Upcoming
In celebration of Asian Heritage Month
Powell Street Festival Society, explorASIAN, and Numen Gallery present
MERGE / Frozen–Melt:
Contemporary glass & ceramic exhibition by
Naoko Takenouchi, Miyuki Shinkai, HiDe Ebina

May 3–June 1, 2008
Numen Gallery
120-1058 Mainland St, Yaletown, Vancouver
Gallery hours: Tue–Sat 11–6, Sun 12–5. Closed Monday.
Info: 604 630 6927 / info at numengallery.com
www.numengallery.com
The three artists in this show, Miyuki Shinkai, Hidenori Ebina and Naoko Takenouchi, are searching for a way to navigate the waters of both Western and Eastern philosophies. This functional art exhibition will give the artists an opportunity to acknowledge and celebrate their Japanese identities, to honour the roots they have grown in Canada, and to encourage the next generation to merge, with sensitivity, the aesthetics from their respective cultures. Read more detailed info here or download the press release.
32nd Annual Powell Street Festival
Saturday, August 2nd and Sunday, August 3rd, 2008
NOTE: The Festival will be held in OPPENHEIMER PARK, 400 block Powell Street, AS USUAL! Oppenheimer Park is still slated for renovations but the current construction schedule will allow us to hold the festival here for 2008!
For information about this year’s Festival, read more here…
Please contact Miko at miko at dkam.ca or 604.683.8240 for more information on any of the above.
Ongoing Projects
Powell Street Festival Society is involved in these important community-building projects. Please check them out!
Lost and Found
www.vaarc.ca/lostandfound
The Lost and Found website is the second half of a collaborative project produced by the Powell Street Festival Society and Access Artist Run Centre in 2006. Lost and Found was originally a group exhibition featuring the work of Judy Chartrand, Wayde Compton and Haruko Okano. Through an artistic residency with the PSFS and VAARC the three artists were asked to consider lost and forgotten “histories” that both linger and disappear within the context of the Downtown Eastside (DTES) of Vancouver, BC. Each artist produced new works that examined three particular neighbourhoods in the DTES: Japantown, Hogan’s Alley, and the area of land once attributed to the Squamish Nation.
2007 Anniversaries of Change
www.anniversaries07.ca
2007 Anniversaries of Change is a broad-based consortium of institutions and organizations that have come together to mark 2007 as an anniversary year in the quest for justice and a multicultural Canada. The years 1907, 1947, 1967, and 1997 each mark a watershed moment in the history of Asian migrants in Canada and in their struggles to fight discrimination and create the society of today. In commemorating them together in the year 2007, we acknowledge the great changes they reflect in Canadian history over the last 100 years.
Join Now!
What can you get for 12 bucks?
A Lifetime Membership to the Powell Street Festival Society!
You get two exciting issues of the PSFS Newsletter (Including a sneak preview of each year’s Festival)! And it’s a great way to support the Festival and keep in touch.
To become a member, please go to our membership page to print or download an application form.
Please donate
For the Powell Street Festival Society to continue its work producing a free festival and supporting artists and other community groups, we need to raise a lot of funds. We hope you can help us. Please click on the logo below to donate now!


