Costs | Monthly/cost | Yearly/total | ||
Operational Expenses | ||||
Salaries | 3000 | 36000 | ||
Occupancy Office | 500 | 6000 | ||
Insurance | 1000 | 12000 | ||
telephone | 100 | 1300 | ||
Travel Expenses International | 7,000 | |||
Postage | 500 | |||
Transportation costs | 300 | 3600 | ||
Opening Gala VAG sponsored | 2000 | |||
Volunteer Appriciation Party | 2000 | |||
Marketing and Advertisement | 6,000 | |||
Artist Costs | ||||
Artist's fees CARFAC | 380 | 7600 | ||
Travel cost for international | 5000 | |||
Accomodations in house | 200 | 2400 | ||
Food Expenses | 200 | 3000 | ||
Transportation | 100 | 1200 | ||
Props | 2000 | |||
Permits City of Vancouver | 36.55 | 731 | ||
Equipment rental | 1000 | |||
Total Expenses | 99331 | |||
Income | ||||
Grants Canada Council | 40,000 | |||
Vancouver Art Gallery | 2,000 | |||
City of Vancouver | 20,000 | |||
Private Donations | 20,000 | |||
Public Donations | 10,000 | |||
Advertisement Revenue | 10,000 | |||
Total Income | 102,000 | |||
Surplus | 2,669 | |||
Thursday, March 11, 2010
Budget
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Day One Performer Bio's
G.Amani
Is a recent graduate of Emily Carr University, has always found herself critiquing conformity. Her work is intended to raise questions about viewing in relation to media and mass-produced texts. Currently she has been working on a body of gray photographic images that she calls “Portraits”, that not only speak to the practice of photography and its strong holding traditions, but also the impact of visual conformity on knowledge production and distribution.
Tomorrow Gary
Genesis
Connie Freitas
Her performance work often addresses the myriad ways of identification through life's experiences and the process of subconscious expression.
Emilio Rojas
Is a performance multimedia artist.
Molly Wright Kreppel,
Born and raised in Los Angeles, moved to Vancouver in 2006 to pursue an education in art. She has been practicing photography for seven years and focuses the majority of her work on conceptual image making and connecting the photographic process with every other medium of art including sound, film, performance, writing, and sculpture. Having actors, dancers, musicians and singers in her family tree, she was brought up to be any of the aforementioned. Her interests within performance critique the mental and emotional pressures of the performing arts lifestyle and the passed down guilt and self-analysis that one inherits from their mentor.
Map and Pictures of Festival Locations
Here is your link mapping everything that is going on for the Broken Intervals Festival.
http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=113603528362847933480.00048178d6739cb53b869&z=12
See you there!
http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=113603528362847933480.00048178d6739cb53b869&z=12
See you there!
Welcome to Broken Intervals
Broken Intervals: Durational Art in Public Space
Stirring up some local Vancouver performances and happenings, the Pirate Performance Collective presents the Broken Intervals Performance Festival. Conceived by six Emily Carr students of different backgrounds and conceptual interest, this city-specific festival explores the layers of complexity and hierarchy within scientific theories and social observations of time and space in relation to the city of Vancouver, adding to the rich art history as well as dynamic discourse of durational and site-specific performance art.
Fifteen artists have been invited to perform durational works in various site-specific locations exploring the fragility of time and space, public and privately owned spaces, relationships within memory, the affect of time on people and places, object relation theories and truths created through the use of ephemera, as well as taking up space in terms of power and authority. Various panel discussions and artist talks, organized by the festival, critique the ongoing usage of time and space as artistic subject matter and examine the human fascination with chronology, expansion and isolation.
For Festival Information: http://brokenintervalsperformancefestival.blogspot.com/
Stirring up some local Vancouver performances and happenings, the Pirate Performance Collective presents the Broken Intervals Performance Festival. Conceived by six Emily Carr students of different backgrounds and conceptual interest, this city-specific festival explores the layers of complexity and hierarchy within scientific theories and social observations of time and space in relation to the city of Vancouver, adding to the rich art history as well as dynamic discourse of durational and site-specific performance art.
Fifteen artists have been invited to perform durational works in various site-specific locations exploring the fragility of time and space, public and privately owned spaces, relationships within memory, the affect of time on people and places, object relation theories and truths created through the use of ephemera, as well as taking up space in terms of power and authority. Various panel discussions and artist talks, organized by the festival, critique the ongoing usage of time and space as artistic subject matter and examine the human fascination with chronology, expansion and isolation.
For Festival Information: http://brokenintervalsperformancefestival.blogspot.com/
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