Monday, February 23, 2009

Catching my breath


Well, last week was heritage week, and what a full week it was! I attended a number of events last week, in Carbonear, St. Brides, Branch and St. John's. Heritage Day itself, Monday, I went to Carbonear to check in on their plans for interpreting Carbonear Island National Historic Site. You can see a historic photo of Carbonear Island on the ever-popular Digital Archive Initiative, or visit Shawn Lidster's site to check out his song about Carbonear Island, which he performed at the event.

In spite of bad weather, the Living RICH symposium went ahead in St. Bride's, followed by the Singing Kitchen in Branch. The Singing Kitchen was a great success, with a full community hall, plates piled high with food, a diverse audience of kids, adults and seniors, and an amazing amount of local talent on stage, ranging from singing and accordion playing to recitation and traditional Newfoundland set dancing. The dance performance was particularly memorable, as it was a group of young performers from the community who have been learning the old dances. They performed The Lancers, directed by Lorna Nash English of Branch.

The same day, ethnomusicologist Kristin Harris Walsh and archivist Colleen Quigley talked with CBC's Ramona Deering about the traditions of dance in the province, and the process of safeguarding this part of our intangible cultural heritage. If you missed Radio Noon, you can download the dance heritage podcast.

On Saturday, the Dance Heritage Think Tank was held at the MMaP gallery in St. John's, with a very strong representation from many different sectors of the dance community, including people with interest in traditional Newfoundland and Labrador set dancing and step dancing, Scottish step dancing, English and Scottish Country dance, contemporary and modern dance, dance conservation, flamenco, bellydance, contemplative dance, dance instruction, and social dance. Participants spoke about the burning issues surrounding dance heritage in the province, including a need for proper dance facilities and increased communication between groups, and discussed possible next steps. Organizers are compiling a report, which will be circulated to all those who attended, and copies of the report will be made available through this blog and will be posted on the Heritage Foundation of NL website.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

ICH Update archived on DAI


The Intangible Cultural Heritage Update newsletter has found a new permanent home on the Digital Archive Initiative (DAI) of Memorial University. The DAI is an online gateway to the learning and research-based cultural resources held by Memorial University and partnering organizations. High-resolution copies of the newsletter will be archived monthly on the DAI, keeping a permanent record of the work of the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador and the implementation of the ICH Strategy for the province.

  • ICH Update page on DAI

  • DAI main page

  • Thanks to Slavko Manojlovich and Don Walsh of the DAI for their assistance in archiving the Update.

    Wednesday, February 4, 2009

    February ICH Update

    February is Heritage Month in Canada, with Heritage Day falling the third Monday of the month.

    In this month's Intangible Cultural Heritage Update we celebrate dance heritage, ICH in Conception Bay South, the traditional naming of trap berths in Carbonear, and a new project of the Association of Newfoundland and Labrador Archives.

    Plus Living RICH, and Cupid makes an appearance in Cupids!

    http://www.heritagefoundation.ca/media/2451/ichupdate003small.pdf

    Monday, February 2, 2009

    Google Calendar for ICH events

    I have started a Google Calendar for intangible cultural heritage projects and events in Newfoundland and Labrador.

    You can access the calendar a couple ways. You can view the calendar directly by going to:
    http://tinyurl.com/anrhh6

    Or you can visit the main page of the ICH Blog and see the event list from the Calendar at the top of the page. If you are a Google Calendar user, you can subscribe to the calendar and track events from there.

    If you have an event, exhibit opening, lecture, program launch or ICH-related workshop that you'd like me to add to the listing, email ich@heritagefoundation.ca

    Thursday, January 22, 2009

    Dance Heritage Think Tank on Feb 21st


    On Saturday, Feb 21st, HFNL, MMaP and Neighbourhood Dance Works will host an open session for dance enthusiasts to meet and discuss the future of the tradition of dance in Newfoundland and Labrador.

    The event will be an introductory platform for members of the dance community to consider our various dance heritages and identify what that means. The main objective is to serve as an information sharing and gathering process.

    The session would be guided by a series of questions intended to generate discussion and pinpoint common themes and trends. We will discuss issues of “dance preservation” and what, why, who, and how we think about local dance history and traditions.

    The outcome would be to consider:

    a) if this a topic of interest to community members, and

    b) is so, what future initiatives could be taken to address dance preservation in the province.

