Friday, December 26, 2008

1111 Group Exhibition: Full Dream Ahead 11Jan2009 @ 225-58Ave SE!!!!

Our ranks continue to swell!

1111 artists... 11 pieces or less.
Hanging pARTy for all artists on Saturday, 10Jan2009 between 11.11am-11.11pm @ 225-58Ave SE
1111: Free Exhibition for all Calgarians on 11Jan2009, doors open 11.11am-11.11pm @ 225-58Ave SE

* make your own title tags. each tag no larger than 3cm x 7cm. should include title, dims (Vert x Horiz), artist, medium & year
* make your own bio/artist statement. 10.5cm x 27.5cm include contact information
* bring promo lit ie biz cards for the artist info tables, or display directly by your pieces.
* ensure your works are ready to hang safely, ie weight
* be prepared to hang ur own work. bring tools... bring easels.
* there will be 24 hour security.
* tell all ur friends, 1111 is always looking for volunteers.
* invite other artists to participate.
* 30,000 sq ft!!

1111 is not about elitism, it is about participation. Calgarians/Viewers will decide what their eyes and minds enjoy.
Remember there will be hundreds of other artists participating with thousands of pieces of art. This is an event you as an artist will also enjoy. Bring your cameras.

check blog...1111 blog... http://1111-oneoneoneone.blogspot.com/
1111 Facebook Event Group... http://www.new.facebook.com/event.php?eid=27540919471

check in the first week of january.

full dream ahead!


Saturday, November 22, 2008

Close your eyes, breath slow and we will begin

Heads up on a very relevant exhibition opening, tonight at Summit Fine Art, 1604-10th Ave SW from 5-8pm. The ex is titled 'Colony' featuring new works by Marcia Harris (exceptionally talented, very earth aware artist). She makes sense of the strange machinery with a rural/industrial beauty that is rare in global contemporary art.

where we live is where we work Marcia Harris, 120cm x 180cm, acrylic on canvas, 2008

Tufts Green Roof Research

Some quick thoughts from an urban ag conceptualist:

Reconceptualizing our food system is a wise use of calories at this critical point in urban evolution.

1. I was viewing aerial photos of North American cities taken in the 30's 40's & 50's... I was amazed to see these small squares and rectangles in the back of many homes, each with little rows. Of course, gardens! These are now lawns, decks, BBQ's, gazebos and pools. Leisure replaced personal food production or home based food security ie gardening.
2. Community gardens, with SPIN (Small Plot INtensive) technology, offer tremendous benefits to communities. These benefits are not just food centric, they are also social in nature (bad pun), craeting community pride, interaction between neighbours, green space for families, vehicle for contribution which provides sense of self worth... et al.
3. Reclaiming roads and boulevards, turning the grey/asphalt into green/food. This transition requires time, just as it did when going from green to grey. Reverse urbanization of infrastructure. It is a myth that we have to live in the concrete jungle. This reconceptualization of urban communities is a juggernaut of a movement.
4. How much can we logically produce? I suggest that using available urban ag technologies, such as green roofs/greenhousing, perimeter planting (around fields and parks), container gardening, unused lots, lane gardens, reclamation gardens, et al, we could produce close to 50% of our food in an urban setting. That is considerable. The carbon footprint is also reduced by a considerable factor. Look at it as a leap frogging of our food source from outside the perimeter to inside. The remainder of the food could be grown in our suburbs and in the brownbelts.
Reconceptualizing our food system is a wise use of calories at this critical point in urban evolution.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Traffuct: The Future of Calgary? Not if YodaZilla can help it

Plan It Calgary, a promising toddler/byproduct of the union between the City of Calgary Sustainable City Program and the imagineCALGARY process, hosted a summit at the somewhat posh and amazingly sterile Calgary Stampede Round Up Centre on Nov 14 & 15, 2008.

E=MC2 assisted with the organizing of the $250K weekend which was attended by aprox 250-300 volunteer citizens.

Breakout sessions, workshops, lecture, keynote speakers (Aussie Jeff Kenworthy and Torontonian Ken Greenberg) and a role playing game, where participants adopted city planner personas akin to Blade Runner meets Isaac Asimov meets Timothy Leary meets the guy who invented lego. Objective: Plan Multi-Modal Tansportation Routes, Land Use (Residential/Office/Retail/Industrial/Recreational/Cultural & Yeah!! Agricultural) and Open Space/Ecology (Grey 2 Green). Sounds dubious, but in reality was tremendously stimulating and quite a bit of fun. Sustainable City (Martians) were everywhere, enthusiastic, helpful and getting a contact high from the participants.

