Sunday, August 24, 2014

1. Pas de deux

Glen Drive @ 8th Ave
The same friend who called for the removal of tossed shoes in his neighbourhood tipped me to these newly tossed shoes on a leafy street in East Van. I didn't ask him how he came across them. Is there a group of people tracking tossed shoes on wire in the city? He did once mention to me a Reddit discussion thread on the phenomenon in Vancouver. According to some, shoes are tossed to mark gang territory. I don't know if that's just an urban legend, but there's something very West Side Story about these ones. I hope they stay!

Friday, August 22, 2014

0. Street Level

New Project! Street Level will assemble 49 snapshots of/in the city’s different neighbourhoods. The project has many sources of inspiration: Douglas Coupland’s City of Glass, an idiosyncratic A to Z directory to his Vancouver; the alternative guide Vancouver: The Unknown City which documents the city's secret histories, urban legends, fun factoids, and its many nooks and crannies; 49 is an homage to my friend Chow Yiu Fai’s beautiful book 7749 where he offers 7x7=49 creative exercises just because he likes how the four numbers look on the page; the title came from a conversation I had long time ago with a friend, an American in Canada, who said he can’t think about nation and identity but was finally beginning to figure out his street after almost a decade. Mostly, the project is for me, to find out more about the city, investigate for myself friends' anecdotes and what I learnt in books or saw on the news or recognized from movies. Besides, I  live in a high rise, and seem to be perennially filled with heady thoughts and skyward visions. Coming back down to street level is a blessing, a life line, a necessity.

Z: Zany & Zen

The statue captures how I feel at the end of the project ... When I started, I thought it would take me 24 days but it ended up taking two years. Good intentions often take unexpected turns. I hope I will always remember to face such turns in precisely this posture.

Y: Yellow



X: X

I was discussing the meaning of the festival's logo with a friend the other night and we could not come up with a plausible interpretation. Only when I was searching for an X-shaped object to photograph for this entry that I came to the conclusion that two hearts entangled make for an excellent X: a kiss to remember, a cross to bear, a path with no exit, a steamy XXX encounter ...

Vancouver Queer Film Festival 2014

W: Wire

 
Somewhere in a dream I am performing a high wire act ...

V: Valour

Terry Fox (1958-1981)
On shadowy days of doubt, the iconic statue of our most celebrated alumni still inspires courage ...