Three truck convoy bring 9 huge sculptures by Ivan Eyre to the McMichael Canadian Art Collection
I took the above and below photographs with my cell a few minutes ago. It shows 2 of the 9 sculptures that are going to be installed at the McMichael today and tomorrow. Last piece will be installed tomorrow (Tuesday June 12) at 11am SHARP.
Media welcome to attend the Tuesday installation. Drop me an email if you want to attend. stephen@stephenweir.com
LATE BREAKING NEWS
Under the watchful eye of the Globe and Mail, Beach Digital, The Metroland News Group (Toronto Star's northern GTA papers) and Vaughan Today watched (above) as the Eyre statues were successfully installed in the new McMichael sculpture gardens.
Monday, 13 June 2011
Friday, 10 June 2011
Installation of Ivan Eyre’s Monumental Bronze Sculptures
PHOTO OP ON TUESDAY AT THE McMICHAEL GALLERY - INSTALLATION OF BIG SCULPTURES TUESDAY - BRING YOUR CAMERA
Tuesday, June 14, 2011 from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
What: Media are invited to capture a “monumental moment” at the McMichael during the installation of Ivan Eyre’s nine twice-life-size bronze sculptures in the gallery’s new outdoor Sculpture Garden.
Why: The sculptures, donated by well known Canadian artist Ivan Eyre, will join the McMichael’s permanent collection. This extraordinary gift and the $4.2 million Infrastructure Stimulus Funding provided by the provincial and federal governments for the enhancement of the grounds are important steps in the ongoing revitalization of the McMichael. The enhancements will help preserve and showcase the spectacular outdoor setting of one of Canada’s most renowned art collections, and the Sculpture Garden is a major component of this plan.
Where: McMichael Canadian Art Collection, 10365 Islington Avenue, Kleinburg (just north of Major Mackenzie Drive and Islington Avenue intersection).
CUTLINE: Photos of two of three trucks enroute to Kleinburg from a US foundry. The sculputres by Winnipeg artist Ivan Eyres to be installed at the McMichael Gallery on Tuesday.
JULY 2011 UPDATE - The Garden is now open and videographer George Socka has posted a you tuber about the ceremony with artist Ivan Eyre
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BE1qbc6NjTc
Tuesday, June 14, 2011 from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
What: Media are invited to capture a “monumental moment” at the McMichael during the installation of Ivan Eyre’s nine twice-life-size bronze sculptures in the gallery’s new outdoor Sculpture Garden.
Why: The sculptures, donated by well known Canadian artist Ivan Eyre, will join the McMichael’s permanent collection. This extraordinary gift and the $4.2 million Infrastructure Stimulus Funding provided by the provincial and federal governments for the enhancement of the grounds are important steps in the ongoing revitalization of the McMichael. The enhancements will help preserve and showcase the spectacular outdoor setting of one of Canada’s most renowned art collections, and the Sculpture Garden is a major component of this plan.
Where: McMichael Canadian Art Collection, 10365 Islington Avenue, Kleinburg (just north of Major Mackenzie Drive and Islington Avenue intersection).
CUTLINE: Photos of two of three trucks enroute to Kleinburg from a US foundry. The sculputres by Winnipeg artist Ivan Eyres to be installed at the McMichael Gallery on Tuesday.
JULY 2011 UPDATE - The Garden is now open and videographer George Socka has posted a you tuber about the ceremony with artist Ivan Eyre
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BE1qbc6NjTc
Monday, 6 June 2011
MEDIA ALERT: Boxing. Chain Saw Juggling. Bikini Photo Op. Wednesday Noon Liberty Grand. Scotiabank CHIN Picnic preview
Scotiabank CHIN Picnic MEDIA LAUNCH & RECEPTION
LIBERTY GRAND GOVERNOR’S ROOM
WEDNESDAY JUNE 8TH, 2011
12NOON – 2PM
Ceremonies/Introductions begin @ 12:30
Complimentary parking in east lot next to Liberty Grand
Lenny Lombardi available for interviews from 11:30 to 12:30; and after 1:30pm
SCOTIABANK CHIN PICNIC MEDIA RECEPTION:
WEDNESDAY JUNE 8: 12noon – 2pm
11:30 Buffet/Refreshments OPEN
12:30 INTRO: LION DANCE Opening
12:35 Lenny Lombardi Welcome Remarks and introductions:
Welcome Remarks by Mr. Ahmad Dajani,
Vice President of Multicultural Banking Scotiabank
Welcome Remarks by Kristi Johnston, Consumer Marketing Manager,General Motors Canada
Intro of Entertaiment Segments
- 3 minute On-stage segments/demonstrations
Sports: Boxing - Atlas Boxing Club boxers.
