Photography: Divided Heaven at The Redwood

Photography: Divided Heaven at The Redwood

Posted: 30th September, 2023 by The Editor

After releasing Clean Sheets earlier this year, Divided Heaven found themselves back in Los Angeles to play some tunes at a packed Redwood Bar show on Friday night. For fans of The Menzingers, Dave Hause, Green Day, and/or Frank Turner, there is something for everyone in Divided Heaven’s music. So check out the tunes and get to the gig the next time Divided Heaven plays in your town.



Photos by Jazmin Lemus

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Calling All Photographers: Bring Your Camera And Shoot To Your Heart’s Delight At The Aquarium Of The Pacific

Calling All Photographers: Bring Your Camera And Shoot To Your Heart’s Delight At The Aquarium Of The Pacific

Heads up, wildlife photographers: the Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach will host its annual photographers’ night on Sunday.

Now in its 14th year, the event takes place from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m., after the aquarium’s closed to the public.

Anitza Valles, the aquarium’s web and social media manager, came up with the idea.

“We invite photographers, amateur and professional, all ages, all skill levels to come and enjoy a night of photography at the aquarium where they don’t have to battle it out with regular guests or strollers or any other kids,” Valles said. “It’s basically a night for people to kind of camp out and get the shots that they’ve always wanted to get.”

A green-brown frog, captured in high detail, looks directly at the camera.

You don’t have to take photos of fish to stand out at Photographers’ Night – this photo won the aquarium’s contest in 2018.

(EE Moore/Aquarium of the Pacific)

The event will also feature vendors like Fujifilm, which will lend equipment to attendees, as well as an introductory workshop. Guests will also be able to make a splash by competing in the aquarium’s annual photo contest.

Photographers Night

  • WHEN: 6:00 p.m. –10:00 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 1
    WHERE: Aquarium of the Pacific, 100 Aquarium Way, Long Beach, CA 90802
    COST: $44.95 per person. $41.95 for members. Advance reservations required.
    INFO: Click here

The biggest attraction

Valles, who’s an amateur photographer herself, said sea jellies are often the biggest attraction on photography night, but getting the right shot of the slow-moving sea creatures can take a bit of work.

Darkened silhouettes of photographers, including a tripod and DSLR cameras, are seen outside one of the aquarium's exhibits.

Photographers gather around the Aquarium’s Amber Forest exhibit hoping for the one perfect shot.

(Anitza Valles/Aquarium of the Pacific)

“It seems really simple, but then once you actually just stop the motion in your camera, you realize that jellies look very strange when they’re mid-motion,” she said. “So you kind of have to follow them along and get in tune with their timing.”

A reptile (possibly a snake) pokes its head out of the water in an aquarium exhibit.

Photographers camp out all night at the aquarium’s exhibits for the perfect photo, like this 2021 contest-winning shot.

(Rebecca Li/Aquarium of the Pacific)

Some exhibits will have restrictions on flash photography and bright lights. For instance, flash is not allowed near the giant Pacific octopus since it’s a den animal that prefers low light. Otherwise, photographers will have free rein to take photos of any of the aquarium’s animals.

Valles said even after almost 15 years, she’s still surprised by the pictures people take — even of the less photogenic animals at the aquarium.

A small, coral-colored fish perches just above a rock.

The Pacific spiny lumpsucker stuns in this photo, which won the aquarium’s photo contest in 2019.

(Heather Lemmon/Aquarium of the Pacific)

“People think ‘aquarium,’ they think bright tropical fish, but we get really interesting fish that most people might have not paid attention to on a regular visit,” Valles said. “You get something like the Pacific spiny lumpsuckers. That’s one of my favorites in recent years, and it is the most adorably ugly, cute fish you can think of.”

You can find more details about the event and buy tickets at the Aquarium of the Pacific’s website.

What questions do you have about Southern California?

