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University Briefs

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WEB- Briefs

McGill researchers look into Maple Spring

One year after the protests, a research group at McGill University has been analyzing data from a survey filled out by Montreal university students. The questions centred on last year’s proposed tuition hikes in the province that spurned a huge movement of student unrest.

More than fifteen thousand students completed the survey, which showed two opposing results, since students who come from families with above average income were likely to support the tuition increase; however, the same students also responded they would attend protests more frequently.

Eva Falk Pedersen, a McGill Masters political science student, said of the results: “In a sense it also means these students were not necessarily protesting out of their self interest.”

With files from The Link

 

Western universities looking for American accreditation

Following Capilano University’s recent accreditation by the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities (NWCCU), Thompson Rivers University has announced its plan to seek the same approval. The NWCCU is a major US agency based in Washington State that evaluates post-secondary educational quality.

The trend of Canadian universities looking for approval across the border has caused some controversy and resistance from faculty members at these institutions due to the NWCCU requiring definite learning outcomes.

SFU has also laid plans to receive NWCCU accreditation through the implementation of learning outcomes. TRU is planning to seek accreditation to ensure quality standards and to identify areas that need improvement.

With files from University Affairs

 

U of A receives large federal grant

The University of Alberta recently received $5.7 million in research funding from the federal government from the Canadian Foundation for Innovation (CFI), who has set aside $47.7 million for research grants in post-secondary institutions across Canada.

Renee Elio, associate vice-president of research at U of A, says that the fact that the university has received this significant amount of funding from the federal government greatly emphasizes the aptitude of the researchers at this university.

Elio stated that the University of Alberta has “the calibre of people who can put forward their vision for research with impact and then get the infrastructure support they need from the federal government.”

She explains how having this kind of financing from the federal government is critical if Canada is to attract and keep researchers in the country, since other nations are also on the hunt for innovators.

With files from The Gateway

Join the Club: The Simon Fraser University Anti-Acronym Society

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JOIN THE CLUB is a feature that highlights SFU’s lesser known clubs and non-existent organizations. 

The Simon Fraser University Anti-Acronym Society, or as it’s more commonly known, the SFU AAS, is an organization dedicated to the elimination of acronyms at SFU.

Although the group’s status as an officially sanctioned SFSS club remains TBD, the club is hoping to be approved ASAP and start the process of removing acronyms from SFU.

According to the AAS, A’s are needlessly confusing and don’t actually save much time because they almost always have to include the the long form version in brackets later anyways (A’s is short for Acronyms).

The AAS meets every Wednesday at 9:00 a.m. in the AQ and also holds a monthly closed meeting for the group’s VIP members which alternates between different rooms in the LDC, MBC, WMC and TASC 2. The AAS requires RSVPs from all VIPs for these CMs (Closed Meetings) and expects all VIPs to give their ETAs beforehand.

PS: The club’s official  motto is “you only live once.”

Word on the Street: Summer Movies

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“I can’t wait to be disappointed by The Lone Ranger! I’ve been waiting for EVER to be let down by it!”

Bill Jones, Eager to walk out of a theatre and do something else

 

“The Smurfs 2 . . . it’ll probably still be good but how do you follow up that original masterpiece?”

Suzie Simpson, Film buff

 

“I’m still holding out hope that Monsters University won’t disappoint and actually be the first movie to show the REAL college experience.”

Glen Jordan, Living the ‘G’ rated Greek life

 

“I was already disappointed by Man of Steel. That Superman guy is such a rip-off of my comic book character: Incredible Person.”

Andy Milton, Hack

 

“Blockbuster? Pfft . . . I only watch obscure independent films like Juno.”

Stephen O’Reilly, Also loves the underground movie Napoleon Dynamite

Research Roundup

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WEB-Research Roundup-SFU PAMR-Flickr

SFU alumna developing app to diagnose skin cancer

Diagnosing skin cancer? There may soon be an app for that.

Maryam Sadeghi, an SFU Computing Science alumna, is working to develop an app to help in early diagnosis of malignant melanoma. The hardware and software Sadeghi is developing can be used on smartphones to photograph a mole, and analyze it for any visual symptoms pointing towards skin cancer. The app then recommends if further medical attention is required.