Spokesperson: Adrian Teodorescu
Cycling - Midweek Cycling Club – Cyclists
Spokesperson: Craig Fagan
Wrestling- Maximum Pro Wrestlers
Spokesperson: Robbie McAllister & Arda Ocal
Family Entertainment Element – on stage demonstrations:
Zero Gravity Circus - Chainsaw Juggler
K9Dog Challenge
Birds of Prey
Circus Jonathan
International Entertainment Element - on stage performances
Culture Phillippines Dance group
Bhangra Dancers
1:06 Lenny Lombardi: Special Mentions
1:08 Miss CHIN and Mr CHIN 2011 participants Introductions of both the Mr. and the Miss CHIN participants
1:25 All Entertainment participants called up to stage to join the Miss and Mr participants for Photo Ops
MEDIA NOTE:
The Media may register for July 1st, 2nd and 3rd with Stephen Weir at the Media Desk at front entrance.
The Media may also pick up fact sheets from Stephen at the Media Desk.
Media Kits and Fact sheets available at Front Desk
Photo Gallery and Media Releases will be made available after June 8th on website: scotiabankchinpicnic.com
Scotiabank CHIN Picnic SOUVENIR MAGAZINES are AVAILABLE AT FRONT DESK
issued by:
Stephen Weir
Stephen Weir & Associates | stephen@stephenweir.com
or sweir5492@rogers.com
2482 Yonge Street, Unit 45032, Toronto, ONT.
CANADA. M4P 3E3
Tel: 416-489-5868 | Fax: 416-488-6518
www.stephenweir.com
CUTLINE: 2008 CHIN Picnic Bikini Contest. Flickr photo from: gbalogh's photostream
LIBERTY GRAND GOVERNOR’S ROOM
WEDNESDAY JUNE 8TH, 2011
12NOON – 2PM
Ceremonies/Introductions begin @ 12:30
Complimentary parking in east lot next to Liberty Grand
Lenny Lombardi available for interviews from 11:30 to 12:30; and after 1:30pm
SCOTIABANK CHIN PICNIC MEDIA RECEPTION:
WEDNESDAY JUNE 8: 12noon – 2pm
11:30 Buffet/Refreshments OPEN
12:30 INTRO: LION DANCE Opening
12:35 Lenny Lombardi Welcome Remarks and introductions:
Welcome Remarks by Mr. Ahmad Dajani,
Vice President of Multicultural Banking Scotiabank
Welcome Remarks by Kristi Johnston, Consumer Marketing Manager,General Motors Canada
Intro of Entertaiment Segments
- 3 minute On-stage segments/demonstrations
Sports: Boxing - Atlas Boxing Club boxers.
Spokesperson: Adrian Teodorescu
Cycling - Midweek Cycling Club – Cyclists
Spokesperson: Craig Fagan
Wrestling- Maximum Pro Wrestlers
Spokesperson: Robbie McAllister & Arda Ocal
Family Entertainment Element – on stage demonstrations:
Zero Gravity Circus - Chainsaw Juggler
K9Dog Challenge
Birds of Prey
Circus Jonathan
International Entertainment Element - on stage performances
Culture Phillippines Dance group
Bhangra Dancers
1:06 Lenny Lombardi: Special Mentions
1:08 Miss CHIN and Mr CHIN 2011 participants Introductions of both the Mr. and the Miss CHIN participants
1:25 All Entertainment participants called up to stage to join the Miss and Mr participants for Photo Ops
MEDIA NOTE:
The Media may register for July 1st, 2nd and 3rd with Stephen Weir at the Media Desk at front entrance.
The Media may also pick up fact sheets from Stephen at the Media Desk.
Media Kits and Fact sheets available at Front Desk
Photo Gallery and Media Releases will be made available after June 8th on website: scotiabankchinpicnic.com
Scotiabank CHIN Picnic SOUVENIR MAGAZINES are AVAILABLE AT FRONT DESK
issued by:
Stephen Weir
Stephen Weir & Associates | stephen@stephenweir.com
or sweir5492@rogers.com
2482 Yonge Street, Unit 45032, Toronto, ONT.
CANADA. M4P 3E3
Tel: 416-489-5868 | Fax: 416-488-6518
www.stephenweir.com
CUTLINE: 2008 CHIN Picnic Bikini Contest. Flickr photo from: gbalogh's photostream
New First Nations' Photography Show Set To Open At The McMichael Gallery
June 11 to September 11, 2011
Organized by the Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography
EXHIBITION EXPLORES IMAGE IDENTITY FROM AN INDIGENOUS PERSPECTIVE
For Immediate Release. June 5, 2011 Kleinburg, ON—Profoundly symbolic works by some of Canada’s most celebrated Indigenous artists send a powerful message on the evolution of Aboriginal self-determination in Canada. Presented by the Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography (CMCP), the exhibition Steeling the Gaze: Portraits by Aboriginal Artists will be on view at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection from June 11 to September 11, 2011.
