Editors Blog

Time to bring some life to 'Dead Square'

clock August 12, 2010 02:02 by author vgilhula

When I visit Tom Davies Square, I find myself using the side entrance off Brady St. rather than walking across the courtyard to use the front doors.

This is ironic because the courtyard outside city hall has some attractive features, and it was designed to be a people place, like Nathan Phillips Square in Toronto or even St. Mark's Square in Venice.

With very few exceptions, the square outside of Tom Davies is a dead zone. It's uninviting.

It doesn't have to be this way. Groups planning special events should consider using this public space more often, and the city should encourage it.

Installing some park benches would be a good place to start. There could be a competition for some public art. It would be very pleasant if people could buy a cup of coffee or cold drink at an outdoor kiosk. This could be run by a service group as a fundraiser during the warmer months.

Perhaps the city's horticultural group could assist in making this area more park-like by adding some potted plants and greenery.

The city's leisure services department could plan Friday lunch-hour concerts featuring some of the many talented musicians and singers who live in the city. Or the city could assign the job to the Sudbury Arts Council and give it some funding to arrange for special arts events in the square. Our poet laureate could host poetry readings. (Art on the Square sounds good to me.)

Let's get really radical, and close Minto St. between Larch and Brady during the summer months, so citizens can enjoy the Memorial Park and the square. (This area is next door to the police station, so we shouldn't have to worry about "undesirables" hanging around.)

If we can't use our square better, someone will get a bright idea about using it as parking lot.

Sudbury has a vibrant, exciting, talented arts community which reflects our multicultural personality. But visitors and newcomers to the community would have a hard time to find it. Let's show it off...and what better place to do it than Tom Davies Square.

(This entry is from the Editor's column in the Summer 2010 issue on sale now.)



Tell city council you care about Bell Park!

clock July 21, 2010 08:00 by author vgilhula

This just in, the city is charging a rental fee to the people who are using the park Thursday to pay tribute to William Bell, the man who donated the land to the citizens of Sudbury!!!

 

I attended a meeting a week ago with people who want to make the former General Hospital property on Paris St. part of Bell Park.

It really seems impossible that the city missed this opportunity. Well, maybe not. People who care about keeping this bit of property for the public good will want to attend a party Thursday, July 29.

This is the invitation: To the Citizens of Sudbury: 

Please join us   

As we celebrate the 152nd Birthday of 

Sudbury businessman and philanthropist

William J. Bell

On Thursday, July 29, 2010

At the William Bell Gazebo, Bell Park

3:00 pm until 6:30 pm

  Free birthday cake, light refreshments and musical entertainment! 

 William Joseph Bell was born July 29th 1858.

In 1926, he donated a large portion of his land to the people of Sudbury, with a covenant for their use and enjoyment for generations to come. Along with the waterfront jewel "Bell Park", William and Katherine Bell provided two other magnificent legacies: Their stately home "Belrock" (which currently houses the Art Gallery of Sudbury), and Memorial Park, a central parkland set aside for the specific purpose of honouring and remembering our local military heros.

Please join us as we commemorate the kindness and generosity of William and Katherine Bell with our families, friends and neighbours.

 

Donations to

 “The Art Gallery of Sudbury – Restoration Fund” would be greatly appreciated.



Could Greater Sudbury become Canada's Central Park?

clock July 14, 2010 20:52 by author vgilhula

 When Sudbury-born design guru Bruce Mau was in the city last fall speaking to civic leaders about how to build a better community, he spoke about the region's great natural beauty, and the mess we humans have made of it (or at least some of it.)

While the region has breathtaking vistas and is recovering from the environmental sins of its fathers, there is too much unsightly development and urban sprawl. The heart of the city, the downtown core, is scared with parking lots.

"We do many things without considering the aesthetics," Mau said in an interview. "This city is not a beautiful place, and that is an opportunity and a challenge.'

A more beautiful city would be inviting to newcomers while offering young people a reason to want to stay at home. It would also be a tourist attraction. (Spending money on roads and highways is an invitation for them to drive away, Mau said.)

He suggested Sudbury do something radical. People want to live in beautiful communities. Greater Sudbury should consider itself one huge city park, or a city within a park, and be governed by rules and regulations one might expect in a provincial park.Visitors to provincial parks are careful about where they dump garbage and take pains not to spoil its natural beauty.

It's funny. When Mau suggests something, we think he is a genius. When one of our own residents suggests the same thing, we call that person a nut!

We have work to do in the Park of Greater Sudbury. We need to believe in ourselves, and as Stephen Fry, the British writer and actor, says, "stop crapping in our own nests."

 

 background notes:

Bruce Mau in Maclean's

 Bruce Mau was interviewed this past January in Maclean's magazine about a variety of things, including his hometown.