In order to better understand the visual indicators found with malignant melanoma, Sadeghi has spent the past 4 years working with UBC dermatologists, along with the BC Cancer Agency. The visual symptoms of melanoma discovered were then applied in combination with computer algorithms and visual imaging technologies in order to potentially diagnosis skin cancer. Skin cancer is 90 per cent curable with early diagnosis.

According to the BC Cancer Agency, melanoma is “the most aggressive and dangerous of all skin cancers.” The affordable app will allow consumers to photograph and evaluate their moles for symptoms of melanoma, and assist in early diagnosis of the disease. Risk factors for this disease include exposure to UV lights, and it is most common among fair-skinned people who have many freckles or moles.

Sadeghi and her friends have also already launched two smartphone apps hosted by the Save Your Skin Foundation. These apps give daily warnings regarding UV exposure across Canada and the US. “UV Canada” and “UV U.S.” have been downloaded 35,000 times since 2011.

Sadeghi explains that she was motivated to create an educational app for skin cancer prevention after she received the CIHR Skin Research Training Scholarship, which allowed her to work closely with dermatologists and receive feedback towards her research.

Sadeghi’s research and thesis landed her the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council’s Innovation Challenge Award in 2012, as well as a Doctoral Dissertation honorable mention from the Canadian Image Processing and Pattern Recognition Society (CIPPRS).

“We are now working on new products to empower patients with a professional tool for skin cancer self-screening,” said Sadeghi. The products are still under development, and are expected to launch by January 2014.

 

Vaccination campain against meningitis in El Daein

Study links food insecurity to death in HIV-treated drug users

A new study involving SFU, published in science journal PLOS One, looked at the relationship between food insecurity and survival among HIV-positive injection drug users who are receiving life-prolonging antiretroviral therapy (ART).

Food insecurity is defined as insufficient quantity and quality of food. The study found that drug users who were food insecure when first starting ART were twice as likely to die as their food secure counterparts.

“[This] study specifically aimed to explore whether food insecurity potentially influenced increased risk of mortality among injection drug users across BC,” said Aranka Anema, first author on the study and BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS (BC-CfE) epidemiologist.

The study followed 254 HIV-positive injection drug users receiving life-prolonging highly active ART across BC. After 13.3 years of follow-ups, they discovered that those individuals who reported being food insecure in the beginning of the study were nearly twice as likely to die than those who were food secure.

“We found that food insecurity, and not hunger, was significantly associated with all-cause mortality,” Anema explained, “suggesting that other aspects of food insecurity — such as poor dietary diversity and / or anxiety regarding food access — may be driving this association.”

Senior author of the study, Robert Hogg, an SFU health sciences professor and director of the HIV/AIDS Drug Treatment Program at the BC-CfE, says this is the first study to observe the impact of food insecurity on the survival of HIV-positive injection drug users.

Although life-prolonging antiretroviral therapy has helped to decrease HIV-related mortality, the findings of this study suggest food insecurity has a great impact on mortality and HIV-related illnesses.

“Our results suggest that addressing food insecurity, in addition to other known social and structural barriers to HIV-related health among illicit drug users, such as incarceration, homelessness, and gender-related factors, is [of] paramount public health importance,” Anema concluded.

Anema suggested that, although further research is necessary to understand the means through which food insecurity drives this association, “public health organizations should prospectively evaluate the possible role of food supplementation and socio-structural supports on survival among IDU within HIV treatment programs.”

Board Shorts

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Board Shorts

Student spaces

Can SFU students look forward to more student-friendly spaces? The Board will be discussing in the near future whether it should be the SFSS’ responsibility to invest in and fund student space or if instead they should motivate the university to invest in student spaces.

“[We need to] decide what kind of a board are we going to be,” said Jade K. Anderson, Faculty Representative (Sciences). The Board has tabled the discussion on student spaces for this week, but will be addressing the topic in the near future.

Welcome back party confirmed

After discussion last week, the Board has approved a budget for the welcome-back event this fall. The motion, which passed unanimously, increased the line item “Special / Large-scale Projects” by $63,000. The budget has been approved ahead of schedule, giving the board more time to organize the large event.

