Chun Hua Catharine Dong talks about her performance/installation practice’s relationship with the camera and then performs a desktop performance with her travelling microphone.
VERB FRAU TV Season 5: The 7a*11d Festival of Performance Art (2016) was created by the following artists:
Technical Assistance and Camera: Golboo Amani
Second Camera: Manolo Lugo, Sarah Sheard
Editing: Moira Simpson, Sarah Sheard, Jade Chen, Margaret Dragu
Theme Song: “Return of the Lemming Shepherds”
Exzel Music Publishing (freemusicpublicdomain.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons:
By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Extro Music: Sarah Sheard
7a*11d Collective
DWI (Dragu Worker International)
VIVO
Chun Hua Catharine Dong talks about her performance/installation practice’s relationship with the camera and then performs a desktop performance with her travelling microphone.
VERB FRAU TV Season 5: The 7a*11d Festival of Performance Art (2016) was created by the following artists:
Technical Assistance and Camera: Golboo Amani
Second Camera: Manolo Lugo, Sarah Sheard
Editing: Moira Simpson, Sarah Sheard, Jade Chen, Margaret Dragu
Theme Song: “Return of the Lemming Shepherds”
Exzel Music Publishing (freemusicpublicdomain.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons:
By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Extro Music: Sarah Sheard
7a*11d Collective
DWI (Dragu Worker International)
VIVO
VIVO is located in the homelands of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səl̓ílwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) peoples in a warehouse space at 2625 Kaslo Street south of East Broadway at the end of E 10th. Transit line 9 stops at Kaslo Street on Broadway. From the bus stop, the path is paved, curbless, and on a slight decline. The closest skytrain station is Renfrew Station, which is three blocks south-east of VIVO and has an elevator. From there, the path is paved, curbless, and on a slight incline. There is parking available at VIVO, including wheelchair access parking. There is a bike rack at the entrance. The front entrance leads indoors to a set of 7 stairs to the lobby.
A wheelchair ramp is located at the west side of the main entrance. The ramp has two runs: the first run is 20 feet long, and the second run is 26 feet. The ramp is 60 inches wide. The slope is 1:12. The ramp itself is concrete and has handrails on both sides. There is an outward swinging door (34 inch width) at the top of the ramp leading to a vestibule. A second outward swinging door (33 inch width) opens into the exhibition space. Buzzers and intercoms are located at both doors to notify staff during regular office hours or events to unlock the doors. Once unlocked, visitors can use automatic operators to open the doors.
There are two all-gender washrooms. One has a stall and is not wheelchair accessible. The other is a single room with a urinal and is wheelchair accessible: the door is 33 inches wide and inward swinging, without automation. The toilet has 11 inch clearance on the left side and a handrail.
To reach the bathrooms from the studio, exit through the double doors and proceed straight through the lobby and down the hall . Turn left, and the two bathrooms will be on your right side. The closest one has a stall and is not wheelchair accessible. The far bathroom is accessible.
Chun Hua Catherine Dong is a Chinese-born Montreal (Canada) based artist. She has exhibited her works and performed in multiple national and international venues and festivals. Among many other grants and awards, she was listed as one of the “10 Artists Who Are Reinventing History” by Canadian Art in 2017, and was a finalist of the Contemporary Art Award at Le Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec in 2020. Her artistic practice is based in performance art, photography and video. Within the contemporary context of global feminism, her work deals mainly with cultural intersections created by globalization. She works on the idea of representation as a political tool to give visibility to those made invisible by dominant ideologies. Her newer works show the body as a bridge connecting East and West, past and present: a new version of hybridity for transcendence and healing.
Margaret Dragu aka Verb Woman, aka Lady Justice, is a renowned interdisciplinary performance artist living and working in Vancouver. She returns to NSL&G to present material from her ongoing How To Be Old How To Guide series, taking on thoughts and issues to do with aging, culture and society. 3 videos will be screened: Get Devices, Get Rolling and Get Group-y.