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Schedule


July 2006
All performances starting between 8:00pm and 9:30pm
Open Mon 6:30 PM - 12 AM (music ending at 11pm)
Open Tue.- Sat., 6:30 PM - 2 AM
Dinner Served 6:30 PM - 10:30 PM
FEATURED ARTIST THIS MONTH: Sculptress JUDE NORRIS

Click here for more info on the exhibit

Tuesday July 11
Acoustic Soul w/DJ Black Lotus
9:30pm, $7

Wednesday July 12
Latin Soulstice
9:30pm, $8

Thursday July 13
The Strip
9:30pm, $5

Friday July 14
The Worst Pop Band Ever
9:30pm, $10

Saturday July 15
Kobo Town
9:30pm, $10

Sunday July 16
Up From the Roots Poetry Lounge
7pm, $10

Tuesday July 18
Acoustic Soul w/DJ Black Lotus
9:30pm, $7

Wednesday July 19
Latin Soulstice
9:30pm, $8

Friday July 21
Daniel Barnes Quartet
9:30pm, $10

Saturday July 22
Buddy Aquilina Quintet
9:30pm,$15

Tuesday July 25
Acoustic Soul w/DJ Black Lotus
9:30pm, $7

Thursday July 27
Van Leve
9:30pm, $10

Friday July 28
The Black Underground Project Honours the Genius of Herbie Hancock,
Part 2 of The Headhunters
With Michael Shand, Larnell Lewis, Rich Brown and Neil Brathwaite
9:30pm, $15 adv.

Saturday – July 29
Radio Nomad with Waleed Abdulhamid
9:30pm, $15



MAY 2006's FEATURED VISUAL ARTIST:
Sculptress JUDE NORRIS
Sculpture exhibit: "scars of gold and other colours"

During the month of May, the Trane studio will be exhibiting a series of work by Plains Cree multi-media sculptress Jude Norris.

The brilliantly coloured, three dimensional wall pieces in Jude Norris’s scar series combine physical ‘evidence’ of ritual with intense fields of colour to produce deeply emotive abstract works. 

In these works on canvas, each artwork’s surface is ‘wounded’ – i.e. slashed - and then painstakingly ‘healed’ with sinew stitching. Sometimes this 'scar' is embellished with carved sticks that pierce the canvas's surface along its length, simultaneously representing elements of repair, security, trial, ceremony, and adornment. 

The choice and use of colour is also designed to express and evoke different emotional responses - and reference personal and universal elements of healing process. The sinew fissures may also be read as seams - helping create structures that provide shelter and/or safety.

The visually bold, simple and even celebratory presentation of these scars promotes a similar attitude towards ourselves and our inherent wounds and weaknesses - symbolizing passage through trial, both individual and communal, by choice or circumstance – to a place of greater experience, strength, and acceptance.

See exhibit poster (PDF file)
 

 Past
Highlights


Click to see full sized
Click to see full sized poster

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