Now that a budget has been approved, decisions can be made such as who might perform during the afternoon concert — Board is hoping to have four different artists — and what might an after-party at the Highland Pub look like.

Peak Humour Quiz

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Take this short personality quiz and find out whether you’re the kind of person who’s more likely to answer ‘A’, ‘B’ or ‘C’ when taking a multiple choice test.

 

1. When answering a question I am most likely to . . . 

a. Choose the first answer 

b. Choose the second answer

c. Choose whatever answer is left after not choosing the first two

 

2. In situations where I have three options that I can choose from I usually . . . 

a. Pick the first one and be done with it

b. Read the first, consider it, but go with the second

c. Choose whatever answer is left after not choosing the first two

 

3. Your crush walks past you with a group of friends at the mall and hands you a multiple choice test. You don’t know the answer to the first question so you . . . 

a. Answer ‘a’

b. Answer ‘b’

c. Answer ‘c’

 

4. What’s the capital of Norway? 

a. Oslo

b. Oslo

c. Helsinki

 

5. You have a choice between three doors each of which contains a man-eating tiger, you . . . 

a. Choose door 1

b. Choose door 2

c. Choose whatever door is left after not choosing the first two

 

6. You can’t read but are instructed to circle one of three multiple choice answers. Which one do you circle?

a. This one

b. This one

c. Helsinki

 

7. You realize how the personality test you’re taking works before you finish. Do you . . .

a. Just keep picking ‘A’

b. Keep picking ‘B’

c. Change your answers just to fuck with the results

 

RESULTS: 

If you answered mostly A you’re most likely to answer ‘A’ on multiple choice tests

If you answered mostly B you’re most likely to answer ‘B’ on multiple choice tests

If you answered mostly C you’re most likely to answer ‘C’ on multiple choice tests

If you answered all C you’re most likely to answer ‘C’ on multiple choice tests and should also work on your Scandinavian geography

Out with the old, in with the ‘new’

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WEB-Wear to Care-Courtesy of Bill Hawley

Green recycling has been a relatively new concept in the 21st century; we are accustomed to the phrase “out with the old and in with the new.” However, SFU student Leah Bjornson has been challenging this mindset, promoting green recycling of clothing with her non-profit organization.

June 15 marked the third annual Wear to Care clothing swap, a non-profit organization aimed at promoting the green philosophy of recycling clothes while collecting donations for homeless youth aged 13 to 24 in the Downtown Eastside, in conjunction with the Covenant House Vancouver.

Held at North Vancouver’s Carson Graham Secondary School at 2145 Jones Avenue from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., the clothing swap took in gently worn clothes, especially those geared towards summer, and also accessories such as shoes, bags, and even sports equipment.

Anyone who donated three or more items was eligible to take home one free item of their choice. People who were looking to swap clothes also had the opportunity to take home great steals such as a BCBG Maxazria dress or even new items with the tags still on them. The clothing swap was not only geared towards the less fortunate or those who wanted to swap items, but it also stressed the importance of “going green” and reusing what is already available.

The idea was started by SFU student Leah Bjornson and friend Alyssa Salt, and it came about as a hobby of swapping unwanted clothes between their group of friends as a means to recycle and reuse those items that they no longer wish to own or wear.

“It became apparent that the clothes that were being swapped were not the particular styles that we would wear or had the right fit. We wanted to expand, to get the word out, and to enact change,” Bjornson explained.

Missing the extracurricular activities that they had once participated in during secondary school, this hobby of theirs quickly transpired into a worthy cause in partnering with Covenant House Vancouver in the Fall of 2011. With winter approaching, Bjornson and Salt wanted to help the homeless population stay warm by providing them with the necessary clothing.

Covenant House was chosen in particular because, unlike other charities such as the Salvation Army, they do not resell the items and are not profit-based. In the past two clothing swaps, geared towards winter and spring donations, upwards of 500 items were donated at each swap with approximately 50 or more people in attendance.

A large part of the donations were collected before the actual event, which Bjornson laments, “It’s crazy how difficult it is to get people to come and take ‘free’ things!” Nevertheless, Bjornson feels proud of what her and Salt have accomplished.