He told the interviewer."I’m not interested in producing a vision of Sudbury. They have lots of those. What they need is a methodology for execution...They graduate about 5,000 university students a year and almost all of them leave. Something we’re doing is sending the wrong message. I showed them the original landscape. Then I showed them four typical street corners, and said, you started with this extraordinary landscape, the subject of the Group of Seven, and this is what you did with it. If a kid walks in this environment, what story are you telling him? You’re basically telling him, get your stuff and get the hell out of here as fast as you can. If you want him to imagine his future here, you have to think of the story differently."

 

Ugly Wallpaper

Stephen Fry, host of Stephen Fry on America , comments on Oscar Wilde statement that the United States was a violent country because it had ugly "wallpaper." 

"If we look out of the window into our world, we see things that are universally and entirely beautiful from nature. Whether they be palm trees swaying in an island, whether they be the arctic wastes, whether they be deserts, tundra steps. It doesn’t matter where you look in the world, we see nothing but beauty. Unconditional, remarkable beauty. Except where man has intervened.

And what (Oscar) Wilde is saying is, imagine belonging to a species where all you believe that all you can do to the world is to uglify it. To make it worse. To despoil it. Which is what we do. We know that now in real and profound and terrible ways that Wilde couldn’t have known about because the science hadn’t yet discovered quite how harmful we are as a species to our planet. But he could see that we were harmful to our planet in terms of its aesthetics. That we were making the earth uglier. Uglier with bad architecture, uglier with badly designed factories, uglier with badly stamped out tin trays and cheap ornaments, ugly with appalling wallpaper. And if you’re someone who grows up in such an environment, who is surrounded by badly made ugly things, then you think ugly thoughts of yourself and world. You think ugly thoughts of your whole species. There is nothing for you to do but to, to, to crap in your own nest. It’s what we do when we don’t believe in ourselves."

 



Hold on to those 1980 fashions

clock June 15, 2010 01:25 by author vgilhula
It is very difficult for most women, and many men, to clean out their closets. When I say clean, I mean sort the good from the baggy and ugly, and donate the stuff that hasn't been worn for years to charity. An article in The New York Times this weekend is going to make tossing out the old even more difficult. The fashion article reported that clothing manufacturers are flipping through their old catalogues for ideas. Eddie Bauer, for example, is reintroducing jackets that the company supplied to pilots in the Second World War. The retro fashions are becoming popular because the Americans are feeling uncertain about their economy. The article states: "Brands are combing their archives in the hope that old clothing styles with a classic feel will assuage consumer anxiety in shaky times. With some Americans feeling as if they can’t trust government, Wall Street or big business, the brands are betting their heritage lines will evoke memories of better times — and help pry open shoppers’ wallets." And we know what happens across the border creeps into Canada soon rather than later. So I will hang on to those old things...just in case.


It's a Miracle!!!!

clock April 22, 2010 02:28 by author vgilhula
Pearl St. Tower Vote Passes! John Grubber one of the people who are invovled in the Save the Sudbury Water Towers posted his message on his Facebook site. It is a miracle "Great news everyone, thanks to your support, and Joel's great job setting up the art show, we managed to convince Council to vote yes, and let Cory Prouse put ads between the tower legs to raise money towards redevelopment! This is all thanks to people like you, who joined the group, contributed art to the art show (on until April 29th at the Fromagerie downtown), messaged your council members and got the community to see the towers again for the first time! Again, thanks for your support- I guess when enough of us little people speak with one voice, we can make things happen."


Don't miss the Water Tower exhibition

clock April 12, 2010 19:38 by author vgilhula
Thanks to Joe Kimmel who has organized an art exhibition at Fromagerie Elgin on Cedar St. (the old LCBO) that celebrates the doomed watertowers. You know, Sudbury's twin towers. The exhibit opens this Saturday, April 17, from 6 to 9 pm. There will be music and art, of course. As many as 50 artists and photographers will have work on display. I hope the mayor and members of city council attend this event, or at least see the show. Everything doesn't have to be about potholes. Some 500 people have joined Joe's Facebook site and would like to see the watertowers stay where they are instead of in the trash heap of history like so much of Sudbury's heritage.


Join me for a good time April 11

clock March 15, 2010 22:29 by author vgilhula

Sudbury Living magazine will present its Spring Lifestyle and Home Show, Sunday, April 11 from 11 am to 5 pm at the Caruso Club, Upper Hall. I am so excited about the many local businesses and services that will be participating in the show. This is an opportunity for me to meet these interesting business people and also chat with readers. Our readers have told us want they want: ideas for home decor, fashion, beauty, health and wellness, plus some fun stuff too. Meet country music sensation Larry Berrio, who is featured in the Spring issue on sale now.Learn some 15-minute dinner recipes from Chef Michael Cullen. There will be a candy station with sale proceeds going to the Sudbury Community Foundation, free copies of Sudbury Living and loot bags. There will also be an opportunity to win more than $1,500 in door prizes including outdoor patio furniture, and Touch of Class hair and makeup makeovers. I wish I could win. The admission is $8.