    The event will take place from 1-4 at the MMaP gallery, Arts and Culture Centre. Stay tuned for more information, or email ich@heritagefoundation.ca

    Monday, January 19, 2009

    Happy Valley-Goose Bay ICH Workshop with the Labrador Metis Nation



    Photo: Labrador Metis Nation President Chris Montague delivering salmon to elders in Lake Melville.

    FREE INTANGIBLE CULTURAL HERITAGE WORKSHOP

    The Labrador Metis Nation will be offering a FREE Intangible Cultural Heritage Workshop on Tuesday, January 27, 2009. This workshop will be lead by Martha MacDonald of the Labrador Institute and Dale Jarvis of the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador. The workshop will take place at the Labrador Metis Nation Board Room at 370 Hamilton River Road.

    There is a limit of TEN seats available. Contact Jennifer Butler to reserve your seat.

    Date: 27-Jan-09
    Time: 9:00am-12:00pm
    Place: 370 Hamilton River Road (LMN Office)
    Contact: Jennifer Butler, jbutler@labradormetis.ca; 709-896-0592

    Radio Noon ICH Podcast




    Photo: Ramona Deering, CBC Radio Noon host (left) and Sheila Downer, SmartLabrador (right).

    On Friday, January 16th, CBC Radio Noon in St. John's hosted a phone-in Crosstalk on the theme of intangible cultural heritage, with guests Sheila Downer of SmartLabrador and yours truly, Dale Jarvis. Interested listeners called in on topics ranging from boat and kayak building to traditional dancing and community oral history projects.

    Ramona started off the show with an audio clip from the SmartLabrador community ICH project, with a local man reciting the points of the compass. It prompted this email from listener Dawn Mesh:

    "Further to the gentleman reciting the compass.......my uncle who was from Keels, Bonavista Bay and who died in 2007 at 82 years of age, could also recite this. He was not a fisherman nor was he a person given to recitation. I thought he had learned this at school.....maybe in the Royal Readers?"

    If you have any information on the compass recitation, you can post a comment here, or email Dale Jarvis at ich@heritagefoundation.ca.

    Download the Radio Noon ICH podcast here in MP3 format.

    Thursday, January 15, 2009

    Fyke Nets and Folklife



    Photo: Mr Freeman Upshall, Placentia, showing the wing of a fyke net used for the eel fishery, with a speedboat he made in the background.

    I was in Placentia today for a meeting at the Avalon Gateway Regional Economic Development office, about the upcoming Living RICH (Rural Intangible Cultural Heritage) Symposium, to be held heritage week, the third week of February. After the meeting, Margie Hatfield, Heritage & Tourism Director with the Town of Placentia, took me over and introduced me to Mr Freeman Upshall, local tradition bearer and jack-of-all-trades. Mr Upshall and I had a cup of tea and a long chat that ranged from eel fishing to boat building to memories of the whale fishery.

    Stay tuned to this blog for more on the Living RICH Symposium and on Mr Upshall!

    For those of you interested (there must be other etymology nerds out there) "fyke" is derived from the Dutch fuik, and means "a long bag net kept open by hoops" according to Merriam-Webster, and you can see a picture of one in action here.

    Wednesday, January 14, 2009

    Boatbuilding thesis added to Memorial's Digital Archive Initiative



    This photo of a herring boat from Trout River, Newfoundland, is taken from Paul Dwyer's Folklore MA Thesis: "The Design, Construction and Use of the Bay of Islands Dory: A Study in Tradition and Culture." The thesis is an examination of dory building the Bay of Islands in Western Newfoundland, looking at the issues of design, construction and use. Written in 2000, the thesis is now hosted online ast part of the thesis digitization project of Memorial University's Digital Archive Initiative (DAI). From books and maps to photographs, periodicals, video and audio, the DAI hosts a variety of collections which together reinforce the importance, past and present, of Newfoundland and Labrador's history and culture.

    Other Folklore theses digitized to date include:

    Continuation and acculturation: a study of foodways of three Chinese immigrant families in St. John's, Newfoundland
    by Jianxiang Liu

    Everyday objects as mediators of self: a material culture study of work, home and community in the pulp and paper town of Grand Falls-Windsor, Newfoundland and Labrador
    by Jane Burns

    Skill and status: traditional expertise within a rural Canadian family
    by Laurel Doucette

    Architectural change and architectural meaning in Moravian Labrador
    by Dale Gilbert Jarvis