“It’s nice to have an initiative that you started yourself and that you feel you are making a difference even if it’s small. We’re aiming to show the younger generation that they do not have to go out and buy expensive things and that they can learn to recycle to make the earth a greener and more hospitable place to live in,” stated Bjornson.

Album Reviews: Boards of Canada, Deafhaven, and a throwback to My Bloody Valentine

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Boards of Canada — Tomorrow’s Harvest

Named in part after The National Film Board of Canada, Boards of Canada is made up of brothers Mike Sandison and Marcus Eoin, who have used their unique blend of techno, downtempo and field recordings to evoke both the nostalgia of VHS tape hiss and the calming atmosphere of the natural world.

Each of their albums seems to occupy a particular space: 1998’s album Music Has the Right to Children reminds of mossy forests and windy beaches, whereas 2002’s Geogaddi is earthy and eerily mechanical.

Tomorrow’s Harvest, the duo’s first full-length since 2005’s disappointing The Campfire Headphase, is their darkest yet; the album calls to mind barren wastelands, endless deserts and post-apocalyptic nightmares that would give Godspeed You! Black Emperor chills.

Sandison and Eoin use obscured vocal samples and state-of-the-art recording equipment to create some of their most lush, sprawling ambient pieces. The 17 vignettes on Tomorrow’s Harvest — which average at about four minutes in length — conjure images of Cold War fever dreams and interstellar transmissions bathed in static electricity.

Based loosely on Deadly Harvest, a 1977 B-movie about a dystopian future caused by crop failures, the album’s best tracks seem to gel with this overarching theme of hopelessness and decay.

The wispy beats and whining keyboards on “Cold Earth” seem to project a futuristic vision akin to Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four. The percussive racket of “Split Your Infinities” seems to exist on the verge of total societal collapse, while the reluctant drum machine and pessimistic keyboard riff of early single “Rich for the Dead,” could soundtrack the depletion of the ozone layer.

Other Boards of Canada albums might offer more enjoyable listening experiences, but the bleak, colourless aural vista of Tomorrow’s Harvest might stand as the duo’s most rewarding. Like most of the band’s best work, the album urges repeat listens, and only time will tell whether this album will reveal deeper layers.

deafhaven

 Deafhaven — Sunbather

Sunbather is a record fueled by intensity. At no point during this album’s seven-track span is any emotion expressed lightly. Even during slower, lighter fare like “Irresistible,” there’s a palpable sense of urgency that runs throughout the LP, like a racing heartbeat.

Though this isn’t uncommon in the world of black metal — a genre characterized by its melodrama and extremity — San Francisco foursome Deafheaven’s sophomore release sidesteps the overwrought brutality of their contemporaries in favour of a more complex, densely layered aesthetic.

The album is made up of four lengthy, sprawling mood pieces, each separated by a shorter, softer track. Although this track sequencing isn’t the most original, it gives listeners breathing space while also highlighting the potency of pummeling tracks like “Dream House” and “Vertigo.”

Guitarist Kerry McCoy’s melodic, post-rock inspired style grounds the album’s busiest, most muscular songs, without subtracting from the break-neck energy of Daniel Tracy’s schizophrenic drum beat or vocalist George Clarke’s impassioned wails.

In fact, Sunbather’s unorthodox combination of genres — part black metal, part post-rock, part shoegaze, part emo, part ambient — might be its biggest strength. The broken beauty of McCoy’s guitar riffs seem to argue with Clarke’s emaciated shriek, until you learn that the two are the album’s principal songwriters.

Tracks like the off-kilter genre experiment “Please Remember” or the ambient “Windows” seem to further highlight the contradictions in the band’s approach, but the quartet’s impeccable musicianship and conviction serve as the glue that combines Sunbather’s most disparate qualities.

As much as I like to think of myself as musically open-minded, I tend to be picky when it comes to metal: so many of the genre’s biggest names always strike me as artificial or simply exhausting. But by avoiding the pitfalls of so many of their peers, Deafheaven have made one of the most original and rewarding LPs in the genre’s recent history.

loveless

My Bloody Valentine — Loveless

Everything that can be written about Loveless probably already has been: how the album’s recording almost bankrupted Creation Records, how countless engineers were hired and fired during the album’s genesis, how Kevin Shields and company took 22 years to record a follow-up. The LP, which stands as one of the best and most unique of the 90s, has been poked and prodded like a frog in a high school chemistry classroom.