There was embedded media and even Lord Bronco showed up, and to his credit actually looked at the map tiles, including a highly conceptualized Broncoville, featuring a city farm, concentrated solar, green roofs and LODD: Life Oriented Design & Development. Even with the budget turdnado back at city hall he heard the buzz about the visionaries over at the Stampede reinventing his perfect AUTO EROTIC city, (we love our autos or at least Klein's or 'that guy with the glasses' city planners did) commenting on how "Calgary is the city of the 21st Century."

Major Collaborative & Sustainable Kudos to the Sustainable City staff and the Calgarians that committed 2 days to planning our city so that it may actually be one we can live in...

visit the amazing web 1.0 city of Calgary web portal, now with html and hyperlinks! wow! www.calgary.ca/planit

Mackenzie Delta @ Plan It




BroncoVille with Calgary City Farm & Festival Village (check out the green roofs and the complete lack of parking... now that's a revolution in parking)


YodaZilla Attacks Evil Autos on Crowchild while lecturing at the newly enhanced Viscount Bennett College Education Hub (Yoda also endorses the green roof)







Torontonian and eco-sustainability-city makeover guru Ken Greenberg addresses the Plan It Summit participants

Friday, November 14, 2008

2,012 new food growing spaces by 2012

Can Calgary create 2,012 new food growing spaces by 2012?



Mayor launches Capital Growth to boost locally grown food in London
Project set to create 2,012 new food growing spaces for London by 2012
4 November 2008

Mayor of London Boris Johnson and Rosie Boycott, Chair of London Food, today launched an innovative scheme to turn 2,012 pieces of land into thriving green spaces to grow food by 2012.

Capital Growth - the first initiative delivered by Rosie Boycott in her capacity as Chair of London Food - aims to identify suitable patches of land around London and offer financial and practical support to groups of enthusiastic gardeners or organisations who want to grow food for themselves and for the local community. It is expected that a range of organisations will open up land to the scheme including borough councils, schools, hospitals, housing estates, utilities companies and parks. There are already community groups growing food on land across London - Capital Growth will help to expand these organisations whilst encouraging new ones.

The Mayor today announced the first organisations to pledge land to Capital Growth, these are:
Blenheim Gardens housing estate in Brixton, to be run by social housing residents;
A large privately owned residential garden in Morden, where local volunteers will grow and share the harvest;
Latchmere House resettlement prison in Richmond, which will grow food for the canteen and run horticulture and catering training with prisoners to improve skills and employment prospects.
Boosting the amount of locally grown food in London makes economic sense at a time of rising food prices, and it also has a range of health and environmental benefits, such as improving access to nutritious food in urban areas and helping to increase flood protection. There is rising interest in self-grown food and inner London boroughs have waiting lists for allotments that can be decades long.

Boris Johnson said: "Linking up currently unloved patches of land with people who want to discover the wonders of growing their own food, delivers massive benefits. It will help to make London a greener, more pleasant place to live whilst providing healthy and affordable food. This will aid people to reconnect with where their fruit and veg comes from and cut the congestion and carbon emissions associated with the transportation of food from miles away. Capital Growth is a win-win scheme - good for our communities and good for our environment."

Rosie Boycott said: "London has a good deal of green spaces - some derelict or underused - but not being used as well as they could be. We also have a veritable host of enthusiastic gardeners who are well equipped to turning derelict or underused spaces into thriving oases offering healthy food and a fantastic focus for the community. Capital Growth will identify spaces across the capital - often in surprising places such as roof gardens - and help London's communities grow their own food."

Monty Don, gardening expert and TV presenter, said: "Growing your own is the most direct route to delicious, healthy food. It is also immensely satisfying. Anyone can do it, anywhere, and if we all grow a little then together we can make a huge difference to our food supply."

Capital Growth will be run by London Food Link, part of the charity Sustain who are working for better food and farming to enhance people's health and welfare and the environment. The pilot stage of the scheme running until March 2009 will identify and support the first 50 spaces, and is being funded by the London Development Agency. Beyond this, Sustain will be seeking future funding for Capital Growth, with the support of London Food.

Ben Reynolds, coordinator of London Food Link, said: "We are delighted to be working with the Mayor of London to transform our city with 2,012 new food growing spaces. People from all over London are already contacting us, keen to be involved in Capital Growth."

