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Please help Megaphone’s Joyful Voices Fundraising Campaign
With your help, Megaphone can make this Christmas one of Joyful Voices for our vendors and community. Megaphone gives homeless and low-income people a chance to be heard, whether it’s by being a vendor, writing an article or having their issues covered in a story. For many, it’s an opportunity they’ve never had before.
“I really had no outlet until I started selling the paper,” says Megaphone vendor Danny Maloney. “It gave me the chance to interact and socialize with people and turn my life around.”
Our vendors take pride in selling Megaphone to their customers. When you buy a copy of the magazine from one of them, you are telling them that their voice matters. But in order for Megaphone to continue to give a voice to the voiceless, we need your support.
This Christmas season, Megaphone needs to raise $5,000 so we can keep working to empower homeless and low-income people, and make sure the rest of the city hears what they have to say. We need your donation.
Donate
Your donation helps pay for:
- Vendor materials: T-shirts, ID badges, hats and bags
- Printing and publishing costs
- Office Supplies
- Vendor Training
Please donate online or fill out this donation form and send a cheque to:
Megaphone Magazine
#611, 142-757 W. Hastings
Vancouver, BC
V6C 1A1
Please help Megaphone make this a season of Joyful Voices for all.
Thank you for your support,
Sean Condon
Editor-in-Chief
Megaphone Magazine
Heart Therapy: A Downtown East Side Art Show Features Unlikely Artists; Pamela Masik leads Vancouver Downtown Eastside (DTES) women on Healing Journey
Can art heal? Try asking the artists featured in a show titled: “Uncovering Vision: A Discovery of Art Forms by Men and Women on the Downtown East Side.” The show runs from Nov. 20-22, with an opening at 4:00pm on Friday the 20th at 361 Heatley Ave., and is sponsored by the East Side Culture Crawl.
The show is the culmination of two art programs hosted by the Union Gospel Mission for the men and women from their Alcohol and Drug Recovery Program and Women’s Drop-In Program: The Creative Journey, with artist Pamela Masik, and Photography 101, with photographer Kevin Clark.
Elizabeth, one of the women who took part in the Creative Journey class, arrived in Vancouver ten years ago with only five dollars in her pocket, fleeing an abusive relationship. Finding herself on the streets and alone, she turned to the Union Gospel Mission for help, eventually finding a home in one of UGM’s permanent supportive housing suites. She’s been through some difficult times over the last ten years, and the Creative Journey program has helped her to process those experiences.
“It isn’t just art, it’s healing,” says Elizabeth. “It’s a way to take everything that happened to me in the past and let it out. I didn’t realize I had so much emotion in me!”
Masik led the women through a ten week journey, helping them to find their own artistic voice and create several pieces each, including a mask, a charcoal drawing, and a large-format oil painting on canvas. But the women came away with more than just art. “Life out there is hard, so it was good to get in off the street and express ourselves,” says Elizabeth. “We became friends, got updates from each other and supported each other every week. We’re healing together.”
Photo Caption(high-res available on request): Artist Pamela Masik (right) helps guide Elizabeth, a participant in the Creative Journey program.
For Masik, the Creative Journey was a natural extension of her own work. She recently completed a series of 69 8’x10′ portraits of women who have been missing from Vancouver’s Downtown East Side for more than a decade, a collection titled The Forgotten. The collection will be featured in a major museum in 2011. “Facilitating the women on this creative journey has been a wonderfully transformative experience, and I believe finding one’s voice through art can be very empowering. Not only did the women create amazing art, which will be featured at the Uncovering Vision show as part of the East Side Culture Crawl, they were also offered a group art exhibition opening at Grace Gallery on Main Street on January 14th, 2010. I am proud of them for their achievements!”
Masik will continue to fund and run the program in the future. “It is a way to give back to the community, by inspiring women to find their voice through art.”
The Details:
What: Uncovering Vision: A Discovery of Art Forms by Men and Women on the Downtown East Side, sponsored by the East Side Culture Crawl. Opening will be attended by many of the featured artists, Mayor Gregor Robertson, Photographer Kevin Clark, Artist Pamela Masik, and others.
When: Opening Friday, November 20th at 4:00pm; show runs Friday, Nov. 20th 4pm-10pm, Saturday and Sunday 11am-6pm
Where: Maurice McElrea Place, 361 Heatley Ave, Vancouver.
HomeGround Community Meeting at Oppenheimer Park in Vancouver Downtown Eastside Friday November 20, 2009 2PM
HomeGround for the homeless & underhoused DTES residents, 1-28th February 2010
HomeeGround – a secular, creative event in February for DTES residents, who are homeless and underhoused.
HomeGround – to offer additional sanctuary and sustenance to our most vulnerable neighbours during the period of the Olympic Games.
HomeGround Workshops – at Carnegie, the DTES Neighbourhood House & Oppenheimer Park as of November 2009
HomeGround Workshops
– painting
– banner making
– exploring a DTES Flea Market with our binning neighbors
– traffic calming signage
– creating a HomeGround Zine
– workshops to support residents in dealing with the potentially invasive international media
– adapt as you contribute your ideas
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Support W2 Community Media Arts in Vancouver Downtown Eastside on Twitter
Support W2 Community Media Arts in Vancouver Downtown Eastside, add a #twibbon to your Twitter avatar now!
–http://bit.ly/143mBD

Hendrik Beune of AHA MEDIA is proud to attend THE DOWNTOWN EASTSIDE ARTS4ALL INSTITUTE
Arts4All Institute

DOWNLOAD PROGRAMME GUIDE HERE (PDF)
THE DOWNTOWN EASTSIDE ARTS4ALL INSTITUTE
November 12-20, 2009
Vancouver BC
In association with Vancouver Moving Theatre
This week long intensive course focuses on the principles, practices and underpinnings of community-engaged art; the tremendous value it has for communities; and the things you need to know to launch your own project. Activities include presentations, discussions, videos, hands-on workshops, creative explorations and resources to take home.
Who is the Institute for? People interested and experienced in arts and other processes that engage communities, and Downtown Eastside community artists ready for leadership roles.
What are the course topics? Definitions, values and principles; developing your own vision; project start-ups and basics; planning and partnerships; budgets and grant-writing; arts-based and oral history research; facilitation skills; documentation and evaluation; legacy and sustainability; challenges and rewards; aesthetics and ethics.
Faculty instructors include four of Canada’s leading community artists: Ruth Howard (Jumblies Theatre, Toronto), Savannah Walling (Vancouver Moving Theatre), Cathy Stubington (Runaway Moon theatre, Enderby BC) and Varrick Grimes (associate artist, Jumblies Theatre), along with guest panelists and presenters.
Dates & Venues: all day Nov 13-15 and 17-19 at the Ukrainian Hall, 805 E. Pender (Sat Nov 14 at the Carnegie Community Centre Theatre, 401 Main)
With thanks to http://www.heartofthecityfestival.com/arts4all/arts4all-institute/



