TarraWarra Museum of Art announces appointment of Léuli Eshrāghi as Curator for TarraWarra Biennial 2023 artdaily.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from artdaily.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Genocidal Love is a book by Bevann Fox.(University of Regina Press/ZG Stories)
Genocidal Love by Bevann Fox leads the titles shortlisted for the 2021 Saskatchewan Book Awards. Of the 14 prizes,
The awards recognize the best writing and publishing in Saskatchewan.
Fox blends biography and fiction to tell her story in
Genocidal Love. Fox tells her story as Myrtle, a young girl who is sent to residential school at seven years of age, and the abuse she suffers there traumatizes her for years to come. But Myrtle eventually finds healing as she finds her voice and discovers the power of storytelling. She faces her painful past to create a better future for her children and grandchildren.
Regina businesses preparing for restrictions to take effect regina.ctvnews.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from regina.ctvnews.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Minecraft exhibit helps people escape reality virtually
MacKenzie Art Gallery embraces digital art during pandemic
While people are shut-in during a pandemic, digital art curators with the MacKenzie Art Gallery are figuring out ways to engage people with art. Canadian artist Sarah Friend, who is currently based in Berlin, Cat Bluemke and Jonathan Carroll came up with the idea for a digital art gallery featuring the popular video game Minecraft.
Carroll likes the idea of using Minecraft as a platform for digital art because it’s an interactive system that has a creative platform.
“There’s what’s called a sandbox game, which means that there aren’t a lot of limitations to what you can do within the system of the game, including of course building things out of blocks that the game is made of,” he said.
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Martin Luther King Jr.’s fight went beyond Black rights
I would like to suggest an additional theme that should be ever-present when we remember the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr., and that is his radical anti-capitalism.
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After successes in the South, when King saw the racial discrimination that characterized Black life elsewhere in the U.S. and let’s not forget Canada was showing no signs of abating, he came to the conclusion the struggle had gone beyond the rights of Black people, and that “a radical reconstruction of society itself is the real issue to be faced.”