But even the most verbose and well-researched article can’t fully communicate what makes Loveless so fundamental and absorbing, even now, two decades after its release. The album can’t be judged on terms of its song structures or melodies — neither of which are particularly groundbreaking — but rather the tactile experience of its sound, which has been often imitated but never matched. You don’t just listen to Loveless, you feel it, and that’s a tough sensation to describe.

From the album’s more accessible tracks like the dance-beat of “Soon,” and the bubblegum-pop refrain of “When You Sleep,” to its more atmospheric sound experiments, Loveless exists in its own sonic sphere, giving the album a timeless and almost ethereal quality. It isn’t a 90s record, and it seems separate from the shoegaze genre it supposedly defines: Loveless just is.

Since the album is better off listened to than written about, allow me to make a recommendation: settle into a comfortable spot, pour yourself a cup of herbal tea, turn off the lights in your room, and slip on your headphones. Keep the volume high — Loveless is best heard loud — and close your eyes.

No words I could write here can match the soaring highs of this Ireland foursome’s magnum opus. Just listen.

There’s a little Jane in everyone

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Having just premiered The Interplay Project on June 7 and 8, Vanessa Goodman is also busy preparing for the premiere of We All Know Jane, a work that has her collaborating with Ziyian Kwan and Anne Cooper from June 21 to 22 at The Dance Centre.

The idea for We All Know Jane came out of Kwan’s residency at The Dance Centre. She approached Goodman and her Contingency Plan partner Jane Osborne, to ask if they’d like to be involved in the show. She also invited Anne Cooper, whom they had an existing relationship with.

The concept of the character of Jane came out of the aspect of femininity that seemed to run through all the artists’ works and the fact that the show is made up of all female choreographers and performers, explained Goodman. “It’s that aspect of femininity; not necessarily feminist, and the significance of ‘Jane.’ Everyone knows a Jane in their lives.”

Fellow Dance Centre artist-in-residence and friend Lina Fitzner was actually the one to come up with the name: “She said ‘well, we all know Jane’ one day as a joke, and it kind of stuck.” Goodman mentioned the various “Janes” that people think of: Dick and Jane, Jane Gooddall, Calamity Jane, Jane Doe, and Jane Fonda.

The concept of Jane is just a way for audiences to approach the show, and it presents a possible entry point that will be different for every individual. “It offers an opportunity to engage,” explained Goodman.

“They are three very different works,” Goodman said, describing the three sections of the show. Her own work is a collaboration with SFU grad Amelia Epp, who specialises in paper sculptures. Epp will be doing a large scale installation for Goodman’s The long indoors. “It will be a ten foot by two foot organic structure suspended in mid-air,” said Goodman, who describes her work as dealing with bodily systems, organs, and the body as a vessel for abstract storytelling. Choreographed by Goodman, Jane Osborne and Ziyian Kwan perform this work.

Kwan also performs her own choreography in The neck to fall, which is an ode to the late Amelia Itcush, who had done a lot of research with Kwan. Goodman says that this work deals with various personas and really came out of the research that Kwan and Itcush were involved in. This work has been in progress the longest, as Kwan worked on it during her residency, premiering it at Studio 303 in Montreal this past May.

“Anne’s piece is a fictitious Jane,” continued Goodman. “She does very creative, insightful work and she has a rich history in the community, so it should be great.” The character is inspired by several characters and is an amalgamation of them all, including the two main characters of the Lanford Wilson play Burn This.

The choreographic process is different for Goodman each time she approaches a new work. She explains, “this was my first time working with Ziyian, so I wanted to get to know her as an artist and an interpreter first and then let her skill set inform the process.” For the duet with Kwan and Osborne, Goodman began with a series of manipulations, which turned into movements that they abstracted to represent organic structures.

“I think it’s better to go in with a structure, a beginning and ending, and know the state or environment of the work and then let it evolve from there.” Goodman also emphasized the importance of not getting stuck on a formula and staying fluid in the creative process. In terms of where this project will lead Goodman next, she said that any work she is involved in will end up informing her next work. “There’s always residue from previous works,” she explained.

