Happy Lunar New Year! □ The Embassy Cultural House welcomes the Year of the Wood Snake and the opportunity for revival, renewal and creativity.
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A prescient response from 50 years ago...
The Embassy Cultural House team will be on a winter break from December 8, 2024 to January 13, 2025.
Forest City Gallery Members' Show and Sale, Museum London Winter Launch, and the 401 Holiday Open House!
It continues to be a heavy year for the ECH community and beyond.
The 2024 programme is hosted by Western University in London, Ontario, and many ECH contributors will be present as guests, hosts, and speakers.
Launch parties for Embassy Cultural House's newest publication, corn roasts, exhibition openings, and more!
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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.
Michelle Owusu-Ansah, Misha Bower, Midswim, and Embassy Cultural House at Innovation Works4/26/2024
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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 |
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]. | Front cover of Portraits of Sam Hallick: Modern Arab Presence in Twentieth-Century North America" by Salah D. Hassan. Cover design by Olivia Mossuto. |
Embassy Cultural House: “Celebrating 40 Years of Cultural History" continues at the Rhino Lounge!
7/18/2023
Celebrating 40 Years of Cultural History
July 14 - November 14
Rhino Lounge, Museum London
421 Ridout Street, London, ON
Embassy Cultural House: Celebrating 40 Years of Cultural History is an exhibition that charts the past and present programs of the Embassy Cultural House. Beginning with the Embassy Hotel in 1983, the exhibition acknowledges the efforts made by a network of artists and activists in London, Ontario and internationally, including the current, re-invigorated community collective initiated in 2020. The exhibition has been coordinated by Ron Benner, Jamelie Hassan, Wyn Geleynse and Olivia Mossuto. Artworks have been exhibited at the Satellite Project Space and with our community partners—Jill’s Table, Colour by Schubert and the Framing and Art Centre—through our Cloud to Street initiative.
Celebrating 40 Years of Cultural History at the Rhino Lounge includes works by Rebecca Baird and Kenny Baird, Stephen Andrews, Carole Condé and Karl Beveridge, Jeff Thomas, Olivia Mossuto, Judith Rodger, Jamelie Hassan, Jean Spence, Patrick Mahon, Jessie Amery, Wyn Geleynse, Fern Helfand, Ron Benner, Jade WIlliamson and Bernice Vincent (1934 - 2016).
Celebrating 40 Years of Cultural History
June 14 - June 24
Satellite Project Space
121 Dundas St, London, ON
Opening Event: Saturday, June 17, 2-5 PM
Closing Event: Saturday, June 24, 2-5 PM
Celebrating 40 Years of Cultural History: Cloud to Street
June 14 - July 17
Jill’s Table
115 King St, London, ON
Colour by Schubert
121 King St, London, ON
Framing and Art Centre
371 Horton St. E, London, ON
Embassy Cultural House: Celebrating 40 Years of Cultural History is an exhibition that charts the past and present programs of the Embassy Cultural House. Beginning with the Embassy Hotel in 1983, the exhibition acknowledges the efforts made by a network of artists and activists in London, Ontario and internationally, including the current, re-invigorated community collective initiated in 2020. The exhibition has been coordinated by Ron Benner, Jamelie Hassan, Wyn Geleynse and Olivia Mossuto. Artworks will be exhibited at the Satellite Project Space and with our community partners—Jill’s Table, Colour by Schubert and the Framing and Art Centre—through our Cloud to Street initiative. The Cloud to Street project was initiated by Tariq Hassan Gordon in 2020 and has continued to be an important exhibition format for ECH. Further programming will address this legacy, in addition to an upcoming publication expected fall 2023.
Celebrating 40 Years of Cultural History includes works by: Jessie Amery, Stephen Andrews, Rebecca Baird & Kenny Baird, Ron Benner, Tom Benner, Carole Condé & Karl Beveridge, Sheri Cowan, Susan Day, Duncan de Kergommeaux, Patricia Deadman, Stan Denniston, Reid Diamond, Holly English, Soheila Esfahani, kerry ferris, Mireya Folch-Serra, Wyn Geleynse, Oliver Girling, Anahí González, Gildo Gonzalez, Jamelie Hassan, Fern Helfand, Jared Hendricks-Polack, Spring Hurlbut, Martyn Judson, Sharmistha Kar, George Kubresli, Patrick Mahon, Doug Mitchell, Kim Moodie, Catherine Morrisey, Olivia Mossuto, Kim Neudorf, Shelley Niro, Oscar Ortiz, Troy Ouelette, Judith Rodger, Thelma Rosner, Jenna Rose Sands, Roland Schubert, Jean Spence, Diana Tamblyn, John Tamblyn, Jeff Thomas, Larry Towell, Bernice Vincent, Don Vincent, Jade Williamson
About the Embassy Cultural House (ECH)
In 1983, artists Jamelie Hassan, Ron Benner and jazz musician Eric Stach founded the Embassy Cultural House (1983-1990), which was located in the restaurant portion of the Embassy Hotel at 732 Dundas Street in East London. In 2020, at the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Embassy Cultural House was re-envisioned as an online collective and art space by Tariq Hassan Gordon. The virtual and in-person programming is a collaborative effort by contributors, editors, partners and volunteers to celebrate the art community in London, Ontario—its past and present, and its many connections across Canada and around the world. As of 2023, the revitalized Embassy Cultural House has initiated over 20 projects and six publications.
This exhibition is generously supported by the London Arts Council, the City of London and the ECH community.
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