This deeply reflective exhibition will showcase the significant collections of Indigenous artists of the CMCP and the National Gallery of Canada, as well as selected private collections. It combines portrait photographs and video installations by twelve artists―KC Adams, Carl Beam, Dana Claxton, Thirza Cuthand, Rosalie Favell, Kent Monkman, David Neel, Shelley Niro, Arthur Renwick, Greg Staats, Jeff Thomas, and Bear Witness.
“This exhibition pays tribute to prominent Aboriginal artists whose works offer a new voice,” said former CMCP Director, Martha Hanna. The exhibition explores how contemporary Aboriginal artists have used the portrait as a means of self-expression in spite of its long problematic history for their peoples. “The portrait is a European convention which exerts control over the subject,” explained the CMCP co-curator Andrea Kunard. “In the past, Aboriginal people were often objectified for commercial purposes. They were represented as a dying race doomed by the inexorable march of ‘civilization’. Contrary to this portrayal, they have neither vanished nor died out; they survived.”
The exhibition’s other co-curator, Steven Loft, added that “these artists use their cameras to create a means of cultural self-determination. By reconstructing the narrative of race, they have captured the wide plurality of Aboriginal histories, cultures, and contemporary realities and have created their own visual identities.”
The exhibition engages a number of themes which are present in the work of contemporary Aboriginal artists. These include:
Aboriginal artists as creators of visual history
These artists reclaim images of themselves, their families, and their communities and use them as a means of transforming past concerns into the present. They challenge stereotypes, creating a new visual history, and are harbingers of a changing reality.
Keeping ancient traditions alive
To challenge the detrimental characterizations of Aboriginal life developed through colonization and assimilation, contemporary Indigenous artists represent identity as a changing and complex state, rather than one that is essential, singular and “frozen” in the past. Within these images, which describe contemporary existence, references to traditions, family, and community, appear as a source of strength and grounding.
Appropriation, mass media, and “acting up”
Bear Witness, Rosalie Favell, and KC Adams use appropriation strategies to explore the influence of art history and mass media on identity. In his work, Bear Witness weaves together images taken from popular movies. Rosalie Favell takes images from art history, and KC Adams merges stereotypes and fashion photography in her portraits of Aboriginal community members. Acting up for the camera is another approach for dealing with identity issues. Dana Claxton, Shelley Niro, Rosalie Favell, Thirza Cuthand, and Kent Monkman use photographic space as theatre, taking on various guises to present a multifaceted view of contemporary Aboriginal existence.
Socio-political issues
Kent Monkman, Rosalie Favell, and Thirza Cuthand explore contemporary, social, and political issues within the Aboriginal communities, such as sexuality, hybridity, and shifting socio-political dynamics.
The full face portrait
Arthur Renwick and David Neel focus on the face and how it is framed. Neel uses more conventional studio techniques to present his portraits, while Renwick presents larger than life, full face portraits, positioning his subjects as living embodiments of Aboriginal spiritual and cosmological traditions. Both artists offer a glimpse of Aboriginality we do not often see reflected in our media saturated society.
Steeling the Gaze: Portraits by Aboriginal Artists is curated by Andrea Kunard, who has been with the CMCP since 1998, and Steven Loft, appointed in January 2008 as the National Gallery of Canada’s first ever Curator in Residence, Indigenous Art.
ABOUT THE McMICHAEL
The McMichael Canadian Art Collection is an agency of the Government of Ontario and acknowledges the support of the Ministry of Tourism and Culture. It is the foremost venue in the country showcasing the Group of Seven and their contemporaries. In addition to touring exhibitions, its permanent collection consists of more than 5,700 artworks, including paintings by the Group of Seven and their contemporaries, First Nations, and Inuit artists. The gallery is located on Islington Avenue, north of Major Mackenzie Drive in Kleinburg, and is open daily from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Admission is $15 for adults, $12 for seniors/students and $30 for families. There is a $5 fee for parking. For more information about the gallery, visit www.mcmichael.com.