This show has given all of these women an opportunity to work together, support each other’s work, and create something unique by combining their strengths. While the show is comprised of three distinct works, the artists have come up with an overarching theme that holds everything together.

Hot and wild in the city

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WEB-Sex In The City-Rachel Braeuer

Ken and Barbie’s sexless plastic crotches serve as the welcoming banner to Sex Talk in the City, the Museum of Vancouver’s (MOV) newest exhibit. The exhibit is broken down into three areas: the classroom, the bedroom and the street, with the physical construction of each area carefully flowing into the next while creating a distinct ambience of each physical location.

Calling this an exhibit is really a misnomer; it’s more so a thoughtfully constructed installation piece that interweaves Vancouver’s sexy past with each collection of artifacts presented in a unique way.

The classroom features desks, questions asked by actual Vancouver school kids scrawled across the tops in vivid black writing, to the backdrop of old sex education videos played on a loop. Concealed behind a door is a set of anatomically correct genitals used for sex education for children with developmental disabilities, while a collection of the old sexual health educational kits used in mainstream programs is displayed behind a pane of glass.

A part of the exhibit is devoted to censorship: peepholes against the backdrop of a wall-length image of the “Restricted” black panther provide the viewer with video clips ranging from censored moments in history to “good dyke porn.”

Walking into the bedroom section of the exhibit, viewers are greeted by a hanging burlesque outfit complete with an ornate feathered headdress. The canary yellow spectre hangs from wires attached to the ceiling, but holds its shape despite being empty — a visual reminder of the way our culture reshapes bodies to fit ideals rather than the other way around.

WEB-Sex In The City 1-Rachel Braeuer

Behind this is a bed with a projected video of Vancouverites talking about what pleasure means to them. To the side, a comprehensive collection of vibrators, from 1890 to today, all on display.

A chest of interactive drawers spans the entire back wall of the room, containing artifacts representing various facets of Vancouver’s sexual history. The advisory committee wanted to mimic the act of “people get[ting] to know sexuality by opening the drawers in their parents bedroom,” explained the exhibit’s curator, Viviane Gosselin.

Acting as a transitional space between bedroom and street is a collection of images from Pride Parades past, a fitting manifestation of the personal and sexual becoming political. A series of these images is set on the wall, back-light glowing through English Bay’s blue skies. Staring at the faces of our city’s queer rights fight serves as a reminder of Vancouver’s often forgotten history.

Next is a wall of old mugshots: individuals found guilty of prostitution, owning or operating a bawdy house, or pimping. The shots are carefully framed and look like family portraits hung on vintage wallpaper, but upon closer inspection take on a fancified Georgia Straight back page ads spread.

We are presented with just how much has changed with 1960s and 70s clippings from The Ubyssey — UBC’s student newspaper — talking about the experiences of a single woman trying to get birth control; yet some debates, like that of abortion, can to this day be found in the opinions section, though to a lesser degree. Next to it is a collection of prophylactics through the ages, looking more like small torture devices.

The exhibit ends with a wall of Post-it notes from exhibit goers: posed with questions such as, “Who is your ideal lover?” we are invited to bare all and in turn see others’ naked desires. The range of responses represented the diversity of approaches we take to sex itself: from humorous and fun like “the pizza man,” to intimate and loving such as “my wife” and “standing next to me.”

The night we attended included a “libido liberation” party, including Coral Short’s performance art piece, “The Insiders.” It consisted of two groups of people in various states of undress moving together in a fabric sphere.

It is meant to represent “intimacy, community, trust and genderless beauty through ever morphing giant shapes that move beyond the human form.” It looked more like a visceral mass dancing its way around the room. While an apt representation of the fluidity of sexuality and desire, it seemed obtuse compared to the subtle and thoughtfully planned exhibit.

The rest of the entertainment was the closest thing to a vaudeville show one could hope to see in this day and age: talents ranged from a dirty haiku competition, Burlesque performances, and the musical stylings of The Wet Spots.

Sex Talk addresses sexuality through our collective unconscious as Vancouverites: much as an individual changes, explores, and evolves sexually, so too did our city.