Photographer peels back Wilson’s layers

Photographer peels back Wilson’s layers
image

The Brooklyn-based street photographer has been the artist-in-residence for the month of September for the Eyes on Main Street Outdoor Photography Festival. Gillard, a graduate of the International Center for Photography’s Photojournalism and Documentary Studies Program, spent many days walking around Manhattan and then Brooklyn, camera in hand, searching. “I found myself wandering around the city, getting the lay of […]

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How to Become a Professional Portrait Photographer

How to Become a Professional Portrait Photographer

Portrait photography is one of the most popular genres out there, and though it can be quite challenging, it can also be very rewarding. If you are just starting your portrait photography journey and feeling a bit overwhelmed, check out this fantastic video tutorial that shares everything you need to get started, ranging from technical skills to developing a creative mindset and starting a business. 

Coming to you from Ed Verosky, this awesome video tutorial will show you everything you need to know to get started as a professional photographer. No doubt, it is crucial that you develop a mastery of technical skills like the exposure triangle, lighting, and post-processing and develop your own sense of style. However, where photographers often go wrong is overlooking the business aspect. A lot of really talented photographers unfortunately fail in the professional realm because they assume that that talent alone is what will bring them success. The truth is that taking pictures is only a small part of what a professional does. The most successful professional photographers are talented businesspeople for whom photography happens to be the service they provide. Invest as much time learning how to run a business as you do behind a camera. Check out the video above for the full rundown from Verosky. 

Indigenous wall murals in ex-Guelph jail reflect ‘pain and anger,’ and heritage interests want them preserved

Indigenous wall murals in ex-Guelph jail reflect ‘pain and anger,’ and heritage interests want them preserved

Freddy Taylor says serving time at the now-former Guelph Correctional Centre started out as a very dark period in his life, but ended with a renewed passion for life and art.

Taylor, 78, was taken from his home in Curve Lake as a child and forced to go to the Mohawk Residential School in Brantford, Ont. After leaving school, he said, he turned to alcohol and then got involved in criminal activity.

Taylor said he doesn’t recall dates well, but he can confirm he was in jail from the mid-1970s to sometime in the 1980s. During that time, he helped form Native Sons, a group of Indigenous men who helped him and others at the centre to work through trauma in their lives.

“We were happy because [in] the Native Sons group, we talked about everything — alcohol, drugs, how we felt being locked up and being taken away to residential schools. Everything,” Taylor said. 

He said many men would create artwork and the group was given permission to paint three murals in the room they used for meetings in a building called the lower assembly hall.

“We planned about what we should put on there and the Guelph reformatory person that was looking after that let us do that after almost a year. And we fought for it,” Taylor said in a phone interview from the Whetung Ojibwa Centre in Curve Lake, north of Peterborough, where he continues to work on his art. 

“We took our pain and anger out, and put it on the wall.”

An artist works on a painting in his studio
Freddy Taylor says painting gives him a way to heal from the trauma he experienced as a child when he was forced to go to the former Mohawk Institute Residential School in Brantford, Ont. Taylor says he remembers painting murals inside the former Guelph Correctional Centre where he spent time as an inmate. (CBC)

Advocate wants to save murals

Brian Skerrett, a heritage advocate in Guelph, wants those murals saved. 

Skerrett is the former chair of the city’s Heritage Guelph committee and continues to research the reformatory’s history. He noted that some of the buildings on the former jail grounds are designated for heritage preservation, but not all of them. That includes the building where the Native Sons met in the lower assembly hall.

He said he finds that “strange because of the whole history of the Native Sons. I mean, the fact that those murals exist is important. The reason they exist is, that room was dedicated to Native spirituality and allowing the Native Sons to explore their own heritage.” 

“That makes it really important to recognize. We’re not celebrating, but we’re commemorating. I think that’s important.”

Man holds up colourful Indigenous painting standing in front of an old building - the former jail
Brian Skerrett, a heritage advocate in Guelph, holds a painting by artist Richard Bedwash, who was an inmate at the Guelph Correctional Centre. It’s believed Bedwash had a hand in painting murals in part of the reformatory. Skerrett would like to see the murals protected. (Kate Bueckert/CBC)

The Native Sons program at the former correctional centre was started in 1977 and it served as a model for similar programs at other institutions in Ontario.

A 1993 report called “The State of the Justice System for Aboriginal Peoples in Ontario” that was created for the Ontario Native Council on Justice pointed to the Guelph program, and said similar ones had been set up at six other institutions.

