestinians is a crime against humanity"
0 Comments

Statement on Palestine/Israel:  October 13, 2023

10/13/2023

0 Comments

 
The Embassy Cultural House expresses our profound grief as we mourn so many lives that have been lost since Hamas launched its horrific attack on Israel on Saturday October 7, 2023, which led to the massacre of Israeli civilians, and the kidnapping of hostages. Israel's subsequent retaliation on Gaza, has also led to the killing of innocent Palestinian civilians.

The magnitude of Israel’s devastating response and the impact of this war on both populations, including innocent children being killed and injured, will have lasting consequences. Both Israeli and Palestinian innocent lives have been lost to this senseless violence in this latest conflict. 

We hope for an immediate release of the hostages held by Hamas and a ceasefire, so that a dialogue can begin towards establishing peace and stability for all those affected by this conflict both on the ground and those who are further away.

Please consider giving to the Canadian Red Cross efforts to provide humanitarian assistance to those affected by the violence: Israel and Occupied Palestinian Territories - Canadian Red Cross

In the words of Francesca P. Albanese, United Nations’ Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territory:

“I am profoundly convinced that while we cannot turn the clock back and make fully right the wrongs punctuating the past of that tormented part of the world that we learn to call Israel/Palestine, there is a just way out." - “Protecting Human Rights in Occupied Palestine: Working Through the United Nations", Richard Falk, John Dugard, Michael Lynk, 2022

From Maya Pontone at Hyperallergic, ​
“After Hamas Assault, Israeli Strikes Destroy Mosques and Buildings in Gaza."
0 Comments

August Updates with the Embassy Cultural House

8/25/2023

0 Comments

 
Dear Embassy Cultural House community, 

August is usually a time of leisure and relaxation for many, but things have continued to ramp up for the Embassy Cultural House. Issues surrounding the climate crisis have continued to require international attention. Our team extends our sympathies to the many people in Canada and abroad who continue to be affected by the horrific wildfires that are raging across the country, and further afield. 
Picture
Wildfires raging in BC. Photo credit: Fern Helfand

Portraits of Sam Hallick: Modern Arab Presence in 
Twentieth-Century North America
by Salah D Hassan

Picture
Embassy Cultural House Editions, 96 pp., $20, September 2023, ISBN 9781777492144

​ECH's newest publication, Portraits of Sam Hallick: Modern Arab Presence in Twentieth-Century North America by Salah D. Hassan will be available on September 5, 2023. This publication marks the Embassy Cultural House's seventh in-house publication, and the first publication to be written by an ECH contributor. 

This book examines photographs of an Arab immigrant coming to the United States taken during the early twentieth century, a period when photography was becoming more accessible to the general public. Arabic-speaking immigrants to the US had photographers take professional portraits in their shops, on the street, in offices, or in factories. Journalists and ethnographers also took photos documenting the presence of Arabic speakers in varied locations across the United States. The main focus is on photos of Sam Hallick, the author's maternal grandfather, who arrived in the US around 1900 and lived in South Dakota before returning to his home village in the Beqa'a Valley in 1920. Hassan pieces together the story of Sam Hallick from family photos and the public record, reading the family portraits in relation to modern forms of Arab self-representation. 

To order a copy of this book, please contact [email protected]. 

Check out the story behind Indwell's Embassy Commons!

In Indwell's newest video, experience the story of a London Old East Village icon—the Embassy Hotel—and the creation of Indwell's newest affordable housing complex--Embassy Commons—and the power of art to build community. The video also explores the creation of Jamelie Hassan's Embassy at Nite mural and Clayworx's Love, Hope, and Belonging mosaics on the exterior of the Embassy Commons in London, Ontario, Canada. Throughout the film, stories of the Embassy Hotel and the Embassy Cultural House are shared by Julie Ryan, Indwell's Community Engagement Coordinator, Hanny Hassan, brother of Jamelie Hassan and Helen Haller (1943-2019), Jeremy Jeresky of the London Arts Council, and Beth Turnbull Morrish, the Embassy Common's Mosaic Art Director. 
 
To learn more about Embassy Commons, please visit Indwell's website. 


Ron Benner's community corn roast returns with
​Doors Open at Museum London! 

Picture
Ron roasting corn on Maiz Barbacoa in 2022. Photo credit: Kuefner Photography
​Join artist Ron Benner on Saturday, September 16, 2023, from 1:00 pm to 4:00 pm for Museum London's annual outdoor corn roast. Enjoy corn on the cob with butter, salt, chili powder, and lime juice freshly roasted from Benner's Maiz Barbacoa — part corn roaster and part sculpture. Live acoustic music by Frank Ridsdale will accompany this feast!

For more information about this event, please visit Museum London's website 

Equal to Mystery: In Search of Harold Sonny Ladoo by Christopher Laird

​Peepal Tree Press, 232 pp., $30.95, April 2023, ISBN 9781845235628

When the Trinidadian novelist Harold Sonny Ladoo was found dead soon after the publication of his classic novel, No Pain Like This Body, for Christopher Laird, it became an obsession to try to discover the writer behind the work and what had brought about his untimely end.Equal to Mystery – words written by Ladoo – is the record of that pursuit.
 