For further information or to receive images, contact:
Stephen Weir, Publicist
Gallery: 905.893.1121 ext. 2529
Toronto Office: 416.489.5868
Cell: 416.801.3101
sweir@mcmichael.com
Michelle Kortinen
Communications Coordinator
McMichael Canadian Art Collection
905.893.1121 ext. 2210
mkortinen@mcmichael.com
CUTLINE: The Masks of Arthur Renwick - From the Face website. Renwick's work is featured in the new exhibition at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg
Organized by the Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography
EXHIBITION EXPLORES IMAGE IDENTITY FROM AN INDIGENOUS PERSPECTIVE
For Immediate Release. June 5, 2011 Kleinburg, ON—Profoundly symbolic works by some of Canada’s most celebrated Indigenous artists send a powerful message on the evolution of Aboriginal self-determination in Canada. Presented by the Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography (CMCP), the exhibition Steeling the Gaze: Portraits by Aboriginal Artists will be on view at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection from June 11 to September 11, 2011.
This deeply reflective exhibition will showcase the significant collections of Indigenous artists of the CMCP and the National Gallery of Canada, as well as selected private collections. It combines portrait photographs and video installations by twelve artists―KC Adams, Carl Beam, Dana Claxton, Thirza Cuthand, Rosalie Favell, Kent Monkman, David Neel, Shelley Niro, Arthur Renwick, Greg Staats, Jeff Thomas, and Bear Witness.
“This exhibition pays tribute to prominent Aboriginal artists whose works offer a new voice,” said former CMCP Director, Martha Hanna. The exhibition explores how contemporary Aboriginal artists have used the portrait as a means of self-expression in spite of its long problematic history for their peoples. “The portrait is a European convention which exerts control over the subject,” explained the CMCP co-curator Andrea Kunard. “In the past, Aboriginal people were often objectified for commercial purposes. They were represented as a dying race doomed by the inexorable march of ‘civilization’. Contrary to this portrayal, they have neither vanished nor died out; they survived.”
The exhibition’s other co-curator, Steven Loft, added that “these artists use their cameras to create a means of cultural self-determination. By reconstructing the narrative of race, they have captured the wide plurality of Aboriginal histories, cultures, and contemporary realities and have created their own visual identities.”
The exhibition engages a number of themes which are present in the work of contemporary Aboriginal artists. These include:
Aboriginal artists as creators of visual history
These artists reclaim images of themselves, their families, and their communities and use them as a means of transforming past concerns into the present. They challenge stereotypes, creating a new visual history, and are harbingers of a changing reality.
Keeping ancient traditions alive
To challenge the detrimental characterizations of Aboriginal life developed through colonization and assimilation, contemporary Indigenous artists represent identity as a changing and complex state, rather than one that is essential, singular and “frozen” in the past. Within these images, which describe contemporary existence, references to traditions, family, and community, appear as a source of strength and grounding.
Appropriation, mass media, and “acting up”
Bear Witness, Rosalie Favell, and KC Adams use appropriation strategies to explore the influence of art history and mass media on identity. In his work, Bear Witness weaves together images taken from popular movies. Rosalie Favell takes images from art history, and KC Adams merges stereotypes and fashion photography in her portraits of Aboriginal community members. Acting up for the camera is another approach for dealing with identity issues. Dana Claxton, Shelley Niro, Rosalie Favell, Thirza Cuthand, and Kent Monkman use photographic space as theatre, taking on various guises to present a multifaceted view of contemporary Aboriginal existence.
Socio-political issues
Kent Monkman, Rosalie Favell, and Thirza Cuthand explore contemporary, social, and political issues within the Aboriginal communities, such as sexuality, hybridity, and shifting socio-political dynamics.
The full face portrait
Arthur Renwick and David Neel focus on the face and how it is framed. Neel uses more conventional studio techniques to present his portraits, while Renwick presents larger than life, full face portraits, positioning his subjects as living embodiments of Aboriginal spiritual and cosmological traditions. Both artists offer a glimpse of Aboriginality we do not often see reflected in our media saturated society.
Steeling the Gaze: Portraits by Aboriginal Artists is curated by Andrea Kunard, who has been with the CMCP since 1998, and Steven Loft, appointed in January 2008 as the National Gallery of Canada’s first ever Curator in Residence, Indigenous Art.
ABOUT THE McMICHAEL
The McMichael Canadian Art Collection is an agency of the Government of Ontario and acknowledges the support of the Ministry of Tourism and Culture. It is the foremost venue in the country showcasing the Group of Seven and their contemporaries. In addition to touring exhibitions, its permanent collection consists of more than 5,700 artworks, including paintings by the Group of Seven and their contemporaries, First Nations, and Inuit artists. The gallery is located on Islington Avenue, north of Major Mackenzie Drive in Kleinburg, and is open daily from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Admission is $15 for adults, $12 for seniors/students and $30 for families. There is a $5 fee for parking. For more information about the gallery, visit www.mcmichael.com.
