Celebrate Spring in Arts and Culture Style May 26/27

Celebrate Spring in Arts and Culture Style May 26/27

May 26 - 27th weekend could be the busiest this spring!  Discover what your local arts and culture groups are up to, get outside and celebrate... There is even a Victorian Tea to take part in.

Saturday, May 26th sees several events spread out around town, and with a bit of planning, you can check out all the fabulous goings-ons:

10 am to 4 pm.  Cariboo Potters Guild present their Spring Sale at the Central Cariboo Arts Centre parking lot. 

10 am to 3 pm. The Museum of the Cariboo Chilcotin invites you to their Grand Opening at the Tourism Discovery Centre.  New summer displays will be presented, and they are excited to show off their new home.

11 am to 3 pm. Station House Gallery host the first Lilac Festival at the gallery.  Join them for a perennial plant sale, cake decorating contest, Victorian tea (there it is!), live music and children's scavenger hunt.  Inquiries for the cake decorating contest can be made to the gallery staff.

Let's not forget to mention the Lakers Car Club's event that spans the two days of this eclectic weekend. 

Sunday, May 27th events:

9 am to 3 pm. Spinners and Weavers Spring Garage Sale. A fundraiser for our devoted fibre artists, and who knows what treasure you might find?

10 am to 3 pm. Williams Lake Children's Festival in Boitanio Park. Loads to do for little ones, including Live music, magician Clinton Grey, Door prizes, concessions and plenty of arts and crafts.  Our wonderful groups, the Cariboo Potters and the Cariboo Art Society will be there!

See you out there!

 

 

Knitting and Crochet Workshop Coming Your Way This April

Knitting and Crochet Workshop Coming Your Way This April

Dreamed of taking your craftiness to the next level?  Learn to knit and crochet! Community Arts Council is teaming up with Williams Lake Spinners and Weavers to bring you a workshop teaching the beginnings of knitting and crochet on Saturday April 14th.  Read on for more details...

The Giving Tree Season: Get your Helper's High

The Giving Tree Season: Get your Helper's High

Bright lights twinkle on the trees, while the icy winds begin to blow. Here comes winter, and with it our lead-up to the holiday season. The predominant Christian culture of Christmas has evolved into so many ideas about celebrating, it can be galling to find a calm centre in the midst of the busy preparations for this time of year. Yet many choose this time to reflect on gratitude and abundance by focusing on the act of giving.

Fire in the Belly

Fire in the Belly

Autumn Movement - Poem by Carl Sandberg

I CRIED over beautiful things knowing no beautiful thing lasts.

The field of cornflower yellow is a scarf at the neck of the copper sunburned woman, the mother of the year, the taker of seeds.

The northwest wind comes and the yellow is torn full of holes, new beautiful things come in the first spit of snow on the northwest wind, and the old things go, not one lasts.

 

On July 7th, 2017, a storm raced across the skies of our region, lighting up the countryside with its electricity, igniting our lives. Its power was undeniable, swift and voracious. The fires would see so many residents of the Cariboo Chilcotin flee our homes and taste the life of a refugee.  The rhythms of our summer stumbled over innumerable obstacles, as we sat glued to our media for information that might keep us feeling safe. A blanket of smoke surrounded us all, unifying the experience for our communities.

As the crisp autumn air touches down its frosty edges, a time of turning inward naturally unfolds, and perhaps we might come to a new understanding of all the fire has left us with. Autumn evokes a natural death and dying, while we struggled with these themes in the heart of summer, building up friction and discomfort. Now, as the times passes, we digest, we process and we re-create.

Autumn Rhythm (Number 30) by Jackson Pollock, 1950. 

Autumn Rhythm (Number 30) by Jackson Pollock, 1950. 

From the perspective of arts and culture, this could be a time ripe with creation. Our feet literally held to the fire, we saw the power of transformation and clearing up close. In this time, art can be a channel for stress, for meaning-making and pure inspiration from all that was billowing in our sphere of experience. As an organization representing the values of a creative community, we encourage the expression of the these ideas, and are seeking ways to support our artists and community members with program ideas that address creative ways to cope.

When the evacuation order for Williams Lake was lifted, our very dedicated Art in the Park coordinator, Laura Ulrich and her assistant Kiera Dolighan, set up at several events at Boitanio Park, including Performances in the Park and Welcome Home Williams Lake, providing colourful crafts for our young people to explore. We are so grateful to these two for bringing their energy to this program in a summer full of uncertainty. Art, especially for young people, can be a salve on a shaken soul, and we are so proud of our team for working through challenging conditions.

As we regroup and bring forward ideas and programs for the next season, our aim is to focus on our local talent, resilience and cooperation.  As ever, we are intent on bringing arts experiences to our young people, and supporting existing programs that enhance our community, like the upcoming Earth Friendly Holiday Event, our Giving Tree project , which sees hundreds of warm woolies donated to the most vulnerable members of our neighborhood, and more musical education via the POPS in the Park fundraising efforts, in partnership with the Boys and Girls Club. 

As we digest the events of this fiery summer, it's lit a fire in the belly of our little organization. With creative intention and thoughtful planning, we'd like to offer up our energy to the community, building up the creative culture that makes Cariboo strong.

 

Joy, Generosity and the Power of Music

Joy, Generosity and the Power of Music

POPS in the Park promises an evening to remember.

Boitanio Park, Thursday, June 22, 2017, 5-9pm.

Ideas have a way of taking root, parachuted like dandelion seeds in the wind. When William Wallace originated an idea to highlight Williams Lake’s fantastic brass bands and choirs at a public event, not even he expected the idea to catalyze the music community in the way it has.