Christopher Laird is a film-maker and producer who has produced over 300 documentaries, dramas and other video productions with Banyan Ltd. over the past 40 years garnering a score of national, regional and international awards. He has overseen the establishment of what is arguably the world’s largest digitised collection of Caribbean culture on video in the Banyan Archive.

For more information about the book, visit Peepal Tree Press. 

First to Leave the Party: My Life with Ordinary People...
Who Happen to be Famous
 by Salah Bachir

Picture
Penguin Random House, 336 pp., $36.95, October 2023, ISBN 9780771006111

A marvelous and compulsively readable collection of stories from the life of Salah Bachir—philanthropist, art collector, movie industry insider—who, with his sheer zest for life, art, human interaction, and giving back to his community has endeared himself to some of the most famous and creative people in recent times.

Bachir, who immigrated to Canada from Lebanon with his family in 1965, is a gay activist who has worked in the film world for over four decades. While this has given him undeniable front-row access to Hollywood’s biggest stars, it is Salah’s personal charm and kindness, his philanthropy, his overall style (think hats, scarves, brooches, pearls, and diamonds), and his deep involvement in the art world that have made him a friend, companion, confidante, and/or lover to so many—including Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, Doris Day, Ella Fitzgerald, Mary Tyler Moore, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Andy Warhol, Keith Haring, Edward Albee, Diahann Carroll, Orson Welles, Aretha Franklin, Norman Jewison, and Elizabeth Taylor—although it’s true that Katharine Hepburn once turned him down, very nicely.

Collected here in this wonderful book are personal stories of them all—some short, some long, some surprising, others juicy, and all fascinating. Through them we get to know Salah, a larger-than-life character that embodies the many worlds he shapes—the kind of person it would be hard to make up if he didn’t already exist.

For more information about Salah Bachir, please visit his website. 

For more information about the book, please visit Penguin Random House. 


Dollirium: The Resurrection at TAP Centre for Creativity and Words: The Literary and Creative Arts Festival!

Picture
“Dollirium: The Resurrection" poster for TAP featuring an art doll by Jacqui Gallant.
The Embassy Cultural House would like to extend our sincere congratulations to the artists of Dollirium: The Resurrection for bringing a unique exhibition to TAP Centre for Creativity from July 5th to August 5th, 2023, and for adding an engaging new group of voices to the Words canon! During the Words event on July 26, 2023, Words host Joshua Lambier, interviewed Anthony Veilleux, Jacqui Gallant, and Sarah Legault to explore how these artists use their artistic vision and skill sets to create charismatic characters with endearing stories. They also talked about why they searched out other like-minded creators and developed opportunities for collaboration, mentorship, and community.
​
The Resurrection showcased work by art dollmakers: Dagmara Antic, Sandra Arteaga,  Melanie Ashton, Kelly Chehardy, Michelle de Pinto, Sara Deck, Kylie Dexter, Chris Elliott, Jacqui Gallant, Pandora Gastelum, Vicky Georgousopoulou, Christophe Goussault, Caroline Jones, Lonnie Jones, Bubu Kamitakahara, Sarah Legault, Kamilla Meesters, Vilia Merton, Kamila Mlynarczyk, Gerakina Pastogianni, Melissa Panth, David Pound, Beth Robinson, Kook Teflon, Tom Taggart, Kat Toronto aka “Miss Meatface”, Anthony Veilleux.

GardenShip and State exhibition catalogue now available! 

This exhibition catalogue brings together 20 artists and writers who engage in decolonial critique, environmental activism, and 21st-century artistic practices to address what is arguably the problem of our times: environmental catastrophe. It asks how we can work together, and create together as a global community to restore the planet – while respecting differences, and seeking to repair divisions and address injustices brought about by colonialism. Designed by Katie WIlhelm and edited by Ruth Skinner, the catalogue expands the conversation with the inclusion of new essays and conversations. 

The catalogue features works from the exhibition that were produced over a two-year period—the results of conversations between the artists and writers, oftentimes with members of their local communities. Featuring artists Ron Benner, Lori Blondeau, Sean Caulfield, Paul Chartrand, Tom Cull, Amelia Faye, Michael Farnan, Joan Greer, Jamelie Hassan, Sharmistha Kar, Jessica Karuhanga, Mark Kasumovic, Patrick Mahon, Mary Mattingly, Quinn Smallboy, Ashley Snook, Adrian Stimson, Jeff Thomas, Andrés Villar, and Michelle Wilson. 

The catalogue is available for purchase at Shop Museum London. 
For more information about the GardenShip and State collective, please visit their website. 


To Western University and our dedicated Contributing Editors! ​

When the Embassy Cultural House was launched online in 2020, some of our earliest supporters included the faculty and students of Western University's Department of Visual Arts, Through the Graduate and Undergraduate internship programs, Embassy Cultural House has been fortunate to host many students from the department, some of whom continue to work with us today. 

