Last week, Gray showed with Mark Cunningham, Lauryn Youden, Nicole Westman, Willem Jan Smit and Cemrenaz Uyguner at ECUAD’s media gallery.


Last week, Gray showed with Mark Cunningham, Lauryn Youden, Nicole Westman, Willem Jan Smit and Cemrenaz Uyguner at ECUAD’s media gallery.

35mm
I am very happy to announce that my website is now online. Check it here
(Source: photomawf)
Andy showed me his (for now) singular copy of New Histories, a full-colour archival collection of his documentation of Florida. One day, Andy, you will make more of these.
No Party is happy to announce that it has tricked Stephen Harper into joining.
Alexa Kirsten Stroth, Three Quarries
May 2011
7.5 x 9.5 in, 28 pages
Saddle stitch, softcover
Colour offset print
Edition of 250
ISBN 978-0-9869180-0-1
Printed in Vancouver, BC, Canada
Purchase through No Party Books.
why you’re quite welcome.
Stuff i received today… Thanks to No Party and Patrick joust for all the awesome swag.
(Source: photomawf)
No Party’s bookstore is (finally) online! Details of books to follow.
“A collaboration between Emily Carr and St. Paul’s Hospital Art Committee has concluded with the stunning work, Three Views of Vancouver.
Third year student Conrad Brown, along with 2011 graduates, Ruth Skinner and Alexa Stroth, re-purposed redundant medical xray boxes and turned them into a large-scale piece measuring 174” wide by 40” high. The piece stretches down the busy Comox Street corridor of the hospital, using photographs that represent more intimate views of Vancouver, views that are seen every day but rarely represented in print.” (From the ECU website)
Three Views of Vancouver
Conrad Brown
Ruth Skinner
Alexa Stroth
Vancouver, landlocked in all four directions by the mountains, the ocean, the suburbs, and the border, has grown to become a dense metropolis. The North Shore mountains, landmarks of Vancouver, are usually obscured by buildings. These photographs represent more intimate views of Vancouver, views that are seen everyday but rarely represented in print.
To preserve the emblematic view of the mountains while still accommodating a growing population, Vancouver adopted an architectural language of tall residential highrises and lower commercial buildings. In 1989, the city designated council-approved view corridors as a way to control and shape its skyline. The buildings around these corridors act as frames for the views within them. The way that the buildings frame the mountains is the same, whether they are highrises or the houses you pass when you walk down the street. The small views pictured here are not protected by civic by-laws, nor are they enjoyed from expensive highrise condominiums, but they are equally as important and familiar to the city’s residents.
noparty is very pleased to announce the addition of gray richards to the collective!
video - Giroux. Gray Richards, 2011.
olio presents unlimited edition:
a poster show
sept 24 2011
olio presents unlimited edition:
a poster show
sept 24 2011