For further information or to receive images, contact:
Stephen Weir, Publicist
Gallery: 905.893.1121 ext. 2529
Toronto Office: 416.489.5868
Cell: 416.801.3101
sweir@mcmichael.com
Michelle Kortinen
Communications Coordinator
McMichael Canadian Art Collection
905.893.1121 ext. 2210
mkortinen@mcmichael.com
CUTLINE: The Masks of Arthur Renwick - From the Face website. Renwick's work is featured in the new exhibition at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg
Sunday, 29 May 2011
NEW PARTNER ANNOUNCED AT FESTIVAL PRESS CONFERENCE
Caribbean Tourism Organization
INTRODUCING THE FESTIVAL’S NEWEST PARTNER
TORONTO, May 25, 2011 – The Festival Management Committee (FMC) today announced its newest corporate partner. The Caribbean Tourism Organization will be partnering with the Carnival this summer.
The Caribbean Tourism Organization (CTO), the global voice for 33 Caribbean countries, is proud to partner with the Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival. The goal of the Caribbean Tourism Organization is to showcase the wide variety of Caribbean cultures here in Toronto and encourage Canadians to visit and experience the warmth of Caribbean hospitality the next time they travel abroad.
This new partnership will include a Caribbean Village as part of the award winning Grace Tropical Rhythms food festival at Ontario Place over the Simcoe Weekend. These Caribbean themed installations are aimed at educating Canadians about authentic Caribbean culture and traditions.
About the Festival:
The Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival is an exciting three-week cultural explosion of Caribbean music, cuisine, revelry as well as visual and performing arts. Now in its 44th year, it has become a major international event and the largest cultural festival of its kind in North America. As Carnival is an international cultural phenomenon, the great metropolis of Toronto and its environs will come alive as the city explodes with the pulsating rhythms and melodies of Calypso, Soca, Reggae, Chutney, Steel Pan and Brass Bands. The Festival Management Committee is responsible for the managing and staging of North America’s largest outdoor festival.
Corporate sponsors of this year's festival include: Scotiabank, The Toronto Star, Sway Magazine, The Grid, CTV, CP24, The Federal Government of Canada, The Province of Ontario, The City of Toronto, Tourism Toronto, , The Greater Toronto Airports Authority, Ontario Place, Royal Ontario Museum, Ontario Science Centre, Toronto Public Libraries, Yorkgate Mall, Liberty Grand Entertainment Complex & Liberty Entertainment Group, The Caribbean Camera Newspaper, Toronto-Lime.Com, and GraceKennedy (Ontario) Inc.
For more information about the programs and events, please visit the festival’s official website at www.torontocaribbeancarnival.com The Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival Office is located at 263 Davenport Avenue, Lower Level; Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5R 1E9. For information about the Caribbean Tourism Organization, visit www.caribbeantravel.com.
Contact info: Tel: 416-391-5608; Fax: 416-391-5693; Email: stephen@stephenweir.com
CUTLINE: Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival CEO Denise Herrara-Jackson announces the festival's new partner - The Caribbean Tourism Organization
INTRODUCING THE FESTIVAL’S NEWEST PARTNER
TORONTO, May 25, 2011 – The Festival Management Committee (FMC) today announced its newest corporate partner. The Caribbean Tourism Organization will be partnering with the Carnival this summer.
The Caribbean Tourism Organization (CTO), the global voice for 33 Caribbean countries, is proud to partner with the Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival. The goal of the Caribbean Tourism Organization is to showcase the wide variety of Caribbean cultures here in Toronto and encourage Canadians to visit and experience the warmth of Caribbean hospitality the next time they travel abroad.
This new partnership will include a Caribbean Village as part of the award winning Grace Tropical Rhythms food festival at Ontario Place over the Simcoe Weekend. These Caribbean themed installations are aimed at educating Canadians about authentic Caribbean culture and traditions.
About the Festival:
The Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival is an exciting three-week cultural explosion of Caribbean music, cuisine, revelry as well as visual and performing arts. Now in its 44th year, it has become a major international event and the largest cultural festival of its kind in North America. As Carnival is an international cultural phenomenon, the great metropolis of Toronto and its environs will come alive as the city explodes with the pulsating rhythms and melodies of Calypso, Soca, Reggae, Chutney, Steel Pan and Brass Bands. The Festival Management Committee is responsible for the managing and staging of North America’s largest outdoor festival.