Taylor said he volunteers as part of a Native Sons program at the Central East Correctional Centre in Lindsay.

Video shows murals still exist

The former correctional centre closed in 2001, in part because it was too costly to maintain the property and buildings. It has now been deemed surplus land by the province, which owns it. The buildings are currently under the care of Infrastructure Ontario.

A request by CBC News to go into the lower assembly hall to see the murals was denied because of health and safety concerns.

Over the years, Skerrett said, there had been rumours that artwork on the walls in the former correctional facility had been painted over by film crews that have used the site.

But in 2021, an urban explorers group called Edge of our Youth posted a video to YouTube showing the murals inside the lower assembly hall. (It should be noted it’s considered trespassing to enter the former correctional centre’s buildings without permission.)

Skerrett said the video gave him hope because it showed the murals still existed and offered a glimpse at their condition.

Mural of brightly coloured birds with black outlines
This image was taken from a YouTube video from 2021 inside the lower assembly hall at the former Guelph Correctional Centre. It shows one of the murals is peeling. (Edge of our Youth/YouTube)

The larger mural appeared to have peeled around the edges, but the two others were largely intact.

“I went, ‘Oh my heavens, it’s still there. That’s fantastic,'” Skerrett said. “That was the first ‘a-ha’ moment connecting the dots saying, ‘Yes, those murals exist.'”

Murals can’t be moved: Infrastructure Ontario

Catherine Tardik, a spokesperson for Infrastructure Ontario, said an assessment has been done of the artwork in the lower assembly hall and it was deemed it “does not warrant inclusion into the Ontario Art Catalogue.”

The report notes the murals’ style “is typical of Indigenous or Indigenous-inspired works from the 1970s or 1980s and the artists are unknown,” Tardik said in an email.

“The art is painted directly onto structural and load-bearing walls. As such, it is not possible to remove or relocate, as any attempts to remove these pieces would carry the risk of further damage to the murals, the building or potentially, the workers.”

Murals ‘worth preserving’

While the province says the artists are unknown, Taylor said he’s one of the people who helped plan and paint them. 

Another artist believed to have been involved is Richard Bedwash, who was born in Hillsport near Thunder Bay in 1936 or 1937 — different galleries list different birth years for Bedwash — and was an inmate at the Guelph jail. He died in 2007.

Judith Nasby, former curator of the Art Gallery of Guelph, remembers going to see Bedwash and even took him art supplies. His artwork is described as woodland spirit art and is colourful, and Nasby said at least one of the murals, if not two, are reminiscent of his work.

“I was amazed at the quality of the work, the care with which he did his drawings … black line drawings with the bright colours of filling in between, in the style of Norval Morrisseau,” she said. The Art Canada Institute said Morrisseau is considered to be the Mishomis, or grandfather, of contemporary Indigenous art in Canada, and was known for using bright colours in his pieces about traditional stories and spiritual themes.

Nasby said she commissioned Bedwash to do 19 legend paintings for the University of Guelph’s collection, and those pieces were shown at the university and were also on tour as part of a mobile exhibit.

Nasby said that in her opinion, the murals inside the former reformatory are significant and should be preserved.

“They’re an example of an incarcerated person with the help, we think, of other incarcerated men to express their spirituality in this way,” she said.

“The reason they did it is because they said that there was a Christian chapel on the grounds but there was no place for them to share their culture, their spirituality and to really socialize in that important way. So I think simply, as an example in Canada of this kind of energy, and desire and importance it was to them to create this space, it’s worth preserving.”

‘They should be documented’

Skerrett hopes that by bringing the murals to the public’s attention, something will be done to preserve them.

At the very least, he said, “they should be documented, they could be reproduced.”

Taylor said he “would love to see them preserved somehow, but I don’t know how you can preserve it.”

Ultimately, for Taylor, the bigger legacy is the Native Sons and how the group has spread.

“In the [United] States and Canada, you can go to any prison and ask if there’s a Native Sons group and they’ll direct you to it,” Taylor said. “That is how powerful our creation became.”

