_ARTS/ENTERTAINMENT un WEDNESDAY, Novemb Wednesday, November 2, 1994 The Castlegar Sun Porcelain on displa | Three exciting artists will be sharing exhibition space at the Langham Cultural Centre in October 25-November 13, a new show entitled, Porcelain, % Peter Vogelaar, a Winlaw artist, thirty years of experience to his art. He has participated in Art ‘Walk for the past five years. He fias painted in a great variety of Subject matter but one of the series has enjoyed most is the ongo- focus on musicians at work y immersing himself into the ¢xcitement of folk and jazz festi- yals as well as smokey Blues bars, be paints a flurry of colour to cap- fure the mood of the moment. } In Porcelain, Paintings and jnore he has chosen a cross-sec- tion of musical portraits from the past seven years, including such $ a notables as Dizzie Gillespie, Tito Puente and Amos Garrett Peter began his training at the old Kootenay School of Art in Nel- son before going on to paint murals in Fort St. John, painting at Expo “86, painting on the 2nd Annual Jazz Cruise, being in Juried Exhibi- tions in Grande Prairie and Vancou- ver, having his poster design chosen for the Ist Annual La Quin- ta Jazz Festival in California and doing one-man shows. “Peter's art,” says Curator Barbara Baving- ton, “is exciting both for its imagery and technique.” Lesley Mayfield credits her art education to a high school teacher, John Mattar. His enthusiasm and eclectic interests “pened my eyes to the rich diversity of many art heritages.” From this simple begin- ning, Leslie was ready to embark Annual Christmas on “later exotic journeys.” Lesley worked for years as a graphic artist, which grounded her in the principles of colour, proportion and balance so evident in her work. Currently she is working with fabric, enjoying not only its richness but its tactile qualities as well. The opulence of heraldic tradition also influenced her choice of material. Her “Seats of Power” series springs from her fascination of heraldry as well as the symbolic art of other traditions. “Thrones,” Lesley says, “are the literal ‘seats’ of power and are occupied by human beings. People become invested with power through vari- ous sets of cultural symbols.” Joining Winlaw artists Peter Vogelaar and Lesley Mayfield is a newcomer to Kaslo, Sada Nam Khalsa. Sada Nam studied ceramics at the Sheridan School of Design in Ontario as well as apprenticing with séveral potters. After seven years in Calgary spent developing her own glazes and designs, Sada Nam is e Margaret Pryce Shows at the NEC —~ Petter touts wood credit system Forests Minister Andrew Pet- ter said the province will estab- lish a credit system to help increase the wood supply avail- able to the value-added manufac- turers. Petter made the announcement in Creston while at the K. Value- a key component was our com- mitment to increase jobs and enhance community stability by promoting the value-added sec- tor,” Petter said. “In order to do that we must ensure more wood is made available to value-added fi rather than being Added Wood Forum. shipped out of the province as dity lumber. “When g: the Forest Renewal Plan in April, = Technology Continued from 4B staff to access the tech- nology that will bring those We already know that when the current students come to us for work in five or 10 years they will be fully conversant in telecommunication, video tele- fe i and all “Establishing a credit system is will give value-added companies greater clout in securing wood from major forest companies.” Petter said the proposal for a credit system was developed by the Forest Sector Strategy Com- mittee’s Industry Structure Work- ing Group. The group proposed a credit system whereby a company's right to purchase logs harvested under the Small Business Forest or fully By being prepared to accept that change will happen, and working with others who are experts in the technology fields, we can at least try and predict what we need. Sometimes planning for change means being able to change your plan. But it has to be done pr our will go the way of the At the National Exhi Centre up to November 13 are two shows. The first is Japanese Prints from the Art Gallery of Victoria. The prints on display are exam- ples of the highest calibre of work that assimilate foreign elements while retaining a style that is distinctly Japanese. The second show is the high tech mumbo jumbo. So, we have a responsibility as business leaders to plan our busi- dinosaur, a good idea at the time but they outlived their usefulness. This isn't a post Hallowe'en story. This is real life. It hap- pened to me on October 27, 1994, at Selkirk College. P Program will depend on the amount of wood it makes available to remanufacturers. ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION Remanufacturers would be able to issue credits to their lumber suppliers, who could then use the credits to gain access to logs they require. The more lumber the supplying company makes avail- able, the greater the volume of logs that a company would be entitled to purchase. The minister said Dan Perrin, of Perrin, Thorau & A i of Sidney, BC, will solicit input from stakeholders on the imple- mentation plan for a credit sys- tem. Perrin is expected to present recommendations to the minister early in 1995 for implementation later in the spring. Aa * "Hair Care & More. FBATURING SHOPPER'S ope 2 nights from 5GO (2 people sharing, taxes extra) Branch 170 ¢ Kelowna ¢ SLUMBER LODGE 2 pm-8 pm 2 pm-10pm 11. am-11 pm Guests with members welcome! at Hwy. 33 & Hwy. 97 (across from Costco) 2486 Hwy. 97 North Call 860-5703 to book or toll-free 1-800-663-2831 and ask for I hope you can take gt of the technology. Soon. 248 Columbia Ave., Castlegar 365-7017 our Kelowna Shopper’s Special Kindergarten and Grade 1 students at Blueberry Creek Elementary School had a sticky good time carving pumpkins donated by SuperValu and Safe- now building a studio in Kaslo. Porcelain, Paintings and more is showing at the Langham Cen- by Stephen Cooke and is called With a Pinch of Salt, which refers to the small NOVEMBER 4the 10 am-9pm | NOVEMBER Sth © 10 am - 4:30 pm at the Castiegar Recreation Centre Complex 2101 6th Avenue Sponsored by Blueberry Creek Recreation Commission Everyone Welcome! FUYROWA SKIING A James AnGrove Jon Lone F “THE WINTER THAT NEVER ENDS NORTH AMERICA'S WILDEST SKI FILM World's BEST Skiers, Snowboarders, > Surfers and Mountain Bikers thrashing y to killer sounds Mov. 3 at Selkirk Coliege Noon K-10* 8 pm S-113 Mov. 8 at SHSS Activity Room 8 pm Mov. 9 at Rossiand Highschool 8 pm $4.00 ADMISSION ov Tickets at Mailard’s in Trail & Castlegar, q Selkirk College Gym & at the door tre in Kaslo from October 25 to November 13. way last week. SUN STAFF PHOTO / Karen Kerkhoft Performance poet gives reading Submitted Vancouver performance poet and playwright Sheri-D Wilson will give a reading on November 4 at 8 p.m. in the Nelson Public Library (Victoria Street entrance). Wilson, an artist known for her scintillating poetic presence, is the author of SWERVE, a col- lection published last year by Arsenal Pulp Press. The work includes Hung, Drawn and Quar- tered, a multi-media epic with a soundscape of jazz rhythms, chants, rants, hexes and humor- ous wordplay, and Taboo x Two, a campy eco-poem in which Salmon attempt to escape Dr. Q's science lab with the help of Being Bird, born from a slot machine in Las Vegas. Pop diva Marianne Faithfull says of the book: “A beautiful work devoted to some of the things important to me...the work understands the importance of AT THE MOVIE Wallpaper Books by Kingfisher Mayfair NOW 402 Custom Color Tinting and Color Co-ordinating Trail Color Centre (1 PERSONAL SERVICE EXPERT ADVICE 943 Spokane St., Trail, B.C. Phone 364-1345 [FRt||SAT||SUN| MON [TUE] WED [THU| 14115116 || 7|8 || 9 ||10) NOVEMBER PLEASE NOTE ONE SHOWING ONLY AT 7:00re EACH EVENING a 8 C Warrang Some violence. and very come ‘occamonal suggestive ones and my ONE OF THE BEST FILMS OF THE YEAR wk kkk PLEASE NOTE: ONE SHOWING ONLY! AT S150 EACH EVENING 1 ENTE | TO THE CA ! Name H Phone giving honour to the anima, the feminine spirit, in fact the god- dess. When in doubt, Swerve.” Wilson is also the author of Bull's Whip and Lamb's Wool, Mamas of Dada (women in sur- amount of salt added to the kiln towards the end of the firing. The fine pottery has strong forms and red blushed salt glazes. It is some of the only wood-fired sculptural and functional ceramics pro- duced in B.C. Twig Workshop There is to be a twig furniture workshop on Sunday November 6, led by Andrea A Participants will lism) and Confessi lA Jazz Play (nominated for three Jessie Awards). She has per- formed in Seattle, New York, Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary and Colorado. In addition to Friday's read- ing, Wilson will present an “Action Poetry Workshop” on Saturday, November 5 from 10am-3pm. Both events are sponsored by the Kootenay School of Writing and the Cana- da Council. Silk flowers, ceramics, helium balloons learn to build their own full- sized birch chair. Class fee is $95, limited to 10 people. For further information call the NEC at 365-3337. Weldon Show Nelson Museum has a show of Phyllis Weldon’s