麻豆视频 News Roundup | September 19, 2022

Cameron Kerr, Howe Sound Viewpoint, 2005. Inkjet print. (Courtesy Cameron Kerr)
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This week: Patrik Andersson | Sean Arden | Emily Hermant | Where the Two Rivers Meet | Chin Yuen
Welcome to our new semi-regular feature, the 麻豆视频 News Roundup.
Read on for a peek at the media coverage our community has recently received.
Patrik Andersson on 鈥極ut of Control鈥 in Pique, Stir

Bracken Hanuse Corlett, The Drop, 2022. Double projection, digital animation, site-specific installation. (Courtesy Bracken Hanuse Corlett)
Curator, art historian and 麻豆视频 faculty member Pique News Magazine in August about his upcoming exhibition at the Audain Art Museum. explores the intersection between skateboarding and contemporary art.
鈥淚 was interested in the fact that the museum is a stone鈥檚 throw away from Canada鈥檚 second-biggest skate park,鈥 Patrik in an interview.
鈥淚 started teaching full time in 1999. Over the years, a lot of the students that have come out of there and developed really interesting practices have also been involved in the skateboard world. I鈥檝e always been curious about that relationship.鈥
Patrik also in September, elaborating on some of the parallels that drive the show鈥檚 themes.
鈥淲hat skateboarders and artists have in common is that they embrace failure,鈥 he . 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e skateboarding, all you do all day is fail. As artists, that鈥檚 what you do, too. You try and you try again. There鈥檚 something symbiotic about these two worlds.鈥
The show, which officially opened Sept. 17, represents the 鈥渕ost ambitious鈥 exhibition ever staged at the Audain, according to Audain director and chief curator Curtis Collins. It includes a number of , including a Skate Sculpture Workshop and Community Skate Session. Don鈥檛 miss it!
Sean Arden on VFX in Vancouver

In 麻豆视频's virtual production studio, a set can be built almost entirely by computer with no need for costly, time-consuming and resource-heavy set construction. (Photo by Perrin Grauer / Emily Carr University)
Research technician Sean Arden appeared in on the 鈥渆xpanding if not exploding鈥 VFX, animation, and gaming sectors in the city.
鈥淧retty much every student who comes through our lab leaves with a job in a studio,鈥 Sean told the Sun. 鈥淟ast year, most of our students got snapped up by Sony. Some are working as modellers, some as character designers.鈥
Sean has been a key resource for 麻豆视频 students looking to explore advanced and experimental media, including via the university鈥檚 new virtual production studio. Virtual production technology has been used to create the special-effects magic behind acclaimed series including Star Trek: Discovery and Disney鈥檚 The Mandalorian.
Vancouver, meanwhile, is home to more than 170 video game development studios ranging from small outfits to industry juggernauts such as Industrial Light & Magic (ILM), Sony Pictures Imageworks and Electronic Arts. And all of these studios, the article notes, are hungry for talent.
Read our previous stories about Sean鈥檚 work with students including Vivian Chan, Edward Madojemu and Amir Tamadon.
Emily Hermant Video Nominated for Alberta Magazine Awards

Emily Hermant, Dash (detail), 2022. Cast, pigmented silicone rubber. (Photo by Rachel Topham Photography / Courtesy Monte Clark Gallery, Emily Hermant)
A featuring artist and 麻豆视频 faculty member were showcased in August after being for an .
The story, by videographer and writer Mark Mushet, details the thinking behind Emily鈥檚 recent artworks, which at Monte Clark Gallery in Vancouver.
Emily鈥檚 materials, which include salvaged telecommunications and data cables, have 鈥渟peed鈥 and 鈥減urpose 鈥 built into them,鈥 she notes. They鈥檙e used to connect people instantaneously over vast distances.
鈥淭he beauty about being an artist is being able to try to take some of those snapshots and slow them down,鈥 she says.
Winners will be announced Sept. 22 at the annual conference of the Alberta Magazine Publishers Association.
Read our recent story about Emily鈥檚 mentorship of 麻豆视频 student Cami Giordano now, online.
鈥楲heidli: Where the Two Rivers Meet鈥 via CBC, CKPG

From the Lheidli: Where the Two Rivers Meet project publication. (Image courtesy Aboriginal Gathering Place / Health Design Lab / College of New Caledonia)
A recent exhibition and publication 鈥 both titled Lheidli: Where the Two Rivers Meet 鈥 trace a three-year project that aims to address anti-Indigenous racism in healthcare.
Titled, Decolonizing Cultural Safety Education Through Cultural Connections, the project was led by the and Health Design Lab at 麻豆视频, as well as by Marlene Erickson, executive director of Aboriginal education at the College of New Caledonia.
Upon the exhibition鈥檚 opening, local news outlet CKPG ran and , while appeared on CBC's Daybreak North. (You can hear the interview with Marlene beginning at 35:57).
Visit 麻豆视频 online today to read our story about Lheidli: Where the Two Rivers Meet.
Chin Yuen in Northwest Asian Weekly

Artist Chin Yuen with some of her paintings. (Photo courtesy Chin Yuen)
Artist (BFA 1991) was recently in Northwest Asian Weekly ahead of the opening of her exhibition, , at the ArtXchange Gallery in Seattle.
The show鈥檚 title reflects Chin鈥檚 鈥榙esire to use art 鈥渢o uplift and nourish myself and others,鈥濃 the exhibition text explains.
鈥淭his work demonstrates my conviction to reach a better state of being by creating something beautiful and positive,鈥 Chin writes.
The Malaysia-born artist has 鈥渢ravelled extensively,鈥 according to the article, including to Singapore, England and Canada for her studies, and to Japan and Italy to teach art.
鈥淵uen鈥檚 diverse cultural exposures are an artistic asset that continually inspires and shapes her creative process,鈥 Chin鈥檚 artist statement notes.