Alert Bay Trip

Dancers in the Big House, Alert Bay, August 21, 2008 On August 21st, I finally made a trek to Alert Bay. My Art History 206 class that I took in 2006 with Laura Wee Lay Laq focused on a number of events from the village’s history that really interest me: the Chicago Worlds Fair performers, the Curtis movie, the Cranmer Potlatch arrests, attempts to relocate the village into Stanley Park as a tourist attraction, the 1953 potlatch at Thunderbird Park in Victoria, Mungo Martin, Charlie James, Ellen Neel, the Hunts…so many associations.

My time on the island was too short. It was a 4 1/2 hour drive from Nanaimo (including a wrong turn it Courtney – don’t take the second exit unless you want the cow-path tour). The day was supposed to be a downpour, but turned-out to be clear and hot. It was a race to get lunch at the store and get over to the Big House to see the dance performance once the ferry docked. It’s a 1.5 km walk, so if you ever do the trip, bear that in mind or you will be running and eating at the same time like I was.

The dances were really well done, focusing on a cast of young peformers, the littlest of whom was 3. The last number was the “happy dance” were everyone in the crowd was invited by the dancers to join in. It ended with the kids wading into the crowd, shaking everyone’s hands and thanking them for coming.

The former St. Michael’s Residential School adjoins the U’mista Cultural Center on the water front. It stands-out in its decrepit state, weathering away like an old stump – the site of much pain and suffering in the community.

As I slowly worked my way back to town, the image of my cousin running towards me in the distance cued me to the fact that the ferry was leaving earlier than I thought. I didn’t get a chance to visit the town this trip. Next time, it will be an overnight trip.

I am so impressed with the village and the Namgis First Nation. The people that I met were friendly and helpful. The speakers at the dance performance genuinely connected with the visitors and explained issues important to the Kwakwaka’wakw people, the environment and their relationship to non-Natives. The last picture I took was a mural painted on the side of a building which read, “Share, Connect, Create, Soul.” That summed-up my experience perfectly.

Special thanks to Barb Cranmer for granting permission for the pictures from the Big House to be posted on this site.

Site Launch: August 18, 2008

Hello:

I am launching this site of my recent work done at Emily Carr from the Spring of 2006 up to the present. I will be adding to it periodically throughout the year. Your comments are welcome.

This is a companion site to my portfolio page at:

http://brumwell.ca

Interactive Design

Translink iPhone App

Translink iPhone App

The link below takes you to the concept page for the Translink iPhone application, developed by the design team that I participated with in Interactive Design Essentials 205 at Emily Carr during the Spring of 2008 with David Humphrey.

The idea is to combine the iPhone’s touch screen interface, GPS technology and ‘Smart’ features to provide real time transit information, payment options and mapping in minimal clicks.

This model provides selected navigation examples for the scheduling option. What you see is my own “skin” on our team’s conceptual design.

Click on the following link:

Translink iPhone App: Interactive Model

Below are some photos of the teams in different stages of the development process.

Drawings 2007

These drawings are selections from, Every Night: 9:00 – 10:00, a project done in Drawing 310 at Emily Carr with Gary Lee-Nova in the Fall of 2007. It is a serial sketchbook compilation of my family, made over the course of 60 successive nights. They are small scale charcoal, conte and pencil portraits executed quickly as they wind-down from their day.

Resurfacing Installation 2007

Resurfacing is a project arising from investigations into the hunting and gathering processes involved in art as examined in Interdisciplinary Forum 333 at Emily Carr in the summer of 2007, taught by M. Simon Levin and Anne-Marie Slater.

The project was initially intended to commemorate the abundant food resources that were harvested by the Squamish, Musquem and Tsleil’waututh First Nations from the streams draining into the eastern tidal flats of False Creek, known as Skwahchays. The largest stream became known as China Creek. It has transformed into an agency of capturing and harnessing community interest in restoring China Creek as a surface stream, or “daylighting” it. The goal of the project will be to work with existing organizations and agencies to return salmon and trout stocks to a buried watershed in much the same way that it has been done at Spanish Banks Creek on the West Side and Beaver Creek in Stanley Park. In the process, continued community involvement in on-going community gardens and commons can be extended and expanded upon, producing an ecological and educational focus for neighbourhood stewardship.


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Paintings 2006

This series of paintings was produced in the Fall of 2006 in Painting 310 at Emily Carr with Mina Totino. They are large scale and I used some pretty big brushes. The process gave me an appreciation of how physical an exercise it is to paint that big.

First Nations Imagery in Schools

The following selection is from a paper that I wrote in Art History 206 in the Spring of 2006 at Emily Carr with Laura Wee Lay Laq. The title is “An Examination of Native and Native-Referenced Art at Kitsilano Secondary School.” In the paper I examine issues of schools and organizations using First Nations signifiers for identification purposes.
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