prints inspired by Franz Kafka's “Description of a Struggle.” It is a serigraph and mixed media print previously described in this article when it was exhibited in the Grand Forks Art Gallery. Art of Humour In Grand Forks Art Gallery up to early November is Art INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIA\ HOUSEHOLD& PERSONAL CARE 4 Refill NOT I 1249-3rd St Castlegar 365-4992 of H and Satire and the second is the fibre works of Betty Maylone called Studio Watch. There are other fibre works on display called Fab- Tications. Theatre Workshop Part Two of the theatre workshop Explore Your Inner Character and Exam- ining Character Types will be on at Selkirk College November 10 to December 1. Maximum enrolment is 22 people. Time is 7:30 - 9 Pm and price for this work- shop is $120. Phone 365- 128 for further information. N SHAW CABLE SCHEDULE OCT. 31- NOV. 6 1994 6.30 pm (Wed.) 9:00 am (Thurs.) 6:00 pm (Sum.) SCHOOL DISTRICT #9 PRESENTS 7-00 pm (Wed.) 9-30 am (Thurs.) 6-30 pm (Sun) NEC SHOWCASE 7:30 pm (Wed.) 10:00 am (Thurs.) 7:00 pm (Sun) COMMUNTY HEART 8:00 pm (Wed.) 10-30 am (Thurs.) 8:30 pm (Sun) CELEBRATING GODS LOVE 9-00 pm (Wed.) 11:30 am (Thurs.) 9-30 pm (Sun.) A TRIBUTE TO WILLI KRAUSE $-00 am (Fri) 6:00 pm (Sun) NELSON PROGRAMMING Rev. V. Tech » 365-3664 ALL WELCOME! Pastor John Wiuff (B.th., M.Div.) 2404 Columbia Ave. Castlegar, BC, VIN 2X5 Pastor 365-6762 Church 365-5300 cc STARTING SEPT. 21/ 6:00 Faithfully serving Castlegar for over 30 years. OVE-ACCEPTANCE BIG GREEN APPLES Submitted by: Pastor Leonard Andrews, Seventh-day Adventist Church Our long hot summer should have been good for the apple crop from our one small tree. Being in the middle of the back lawn, it got watered every time the grass did. The bug-light behind the deck did a fine job of devouring the coddling moths. And we had made some effort the previous winter to prune the tree into a manageable shape. True, it was the off year in the two-year cycle, so we weren’t looking for loaded branches, but we were expecting more than just a lot of little green apples. And, to a point, we got more. We got big green apples. 614 Christina Place 8:00: Holy Communion - BAS. Traditional 10:00: Family Service and Charch School & Nursery Nov. 12-6 pm: Parish Dinner & Talent Show ALL WELCOME The Rev. Canon Dorothy Barker Phone: 365-2271 : TO KNOW CHRIST AND TO MAKE HIM KNOWN Calvary Baptist Church | FAITH FELLOWSHIP 2329 6th Ave., Castlegar - 365-5818 © Youth Ministries © Victorious Women © Men’s Fellowship sueemmmmemes WATCH FAITH ALIVE ON SHAW CABLE 10 Summmmeeneees ii d with C. di. Fell GRACE PRESBYTERIAN MG Wes ie ase" In all honesty, there were some that got red, but they tended to be on the top and one side where a hailstorm left too many of the wounded and deformed. 2605 Columbia Ave. What about the other side? My apple picking in younger days had left me with a Sunday Worship 11:30 a.m. Need a ride to church? Call 365-2438 Rev. Murray Garvin picture of ripe red apples all around the tree. My aging father-in-law, himself an orchardist most of his life, put a succinct finger on the problem. “This tree,” he pronounced, “‘needs to be opened up.” Not exactly news - since my own father had intoned the same verdict earlier. ‘““Never get any colour if the sun can’t get into the tree.”” We should have known. We had been warned. So we needed to prune more severely. And why hadn’t such a thinning of the wood already CASTLEGAR UNITED CHURCH 2224 - 6th Ave., Castlegar Ph. 365-8337 Minister: The Rev. Ann Pollock 10:00 am Worship Service taken place? Was it because of an ancient aversion to Chach the pain of picking up prunings? Or was I simply too 10030 am Mor, Wor» 630 pn Eve. Cebbraion : * MIDWEEK SERVICES uncomfortable with the stark, angular skeletons that remained after my father finished his no-nonsense — CASTLEGAR FULL treatment? Maybe I would just as soon settle for an GOSPEL FELLOWSHIP | ornamental rather than a producer. Perhaps I was 1801 Connors Rd. Ne Schcal foe merely being sentimental, sorry for the tree. Wednesday Bible Study It’s quite possible to be the son of a good orchardist & Prayer 7:00 pm Friday Youth Activities 7:00 pm A loving, caring church invites your cipation. | You are welcome here! Pastor Stan Block \) Family Chuarch without being much of one yourself. Be that as it may, I do like apples. By the way, what was your excuse the last time an incisive Providence proposed a little personal pruning to open you up to the Son, to enable hip of Churches & Mini some fruitfulness, some attractive maturity? LIVING WATERS CHRISTIAN ACADEMY - Grades k - 12 "S LEAD, 365-6317