Bonnie Hewson, a housing estate resident from Blenheim Gardens in Brixton, the first new food growing space in the Capital Growth initiative, said: "Residents on my estate are very excited about Capital Growth - everyone from children to older people will be growing more of their own fresh food. Being part of Capital Growth will help to raise the profile of our work and get more people involved."

For more information on Capital Growth, visit: www.capitalgrowth.org

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Anti-Idle Bylaw

Most people know it is not good for the environment to idle a vehicle. Significant work to do on this issue...

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

The new Polar Caps: Societal/Cultural Polarization

In virtually every aspect of society, polarization is occurring, made manifest in various ways:

- The widely divergent voting blocs in the Nation
- A divergence of lifestyles between married and single people
- Geographical choices—leaving suburbs for cities on one hand, and suburbs for exurbs on the other
- A growing distinction between affluent and impoverished
- An increasing separation of young from old
- An increasing separation of ethnic groups from each other, and from the mainstream
- An increasing fragmentation of information delivery means.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Calgary Food Policy & Programming Council

The Calgary Food Policy & Programming Council started in May 2008.

Paul Hughes is the first Director and is concentrating his energy on forming the council's nucleus of members.

We have been offered an office, desk, phone & internet access downtown.

Food Councils exist in most cosmopolitan centres in North America. Calgary is one of the few large municipalities without a council, until now!

Why create a Food Policy Council?

There are many reasons why local officials may want to create a FPC. The most significant may be to broaden the discussion of issues beyond agricultural production to enter into a more comprehensive examination of a food system. Due to multi-stakeholder nature of a Food Policy Council, a wide range of ideas and expertise can contribute to the creation of food policy.

The creation of a FPC can provide an opportunity for a focused examination of how local government actions shape the food system. It can also create a forum in which people involved in all different parts of the food system and government can meet to learn more about what each does—and to consider how their individual actions impact other parts of the food system.

What can a Food Policy Council do that is not already being done in government?

Food Policy Councils can bring a wide range of interests and voices together which do not typically work directly with each other

Food Policy Councils can examine issues which often go unexamined; such as the effectiveness of food assistance programs and the causes of hunger in a society

Food Policy Councils can enter into a more comprehensive approach to analyzing food system issues. Since members come from all sectors of the food system, they are able to recognize the interrelation between different parts of the food system and the need for coordination and integration of actions if policy goals are to be achieved. For example, if a key objective is to increase markets for locally produced food, a FPC can play a role to consider how decisions at all levels of a food system—not just farmers or governmental officials—but also food buyers, wholesalers, retailers, and consumers must also be considered in the equation.

They might:

* Help bring grocery stores or food cooperatives into areas that have none
* Work on farm to school programs to bring farm fresh food from local farmers into schools
* Get laws passed to allow residents to keep chickens for food
* Work to get farmers' markets to accept alternative forms of payment
* Change government purchasing rules so they give preference to local farmers over out of province food suppliers
* Work to preserve farmland from development into subdivisions
* Link up land owners with wannabe-farmers who can farm their land
* Reconnect with sustainable practices of First Nation's Peoples
* Survey food prices in different stores so people can compare prices without driving around
* Remove junk food from schools
* Prevent the city from selling ads for junk on the side of city busses
* Improve access to school breakfast


Acting Calgary Food Policy Council defines our purpose as:

* Develop, coordinate, and implement a food system policy.
* Connect economic development, food security efforts, preservation and enhancement of agriculture, and environmental concerns.
* Ensure universal access to healthy and affordable food for all citizens.
* Support development and expansion of locally produced food.
* Review proposed legislation affecting the food system.
* Make recommendations to the government leadership.
* Employ research and information gathering, policy analysis, and public education methods.
* Serve as a public forum for a discussion of key food system issues.

Monday, August 4, 2008

The Calgary Renaissance Project














"I want there to be no peasant in my kingdom so poor that he is unable to have a chicken in his pot every Sunday."
~Henri IV 1553 - 1610

The Calgary Renaissance Project
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=41108528168

The Calgary Renaissance Project. A sociocultural movement to advance positive change in Calgary through the collective efforts of autonomous working groups and organizations. A gathering place for all groups involved in progressive, forward thinking initiatives for the future of Calgary.

The Calgary Renaissance Project supports independent communities working with partners to help improve the quality of people’s lives, their prospects, potential and the places where they live, work and play.

Our vision is of a society of sustainable communities which are vibrant, healthy and safe, which respect the local and global environment and where individuals and enterprise prosper.

Agriculture
Architecture
Dance
Literature
Music
Painting
Philosophy
Science
Technology

paul@earthsofft.com