Corporate sponsors of this year's festival include: Scotiabank, The Toronto Star, Sway Magazine, The Grid, CTV, CP24, The Federal Government of Canada, The Province of Ontario, The City of Toronto, Tourism Toronto, , The Greater Toronto Airports Authority, Ontario Place, Royal Ontario Museum, Ontario Science Centre, Toronto Public Libraries, Yorkgate Mall, Liberty Grand Entertainment Complex & Liberty Entertainment Group, The Caribbean Camera Newspaper, Toronto-Lime.Com, and GraceKennedy (Ontario) Inc.
For more information about the programs and events, please visit the festival’s official website at www.torontocaribbeancarnival.com The Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival Office is located at 263 Davenport Avenue, Lower Level; Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5R 1E9. For information about the Caribbean Tourism Organization, visit www.caribbeantravel.com.
Contact info: Tel: 416-391-5608; Fax: 416-391-5693; Email: stephen@stephenweir.com
CUTLINE: Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival CEO Denise Herrara-Jackson announces the festival's new partner - The Caribbean Tourism Organization
Scotiabank Caribana has been laid to rest - long live Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival (or is it Caribbean Carnival Toronto)
New Name: Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival Turns Up the Heat this Summer. Same Festival. Same Vibe!
pictures from the presser
On May 25th The Festival Management Committee announced a new name to the Festival that has captured an audience of more than 1.2 million people annually on the August long weekend: The Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival.
The Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival (STCC) will be back in July with the same line up of events featuring the Toronto Mas Band Association, the Organization of Calypso Performing Artistes and the Pannists, as well as an array of new programming leading up to the Parade on July 31st.
“This is the 44th year for the Parade, and all of the participants are preparing for another major turnout of attendees this summer,” said Denise Hererra Jackson, CEO of the FMC. “Rebranding ourselves as the Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival helps us resolve any ongoing trademark issues around the old Festival name, and allows us to move forward with an exciting program that will appeal to members of the community of all ages.”
“The Festival is an important summer celebration of diversity through arts and culture in Toronto and as such, is important to the roots of this city,” said Chris Alexander, CFO of the FMC. “The Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival will continue to grow and meet the needs of the attendees, while reinforcing its relationships with the Toronto community, its sponsors and other stakeholders.”
In addition to its commitment of title sponsor, Scotiabank and the FMC announced today they will donate a total of $2,500 in prize money to the Pan and Calypso competition, with the first place performers receiving a $1,500 prize, $1,000 to second place and $500 to third place.
“Scotiabank’s partnership with the FMC opened an exciting new chapter for the Bank – given our extensive presence in the Caribbean and the importance of this event to the City, our customers and our employees, this event is a natural fit for us,” said John Doig, Scotiabank Senior Vice-President, Toronto Region. “Today we have come together to reinforce our support for the Festival Management Committee – their decision to rename the Festival the Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival reflects our diverse and multicultural communities. We’re looking forward to a great festival!”
The STCC has released the official programme for the summer festivities today, and festival goers will see new additions, including a sports component featuring athletics of the Rugby League. Programme details can be found in the backgrounder and a new name and logo will appear in all marketing materials as well as on the revised interactive website, www.torontocaribbeancarnival.com.
About the Festival:
The Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival is an exciting three-week cultural explosion of Caribbean music, cuisine, revelry as well as visual and performing arts. Now in its 44th year, it has become a major international event and the largest cultural festival of its kind in North America. As Carnival is an international cultural phenomenon, the great metropolis of Toronto and its environs will come alive as the city explodes with the pulsating rhythms and melodies of Calypso, Soca, Reggae, Chutney, Steel Pan and Brass Bands. The Festival Management Committee is responsible for the managing and staging of North America’s largest outdoor festival.
Corporate sponsors of this year's festival include: Scotiabank, The Toronto Star, Sway Magazine, The Grid, CTV, CP24, The Federal Government of Canada, The Province of Ontario, The City of Toronto, Tourism Toronto, Mobilicity, The Greater Toronto Airports Authority, Ontario Place, Royal Ontario Museum, Ontario Science Centre, Toronto Public Libraries, Yorkgate Mall, Liberty Grand Entertainment Complex & Liberty Entertainment Group, The Caribbean Camera Newspaper, Toronto-Lime.Com, and GraceKennedy (Ontario) Inc.The Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival Office is located at 263 Davenport Avenue, Lower Level; Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5R 1E9. Contact info: Tel: 416-391-5608; Fax: 416-391-5693; Email: Stephen@stephenweir.com CUTLINES:
Top: Press conference was held on an empty floor of the Scotiabank Tower in downtown Toronto. Over 55 journalists representing media outlets in 5 different countries, crowded onto the 59th floor to learn the new name of Scotiabank Caribana.