To our contributing editors past and present—JoAnna Weil, Jared Hendricks-Polack, Liv Pattison, Charlotte Egan, Turing Xu, Mackenzie Smith, Imogen Clendinning, Andreas Buchwaldt, Anahi Gonzalez, Ashar Mobeen, Iraboty Kazi, Shelley Kopp, and Blessy Augustine—thank you!  

Thank you for reading!
0 Comments

“Portraits of Sam Hallick: Modern Arab Presence in Twentieth-Century North America" by Salah D Hassan.

8/22/2023

1 Comment

 
Embassy Cultural House Editions, 96 pp., $20, September 2023, ISBN 9781777492144 

ECH's newest publication, Portraits of Sam Hallick: Modern Arab Presence in Twentieth-Century North America by Salah D. Hassan will be available on September 5, 2023. This publication marks the Embassy Cultural House's seventh in-house publication, and the first publication to be written by an ECH contributor. 

This book examines photographs of an Arab immigrant coming to the United States taken during the early twentieth century, a period when photography was becoming more accessible to the general public. Arabic-speaking immigrants to the US had photographers take professional portraits in their shops, on the street, in offices, or in factories. Journalists and ethnographers also took photos documenting the presence of Arabic speakers in varied locations across the United States. The main focus is on photos of Sam Hallick, the author's maternal grandfather, who arrived in the US around 1900 and lived in South Dakota before returning to his home village in the Beqa'a Valley in 1920. Hassan pieces together the story of Sam Hallick from family photos and the public record, reading the family portraits in relation to modern forms of Arab self-representation. 


To order a copy of this book, please contact [email protected]. ​
Picture
Front cover of Portraits of Sam Hallick: Modern Arab Presence in Twentieth-Century North America" by Salah D. Hassan. Cover design by Olivia Mossuto. 
1 Comment
<<Previous

    ECH NEWS

    Updates on the London Arts Community

    Archives

    April 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    June 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    March 2023
    January 2023
    November 2022
    September 2022
    July 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020

    Categories

    All
    BIPOC
    Environment
    Events
    Exhibits
    IBPOC
    In Memoriam
    London Art Scene
    Media
    Music
    Old East Village
    Partners
    People
    Politics
    Publications
    Women
    Words

    RSS Feed


EDITORIAL TEAM

ONLINE FOUNDER
Tariq Hassan Gordon

COFOUNDERS & CURATORIAL ADVISORS 
 
Jamelie Hassan 
& Ron Benner

ADVISORY CIRCLE
Samer Abdelnour, Marnie Fleming, Wyn Geleynse, Fern Helfand, S F Ho, Lorraine Klaasen, Judith Rodger, Ruth Skinner, Mary Lou Smoke, and Lucas Stenning 

COORDINATING EDITORS
Tariq Hassan Gordon & 
Olivia Mossuto

CONTRIBUTING EDITORS
Blessy Augustine, Anahí González, Jared Hendricks-Polack, Jessica Irene Joyce, Ira Kazi, 
Shelley Kopp, Jenna Rose Sands, Mireya Seymour, Venus Tsao, Diana Tamblyn, and Michelle Wilson. 

VIRTUAL TOUR
Andreas Buchwaldt

SUBSCRIBE TO THE MAILING LIST
/* real people should not fill this in and expect good things - do not remove this or risk form bot signups */

Intuit Mailchimp


OUR STORY
Artists Jamelie Hassan and Ron Benner and jazz musician Eric Stach founded the Embassy Cultural House (1983-1990) located in the restaurant portion of the Embassy Hotel at 732 Dundas Street in East London. In 2020, at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Embassy Cultural House was re-envisioned as a virtual artist-run space and website. 

The Embassy Cultural House gratefully acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council and the London Arts Council through the City of London's Community Arts Investment Program.
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture

The Embassy Cultural House is thankful for the mentorship program established by Western University's Visual Arts department and the continued support of the students and Faculty of Arts & Humanities.
Picture

Our Partners

Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture

E M B A S S Y  C U L T U R A L  H O U S E . C A

The Embassy Cultural House (ECH) is located on the traditional lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnaapéewak, and Chonnonton peoples, at the forks of Deshkan Ziibi (Antler River), an area subject to the Dish with One Spoon Covenant Wampum and other treaties, colonized as London, Ontario. The ECH strives to create meaningful relationships between the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island and our contributors. The ECH honours the stewardship of the many Indigenous peoples who have resided on these lands since time immemorial.

Copyright © 2025  Embassy Cultural House.
All rights reserved.
Proudly powered by Weebly

  • Home
  • Recent News
  • Community
    • Advisors & Editorial Team
    • Contributors
    • Governor General Laureates
    • In Memoriam
  • Exhibitions
  • Projects
  • Publications
  • Background
    • Past Programming >
      • Exhibitions 1983-1990 >
        • Index of Curators
        • Index of Photographers
        • Index of Visual Artists
      • Film 1983-1990
      • Music 1983-1990 >
        • Index of Musicians
      • Performances 1983-1990 >
        • Index of Performers
    • Embassy Hotel History
  • About