World Mad Pride Day Celebrated By Gallery Cachet In Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Local and international artists, both emerging and professional, are invited to participate in an interdisciplinary call for work addressing human rights and psychiatry, and mental health and arts.
ONE FLEW WEST: OLD LANDMARKS, NEW TOPOGRAPHIES
CALL TO ARTISTS - WORLD MADE PRIDE BIENNALE 2008
DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS:
MAY 23, 2008
Local and international artists, both emerging and professional, are
invited to participate in an interdisciplinary call for work addressing
human rights and psychiatry, and mental health and arts.
Work must incorporate themes of place, surroundings, or (internal and
especially external) location as it is related to mental health. The
artwork may consider the following questions: How is madness tied to
physical space? How do we situate dualities of freedom vs.
confinement, separation/participation within evolving landscapes of
madness vs. sanity? Healing vs. healed? What is the geography of
breakdown? In what environments do we experience wellness?
Within the Biennale, this year's art exhibition incorporates the theme
of Riverview. Opened in 1913, Riverview (also named Essendale) housed a
population of 4630 in 1951. It is a controversial site and pivotal
subject in the history of the mad movement in British Columbia, and as
a subject
within artists' work, a source of pain, survival, struggle, and healing.
If work is submitted specifically addressing the subject of
Riverview, that work must be experiential, well researched and/or
incisively felt and directed.
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES:
All artistic mediums will be accepted, including live performance,
spoken word, painting, drawing, photography, video, sound, and new,
mixed, and interdisciplinary media. Local artists should forward
submissions in person, artists outside of Vancouver send as digital
documentation (email jpeg files). Submission form can be downloaded
from our website or request by telephone or email to
madpride@gachet.org.
If work is accepted we will provide
shipping costs. Artist exhibition fees are also paid. The submission
form requires you include your name, telephone number, email address,
return shipping information, a short description of your work, an
estimate of its value (for shipping and insurance purposes), and an
artist CV (optional). Work will be insured during the exhibition
(deductible $1,000).
OBJECTIVES:
.
Highlighting the global movement advocating for mental health and human
rights through sharing and showcasing artistic _expression on these
themes.
. Connecting artists' work that addresses the social determinants of mental health.
. Challenge stigmas of people living with mental health issues.
. Providing a forum for discussion and education on these issues.
. Creating links to the rights of individuals for health and security worldwide.
TIMELINE:
Deadline for submissions of artwork May 23.
Jury meets and selected artists notified May 25-28.
Distribution of printed Mad Pride Guide May 29.
Work must be received in Vancouver by June 6.
Program (panel discussions, performance, readings, and film events) June 6- July 14.
Closing Celebration & Mad Pride Day July 14, 2008.
A highlight of this year's Biennale includes our collaboration with
SFU's Madness, Citizenship & Social Justice Conference (June
12-15). In conjunction with Cinematheque, we present a public screening
and retrospective of the landmark documentary 'Titicut Follies,' on the
40th anniversary of its release (and banning by the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts). Its world-renowned director, Frederick Wiseman, will be
in attendance. Released in 1967, Titicut Follies is a stark and graphic
portrayal of the conditions that existed at the State Prison for the
Criminally Insane at Bridgewater, Massachusetts.
For more information
Cherise Clarke, World Mad Pride Coordinator,
Gallery Gachet
e: madpride@gachet.org | t: 604.687.2468
88 East Cordova Street, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6A 1K2
www.gachet.org
Don't 4 get to celebrate your Mad Pride!
"Ruminations on Drugs, Madness, Mad Pride and Radical Mental Health"