Second from top: The festivals CFO, Chris Alexander introduces the new name: Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival. Too bad the artwork on stage had a slightly different name that was instantly picked up by the press.
Second from bottom: I spent much of the press conference on the ground level of the Scotiabank Tower, registering guests near the elevators. I did get to watch the events unfold in the nearby coffee shop which ran a live feed on CP24. Scotiabank vice-president John Doig is on screen.
Botom: over a dozen mas camp models attended the presser and assisted with the photo sessions. Two models are from Tru Dynasty.
For more information about the programs and events, please visit the festival’s official website at www.torontocaribbeancarnival.com.
pictures from the presser
On May 25th The Festival Management Committee announced a new name to the Festival that has captured an audience of more than 1.2 million people annually on the August long weekend: The Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival.
The Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival (STCC) will be back in July with the same line up of events featuring the Toronto Mas Band Association, the Organization of Calypso Performing Artistes and the Pannists, as well as an array of new programming leading up to the Parade on July 31st.
“This is the 44th year for the Parade, and all of the participants are preparing for another major turnout of attendees this summer,” said Denise Hererra Jackson, CEO of the FMC. “Rebranding ourselves as the Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival helps us resolve any ongoing trademark issues around the old Festival name, and allows us to move forward with an exciting program that will appeal to members of the community of all ages.”
“The Festival is an important summer celebration of diversity through arts and culture in Toronto and as such, is important to the roots of this city,” said Chris Alexander, CFO of the FMC. “The Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival will continue to grow and meet the needs of the attendees, while reinforcing its relationships with the Toronto community, its sponsors and other stakeholders.”
In addition to its commitment of title sponsor, Scotiabank and the FMC announced today they will donate a total of $2,500 in prize money to the Pan and Calypso competition, with the first place performers receiving a $1,500 prize, $1,000 to second place and $500 to third place.
“Scotiabank’s partnership with the FMC opened an exciting new chapter for the Bank – given our extensive presence in the Caribbean and the importance of this event to the City, our customers and our employees, this event is a natural fit for us,” said John Doig, Scotiabank Senior Vice-President, Toronto Region. “Today we have come together to reinforce our support for the Festival Management Committee – their decision to rename the Festival the Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival reflects our diverse and multicultural communities. We’re looking forward to a great festival!”
The STCC has released the official programme for the summer festivities today, and festival goers will see new additions, including a sports component featuring athletics of the Rugby League. Programme details can be found in the backgrounder and a new name and logo will appear in all marketing materials as well as on the revised interactive website, www.torontocaribbeancarnival.com.
About the Festival:
The Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival is an exciting three-week cultural explosion of Caribbean music, cuisine, revelry as well as visual and performing arts. Now in its 44th year, it has become a major international event and the largest cultural festival of its kind in North America. As Carnival is an international cultural phenomenon, the great metropolis of Toronto and its environs will come alive as the city explodes with the pulsating rhythms and melodies of Calypso, Soca, Reggae, Chutney, Steel Pan and Brass Bands. The Festival Management Committee is responsible for the managing and staging of North America’s largest outdoor festival.
Corporate sponsors of this year's festival include: Scotiabank, The Toronto Star, Sway Magazine, The Grid, CTV, CP24, The Federal Government of Canada, The Province of Ontario, The City of Toronto, Tourism Toronto, Mobilicity, The Greater Toronto Airports Authority, Ontario Place, Royal Ontario Museum, Ontario Science Centre, Toronto Public Libraries, Yorkgate Mall, Liberty Grand Entertainment Complex & Liberty Entertainment Group, The Caribbean Camera Newspaper, Toronto-Lime.Com, and GraceKennedy (Ontario) Inc.The Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival Office is located at 263 Davenport Avenue, Lower Level; Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5R 1E9. Contact info: Tel: 416-391-5608; Fax: 416-391-5693; Email: Stephen@stephenweir.com CUTLINES:
Top: Press conference was held on an empty floor of the Scotiabank Tower in downtown Toronto. Over 55 journalists representing media outlets in 5 different countries, crowded onto the 59th floor to learn the new name of Scotiabank Caribana.
Second from top: The festivals CFO, Chris Alexander introduces the new name: Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival. Too bad the artwork on stage had a slightly different name that was instantly picked up by the press.
