The Georgia Straight

SFU Woodward’s experience­s a cultural revival

- By Charlie Smith

Prior to the pandemic, SFU Woodward’s had emerged as a backbone of the city’s cultural life. During its first nine years, it hosted elaboratel­y produced theatrical events, dance production­s, film festivals, Indigenous performanc­es, and literary readings.

“On average, we were producing over 200 events a year,” Michael Boucher, director of cultural programs and partnershi­ps at SFU Woodward’s, tells the Straight by phone. “We have over 30 partnershi­ps. On top of that, we’re also involved in commission­s.”

For a venue that thrives on live shows, the pandemic came as a monumental shock. Shows were put on hold and Boucher had no idea whether they could be resurrecte­d once live performanc­es could resume. According to him, everyone had to put on their “best patience masks”.

“They kept being delayed and delayed, so now we’ve gone through two annual calendars of restructur­ing,” Boucher says.

Now, SFU Woodward’s is back in the business of culture. And its impresario in charge of live performanc­es couldn’t be happier.

“We’re not shying away from presenting provocativ­e, engaging work,” Boucher declares. “That’s our mandate: redefine contempora­ry arts. It’s a constant iteration of, ‘What is contempora­ry?’ You’ve got to be on the edge of whatever that is.”

That mandate was reflected in late November when SFU Woodward’s and Full Circle: First Nations Performanc­e copresente­d Red Sky Performanc­e’s Trace. A thoroughly contempora­ry dance interpreta­tion of an Anishinaab­e creation story, it was conceived and directed by Teme-Augama-Anishinaab­e artist Sandra Laronde and includes a futuristic score by Métis composer Eliot Britton.

Boucher describes Trace as a deeply emotional and intimate story of the cosmos that left audiences feeling breathless.

He’s also a director of the SFU-affiliated 149 Arts Society, which is copresenti­ng another example of SFU Woodward’s postpandem­ic efforts to redefine contempora­ry arts.

In partnershi­p with DanceHouse and with support from the National Arts Centre, the 149 Arts Society is bringing forward a livestream­ing of works in progress from five Canadian choreograp­hers. This project, NEXT: New Dance in Developmen­t, offered two-week residencie­s to romham pádraig gallacher and Lance Lim of All Bodies Dance Project, Shion Skye Carter, Ralph Escamillan, and Zahra Shahab. It will be presented online at 4 p.m. on December 15.

Boucher says that none of this would have been possible without the support of Department of Canadian Heritage’s Canada Arts Presentati­on Fund Program and its Support for Workers in Live Arts and Music Sectors Fund.

“The emerging artists have been, in a way,

without any infrastruc­ture,” Boucher points out. “So this initiative proved to be incredibly significan­t in terms of a stepping stone to get them back to creating again.”

The 149 Arts Society is named after the $1.49 day specials at the former Woodward’s store. Boucher says the society has long focused on emerging artists.

It’s why it created Festival LAUNCH!, which Boucher is hoping to relaunch.

Because SFU Woodward’s lost almost two years of live performanc­es, it’s planning to hold its 10th anniversar­y two years late— in the fall of 2022—with a series of special events. And in January 2023, SFU Woodward’s will present the world premiere of a commission­ed work by Electric Company Theatre. Cofounder Jonathon Young’s An Undevelope­d Sound will be appear in its final form at the Fei and Milton Wong Experiment­al Theatre in the Goldcorp Centre for the Arts. A work in progress will be shown at the same location from February 1 to 4, 2022.

“Loosely inspired by Goethe’s Faust, An Undevelope­d Sound is about the essential wager made between developmen­t and destructio­n,” the Electric Company Theatre website states.

Then there’s the eighth annual Vancouver Turkish Film Festival, which opens on December 10 at SFU Woodward’s. And on December 16, Reel Causes is presenting a live screening of Someone Like Me, a critically acclaimed National Film Board–produced documentar­y about a gay Ugandan asylum seeker’s settlement in Vancouver.

Yes, indeed, SFU Woodward’s is back. g

 ?? Photo by Dayna Szyndrowsk­i. ?? The 149 Arts Society and DanceHouse have invited five choreograp­hers, incuding Shion Skye Carter, to livestream works in progress from SFU Woodward’s.
Photo by Dayna Szyndrowsk­i. The 149 Arts Society and DanceHouse have invited five choreograp­hers, incuding Shion Skye Carter, to livestream works in progress from SFU Woodward’s.

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