Seneca museum showcases new Haudenosaunee Beadwork exhibit

Seneca museum showcases new Haudenosaunee Beadwork exhibit
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SALAMANCA — The Onöhsagwë:de’ Cultural Center recently hosted the opening of its new exhibit, “Here, Now and Always: Haudenosaunee Beadwork,” housed in the Seneca-Iroquois National Museum.

The Sept. 23 event celebrating beadwork from the museum’s vast collections gave the public an opportunity to view the pieces, both old and new, and see the inspiration for contemporary artists. People also watched Haudenosaunee artists working on their craft.

Director Hayden Haynes said the staff wants to highlight the museum’s collections and is putting more emphasis on the beadwork because it’s so vast. He said they invited people to come to the opening and view the old as well as the more contemporary pieces on display, learn about their origins and what they mean to the Haudenosaunee culture.

“We wanted to exhibit these pieces, not just to show the collections but to also open conversations about Haudenosaunee history that includes the beadwork,” he said. “Beadwork is not just a form of self-expression; it’s also tied to our identity, our beliefs and our culture. The motifs, designs and even the forms themselves all tie to other things in our culture. We want to show how our ancestors’ pieces inspired us and continue to inspire contemporary bead artists, along with other artists.”

Haynes said beads, in general, have been employed by the Haudenosaunee people for many different uses since time immemorial. He said beads themselves are important to his people and they’ve been used for tens of thousands of years, having been made out of stone, bone, wood and marine shells.

Randee Spruce, educator and curator, said she prepares most of the exhibits at the museum, including putting the current beadwork exhibit together. She was educated at the Institute of American Indian Arts where she majored in museum studies. Spruce, who is also a beadworker, said she first learned the art from a friend and her friend’s grandmother.

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Two well-known bead artists presented at the opening. Through their presentations, Grant Jonathan gave a detailed history of Tuscarora Raised Beadwork while Ken Williams Jr. took visitors on his personal beadwork journey. Both presenters gave an inside look at their lives growing up and how Haudenosaunee beadwork influenced their own beadwork.

Jonathan, who grew up on the Tuscarora Reservation near Niagara Falls, is a renowned beadwork artist and an attorney who has spent over a decade bringing home the beadwork crafted by his Tuscarora ancestors and sold to tourists from across the world at Niagara Falls. He said they were called “whimsies” and are beaded souvenirs that first appeared in the mid-19th century and were sold to tourists throughout the Northeast. Based in New York City, he started collecting whimsies in 2008 and currently has more than 2,100 of the historical beadwork pieces.

Williams, an award-winning bead artist, is Northern Arapaho and Seneca. Originally from the Cattaraugus Territory, he now lives in Santa Fe, NM. He talked about the traditional art of the Haudenosaunee and how modern design is integrated into his works today. Drawing upon Indigenous history, popular culture and high fashion, his work merges earlier Seneca and Arapaho styles and techniques with his own contemporary twist on pictorial imagery. He manages the Case Trading Post at the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian in Santa Fe, N.M.

Bead artists from across Turtle Island were invited to the event to sell their finely crafted pieces. Beadwork vendors included Lexi Sickles (Oneida), Iakorihwato:ken Hemlock (Mohawk), Courtney Regis (Seneca), Grace Crowe (Seneca) Robin Seneca (Seneca), Katwite:ne and Kwaharani Jacobs (Mohawk), Alayna Jimerson (Seneca), Kahionwinehshon Phillips (Mohawk), Kehala Smith (Tuscarora), Barbara Jonathan (Seneca) and Melissa Smith (Seneca). Visitors had the opportunity to watch Regis, Sickles and Hemlock demonstrate the intricate beadwork in their own styles.

Haynes said the beadwork exhibit will be on display until next fall. Staff are currently planning the museum’s November Winter Art Market, which is always well-attended. The market will feature traditional and non-native vendors showcasing their amazing works of art, jewelry and home decor. He said they are also working on their Annual Spring Art Show for 2024, which is one of their most popular events. Carson Waterman’s painting exhibit will be on display through February.

The Seneca-Iroquois National Museum is located within the Onöhsagwë:de’ Cultural Center at 82 West Hetzel St. For up-to-date information, call (716) 945-1760. The museum’s website, senecamuseum.org, is currently under construction.