Save the watertowers

clock February 10, 2010 18:49 by author vgilhula


Event: Sudbury Water Tower Meet and Greet
Start Time: Thursday, March 4 at 8:05pm
End Time: Thursday, March 4 at 11:05pm
Where: S.R.O. 93 Durham Street

To see more details and RSVP, follow the link below:
http://www.facebook.com/n/?event.php&eid=367122433973&mid=1f745c6G5af31a9771cdG65b336G7

Call me crazy, but I want the city to keep its landmarks, the watertowers. A Sudbury artist, Joel Kimmel, wants to create awareness of the towers and is organizing an exhibit of watertower art; see his recent release below.

 

Save Sudbury’s Water Towers: Call for Submissions

Sudbury’s water towers are in danger of being demolished in the spring of 2010.

We want to preserve the towers and allow them to remain in downtown Sudbury as symbols of the city. We think we can show the city that the artistic community appreciates them and doesn’t want to see them destroyed. There are groups of people speaking out on the behalf of towers; we’re hoping the city’s artists can make a visual appeal to the city.

What would the city look like without them? Too often buildings and landmarks are destroyed, only to be looked back upon as great mistakes. We need to stop destroying these old buildings and preserve them to preserve the city’s history. How many great buildings in Sudbury have already been destroyed?

If you love the towers, show us. Photography, illustration, collage, sculpture, painting, animation, digital media, all types of media are accepted as long as they depict the towers (or one tower).

You do not have to be a Sudbury artist to participate. We encourage artists from all over the world to submit their artwork.

Why participate?

Your submission will be featured online and become a part of a collective of artists depicting the towers (along with your name, website, and information about your piece). The ultimate goal of this project is to come together to support the preservation of the towers. We are currently looking into venues to hold a gallery show of the work submitted, for those of you interested in participating in an exhibition.

As the towers are slated for demolition in the Spring of 2010, we need to act quickly. We are looking into holding an exhibition of the work collected in late April, 2010.

Thank you for your interest. Please encourage your friends to participate. Any help you can provide spreading the word to other artists is appreciated. Contributors do not have to be professional artists. Elementary and high school students are also encouraged to create work showing their love of the towers. We look forward to seeing your submissions! Start submitting now if you have artwork of the towers.

Visit Save the Sudbury Water Towers for more information, including submission requirements.Thank you for participating. This will be a fun and hopefully a successful project.

 Website: www.joelkimmel.com

Blog: http://joelkimmel.wordpress.com

Phone: 705-523-4397



When I need a laugh

clock February 2, 2010 07:47 by author vgilhula

I found this funny post on a blog/website called Welcome to My Midlife Crisis. This was posted in December 2007:

"The 2007 award for "Unecessary and Distracting Use Of Detail" has been won by a writer on staff of a little northern newspaper based out of Sudbury, Ontario ,Canada called The Northern Life. The story was written for the holidays and is titled "A Merry Little Christmas", and was written by Vicki Gilhula. It unfortunately was published, and I, unfortunately read the first paragraph, which was more then I needed to read before deciding that this particular story absolutely HAD to win this particular award...Here's why, in only eight words...."Mathew watched his Mother make CAMPBELL"S TOMATO SOUP"....(caps mine)...Branding in the form of a short story now? Did Campbell's pay her for that? Wouldn't they have chosen a more prestigious publication if that were the case? The detail does nothing to move the story forward! What was the point? Did the author feel the menton of the brand would help her story? Does she have relatives who work for that particular company?"

Hey I like Campbell's tomato soup...like Heinz ketchup , there is no substitute. And no I didn't get paid for endorsements. The boy I modelled Mathew on used Campbell's soup.




Patricia Cano sings about Northern Ontario

clock January 25, 2010 20:32 by author vgilhula

This is an email sent to me by by fans of Patricia Cano:

Hello Fans of Patricia Cano: Morning North/CBC Radio is calling for suggestions for a Northern Ontario anthem.  Well, Patty's (Cano)'shivers up my spine' original song Home Again has to be The One!
Let's start the ball rolling and everybody call in Home Again as the Northern Ontario anthem.
Here is Patty's web page, with the clip Home Again on MP3 (scroll down on the Music selection square...) to hear it.
CALL TALK BACK at  1-800-461-1138 to suggest HOME AGAIN by Patricia Cano from her CD This is The New World. This spectacular song needs to be heard. Patty's Page:  http://www.myspace.com/patriciaceciliacano
The Feature Page about her CD: http://tinyurl.com/ye9uftg