Self-publishing Discussion and Workshop: “One in the Hand beats two on the Internet”

Andy

Instructor: Andrew Williamson

Friday July 5th a 6pm

Cost to participate: $20 for members, $30 for non-members

A teenager in rural Northern Ontario in the mid-90s had scant few outlets and inroads to culture outside of their surroundings. Being passed a copy of someone’s photocopied cut-and-paste ‘zine full of clippings from unknown magazines, quotations, amateur poetry , and weirdo artwork was like being shown a doorway that led to another world. It was like the mix tape full of bands you’d never heard of, given to you by your cooler, older friend – or your sister’s boyfriend, or the coffee shop owner, or whoever was your small-town culture enabler. Reading someone’s self-published work can be intimate, enlightening, and ultimately empowering; it shows that you don’t have to have a slick gloss cover, high-profile interview, or even proper spellign to be able to make a real, physical copy of your art, ideas, and obsessions and disseminate it to everyone you know – of at least those who really get you, y’know?

This discussion and workshop aims to connect a generation that might not know the joys of having fingers sticky with glue and smudged with photocopy toner to a creative outlet and medium that, while inexpensive and often ephemeral, can be an intensely satisfying alternative to online media.

Originally from Manitoulin Island, Andrew has lived in North Bay for the past eight years. An honors graduate of Humber College’s Multimedia Design and Production Technologies program, Andrew has been engaged with digital photography, film, and graphic design and has performed live video-mixing projection displays for local art events as well as for Canadian artists such as The Sadies and writer Rebecca Rosenblum. Andrew has recently started an independent digital printing studio, producing archival-grade giclee photographic prints and reproductions of original art as well as scanning and restoring antique photos, film negatives, and slides.

www.nichedigitalimaging.ca

New Publication Out Now: Invented Emergency (For Small Cities & Big Towns)

 Just saw this message on Broken City Lab’s website and wanted to share it with you all!

– Clayton

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We just received a few boxes of our newest publication, INVENTED EMERGENCY (For Small Cities & Big Towns), published through White Water Gallery. They look so good, we can’t wait to give them out!

INVENTED EMERGENCY is built on the research developed for Surviving North Bay, a residency and exhibition by Broken City Lab, hosted by White Water Gallery in the summer and fall of 2012. Surviving North Bay developed as a series of exploratory public interventions, micro-gestures, and tactical responses to North Bay. Each of these exploratory initiatives called on public participation to engage with North Bay, its infrastructures, and its communities. Throughout the residency, we collected research on the city in support of an exhibition that aimed to not only examine the practice and production of a northern locality, but also present a range of resistive tactics that can help the community survive, or help one survive the community. Emergencies became shorthand for this series of resistive tactics and gestures and INVENTED EMERGENCY extends these ideas towards developing a series of starting points and positions for new (and revisited) radical practices.

Pick up your copy at CIVIC SPACE, or let us know if you want one, and I’m sure we can arrange getting one in the mail to you!

Huge thanks to Clayton and Robyn and everyone at White Water Gallery for making this possible!