Second from bottom: I spent much of the press conference on the ground level of the Scotiabank Tower, registering guests near the elevators. I did get to watch the events unfold in the nearby coffee shop which ran a live feed on CP24. Scotiabank vice-president John Doig is on screen.
Botom: over a dozen mas camp models attended the presser and assisted with the photo sessions. Two models are from Tru Dynasty.
For more information about the programs and events, please visit the festival’s official website at www.torontocaribbeancarnival.com.
Wednesday, 25 May 2011
not Telling Tales - it was one of the best new children's book festivals in Ontario
Telling Tales:
A Family Festival of Stories Four-month Reading Campaign Starts Here
For Immediate Release:
May 25, 2011
The Telling Tales Festival kicks off a four-month reading campaign that begins with Jude Johnson’s school visits, carries on through the summer thanks to our online recommended reading list, and leads up to the main event: the third annual Telling Tales festival, featuring Canada’s best children’s writers, illustrators, storytellers, and musicians at Westfield Heritage Village.
Media are invited to check in with Hamilton’s musical ambassador Jude Johnson who is currently visiting14 inner-city schools across Hamilton that are challenged by poverty, giving students advance festival presentations and inviting them to this year’s Telling Tales Festival. Free to attend, the September festival gives many children and families an un-heard of opportunity to see and hear their favourite literary performers.
The Telling Tales Festival makes reading come alive for children across the economic spectrum. Whether they travel by car, or catch a free ride on a sponsored school bus, children of all ages will find their favourite authors and discover new ones, sing along with talented musicians, explore authentic buildings in Westfield’s beautiful pioneer village, and join in many other fun-filled activities, all free of charge and age-appropriate.
Feature talent includes: Tim Beiser; Rebecca Bender; Rob Blunsdon; Jo Ellen Bogart and Barbara Reid –for their 2011 TD Grade One Book Give-Away program-featured title Gifts; Sharon Jennings; the renowned Jean Little; Lesley Livingston; French author Mireille Messier; the popular Robin Muller; Mahtab Narsinham; local hero Ken Roberts; Caribbean-born Itah Sadu; festival veteran Ken Setterington; graphic novelist Kean Soo; and Robert Paul Weston. Over 20 performers in all – check www.tellingtales.org for presenter biographies plus, new for 2011, our recommended
summer reading list.
Quick Festival Facts:
This year’s FREE festival runs rain or shine, Sunday, September 18, 10:00 – 4:00
• Telling Tales launched in 2009 and instantly put the Hamilton Conservation Authority’s Westfield Heritage Village on the national map, attracting 4000 guests and raising $20,000 for Hamilton-based literacy programs
• Tourism Hamilton honoured the inaugural festival, naming it best festival in the medium-budget category and giving honorable mention in the Rookie-of-the-Year category
• In 2010, 5000 children and their families visited on festival day; $45,000 was raised for Hamilton-based literary projects and surprise guest Robert Munsch thrilled the capacity crowd with renditions of his popular stories
• Now a much-loved annual event, Telling Tales draws fans from Hamilton, the Greater Toronto Area, the Golden Horseshoe, and Guelph/Cambridge/Kitchener-Waterloo.
The festival wishes to thank TD Bank Group, the Ontario Trillium Foundation and a host of additional sponsors and in-kind donors.
Several finalists for the $25,000 TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award as well as Jo-Ellen Bogart and Barbara Reid, author and illustrator of Gifts, the title chosen for the 2011 TD Grade One Book Giveaway Program, will be appearing at Telling Tales this year.
About the Festival:
Now in its third year, Telling Tales: A Family Festival of Stories is jointly hosted by the Hamilton Conservation Authority, the Hamilton Public Library, and Rotary International. Key financial support is provided by TD Bank Group, the Ontario Trillium Foundation (2010), and a growing list of local Rotary clubs. For a full list of community partners, sponsors, and in-kind donors, please visit www.tellingtales.org.
Festival media partners include The Hamilton Spectator, Corus Entertainment (CHML, Y108 and Vinyl 95.3FM), and CHCH Television.
Media Contact: June Dickenson
Direct: 647 477 6000 or 905 689 0388
E-mail: junedickenson@cogeco.ca
Posted by Stephen Weir for Telling Tales
Festival Contact:
Susan Jasper
Direct: (905) 973-6478
E-mail: sjasper@sympatico.ca
Please visit: www.tellingtales.org
Follow us on Twitter at: www.twitter.com/tellingtalesFFS
Photograph: Sitting on the grass listening to author tell tales. Photo taken by sweir
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