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X-WR-CALNAME:UniverCity - Better Living on Burnaby Mountain
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://univercity.ca
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for UniverCity - Better Living on Burnaby Mountain
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DTSTART:20180101T000000
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180120
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180204
DTSTAMP:20260509T231249
CREATED:20171214T210908Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171214T210908Z
UID:2537-1516406400-1517702399@univercity.ca
SUMMARY:Richard Ibghy and Marilou Lemmens: When the Guests Are Not Looking
DESCRIPTION:When the Guests Are Not Looking is a new installation and performance project by Richard Ibghy and Marilou Lemmens that examines audience expectations towards artists\, artworks and art institutions. In their collaborative multidisciplinary practice\, Ibghy and Lemmens investigate the material\, affective and sensory dimensions of experience\, and the ways in which the logic of economy infiltrates the most intimate aspects of our lives. \nThis project extends from a publication by the artists related to work\, productivity and idleness. It is structured around Diderot’s Rameau’s Nephew (a satirical late 18th century text) which presents a dialogue between a philosopher and a vagabond that offers two opposing views on work: the philosopher loves unconfined thought\, while the vagabond is an idler\, buffoon\, actor\, and musician who avoids sites of production. Diderot’s text provides an alternate view within the Enlightenment\, a period often portrayed as the foundation of our contemporary obsession with productivity. \nSFU students will workshop and interpret the publication through improvisational performances during the course of the project. The performers will inhabit the character of Rameau’s nephew (the vagabond) and their performances will be sporadic so that visitors to the gallery may or may not witness a performance\, and may or may not be aware that what they are witnessing is a performance. When the Guests Are Not Looking addresses the social demand for individuals to perform within the conditions of post-Fordist labour regimes and neoliberal social processes\, and for the gallery to similarly “perform” within these circumstances. \nBased in Durham-Sud\, Quebec\, Ibghy and Lemmens have shown their work extensively nationally and internationally. \nCurated by Melanie O’Brian \nThis project is part of Of Bodies\, On Land\, In Time\, a three-year SFU Galleries series that foregrounds performative\, process-based and embodied practices that attend to the social\, political and economic pressures that impact people\, land-relations\, and material and immaterial culture. \nEvents\nOpening Reception and Artist Talk\nSaturday\, January 20\, 3 – 5pm\nAudain Gallery \nExhibition Tour\nSaturday\, February 3\, 1pm\nAudain gallery \nPart of the Downtown Vancouver Gallery Tour \nPanel Conversation: Performing Intertextuality\nWednesday\, February 28\, 7pm\nAudain Gallery \nPanelists will consider how artists read history through literature\, literature through performance\, performance through history. The cultural and socio-geographic contexts within which Denis Diderot and Hugo Carillo wrote will be discussed\, alongside the current cultural and social climate within which Ibghy\, Lemmens and Ramírez-Figueroa revisit their texts.
URL:https://univercity.ca/events-calendar/richard-ibghy-marilou-lemmens-guests-not-looking/
LOCATION:Audain Gallery\, Goldcorp Centre for the Arts\, 149 West Hastings Street\, Vancouver\, British Columbia\, Canada
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180131T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180131T203000
DTSTAMP:20260509T231249
CREATED:20171214T210255Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171214T210255Z
UID:2534-1517425200-1517430600@univercity.ca
SUMMARY:President’s Faculty Lecture: Dr. Yuezhi Zhao
DESCRIPTION:China’s “Belt and Road Initiative:” A Critical Communication Perspective\nIn the past few years\, China has been developing the “Belt and Road Initiative” as a response to Western-centric globalization. Referring to both the “Silk Road Economic Belt” and the “21st Century Maritime Silk Road\,” this initiative is reshaping Chinese foreign policies and trade relationships with major Eurasian and African countries. Focusing on communication as a key component\, this lecture offers a critical analysis of this initiative’s geo-political economy origins\, ideological and cultural underpinnings\, as well as its possibilities and challenges. \nDr. Yuezhi Zhao (Ph.D.\, 1996) is Professor and Tier I Canada Research Chair in Political Economy of Communication at the School of Communication\, Simon Fraser University. A recipient of the C. Edwin Baker Award and the Dallas Smythe Award for her contributions to scholarship on communication and democracy\, and SFU’s Chris Dagg Award for International Impact\, Dr. Zhao’s publications include Media\, Market and Democracy in China\, Communication in China\, Global Communication\, Communication and Global Power Shifts\, and Global to Village. She currently co-directs the SFU-CUC Global Communication M.A. Double Degree Program. \nThe President’s Faculty Lecture Series is a public program aimed at showcasing outstanding SFU faculty and their research\, and strengthening relationships between the university and the many communities we serve.
URL:https://univercity.ca/events-calendar/presidents-faculty-lecture-dr-yuezhi-zhao/
LOCATION:Room 1400\, SFU Harbour Centre\, 515 West Hastings St\, Vancouver\, British Columbia\, Canada
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