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Art Beat: Rodgers's new release makes history – Coast Reporter

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Local author Ruth Rodgers will launch Those who Return, a third installment in her Sunshine Coast series of historical fiction novels, on Friday, May 13, at the Seaside Centre in Sechelt, at 7:30 p.m. Members of the public are invited to attend. 

Rodgers’s earlier novels in the series (Those who Wander and Those who Stay) followed early settlers on the Coast and explored settler–Indigenous relations.  

Her latest book follows four generations of one Japanese-Canadian family, from the first immigrant in the late 1800s through the present day. Along the way, readers visit the Fraser Valley, Vancouver, Powell River, the East Lillooet internment camp, Winnipeg, and Ottawa, tracing the challenges and triumphs of Canadians of Japanese descent through two World Wars, post-war dispersal and eventual redress. 

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Pleasing the Palette 

The recently-relocated Coastal Art Gallery — now a resident of the Sunnycrest Mall in Upper Gibsons — will be holding an open house on Saturday, May 14 to celebrate its new home. 

The gallery is a co-operative enterprise, featuring local creations. The artists take turns hosting the gallery, welcoming and assisting visitors. 

During its grand opening (10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.), the gallery will be offering coffee, juice, treats, artist demos, a free draw for a $100 gift certificate and a chance to meet the artists. 

More information is available online at coastalart.ca.

Come in for a Landing 

The Landing Artists will mount their annual spring show and sale at the Gibsons Public Market from Friday, May 20 (12 p.m. to 5 p.m.) through Sunday, May 22 (10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday). 

Along with new works by established members Charmaine Bayntun, Ed Hill, Nancy Hugh, Trisha Joel, Ruth Rodgers, and Coralie Swaney, works by new members (glass artist) Susan Furze and (woodcarver) Shirley Burton will be available.  

Ruth Rodgers will also have copies of her latest book, Those Who Return, for sale.  

Come by and choose something to refresh your house for spring! The Landing Artists are a vibrant group of artists working in various media that offer two pop-up shows each year. 

Harmonies Homeward 

The Inspirito Women’s Ensemble is performing at Calvary Baptist Church in Gibsons, with performances scheduled on Saturday, May 14 at 6 p.m. and Sunday, May 15 at 3 p.m. 

The concert will open with The Prayer—a piano and flute duet that was written for Ukraine. It will be followed by Harbour: a song by Anna Tabush written to welcome refugees in new communities across the world. 

The ensemble will be accompanied by flutist Bernard Blary. 

Tickets are $20 and can be purchased at the door. Contact vivavoce@saronamynhardt.com for more information.

Asian literature aloud 

The Gibsons Public Library welcomes everyone who loves to read aloud to participate in its monthly Readers Open Mic on Wednesday, May 18.  

To celebrate Asian Heritage Month, May’s theme is “Asia in the Old and New Worlds.” 

Participants may read or perform their favourite passage or poem by any writer of any Asian heritage, or about any Asian culture. Teens and adults, and readers at all levels of English, are all welcome. 

The event begins at 6:30 p.m. Registration for in-person attendance is required; Zoom participants are also welcome. Email LKreps@gibsons.bclibrary.ca for details.

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In apparent first, Croatia restores looted art to grandson of Holocaust victim

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In the first reported case of its kind in Croatia, three museums have restored several pieces of art stolen from a Jewish businessman during the Holocaust to his grandson, according to a report Friday.

The move marks the end of a 70-year struggle by the descendants of Dane Reichsmann, who was a wealthy owner of a department store in the country’s capital Zagreb before the Nazi-led genocide and was deported and murdered at Auschwitz along with his wife.

“This seems almost beyond belief,” Andy Reichsman, Dane’s grandson, and inheritor of the looted works told The New York Times. “I thought that our chances would be one in a million. They never had any interest in giving anything back to Jews.”

The artworks returned include paintings by André Derain, “Still Life With a Bottle,” and Maurice de Vlaminick’s “Landscape by the Water,” which were held by the National Museum of Modern Art, and lithographs from the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts by Pablo Picasso, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Paul Cézanne and Pierre Bonnard.

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A bronze plaque, copper tray, and bowl from the Zagreb Museum of Arts and Crafts was also restored. However, 19 additional pieces from the institution are still being pursued by Reichsman’s lawyer.

The pieces were looted by the ruling Croatian fascist group, the Ustaše.

André Derain’s “Still Life With a Bottle,” an art piece looted by the Nazi-allied regime in Croatia during the Holocaust and restored in September 2023 to its rightful owner, undated. (Archives of the Zagreb National Museum of Modern Art)

Reichsman’s aunt Danica Scodoba and father Franz Reichsman fled Europe before the outbreak of World War II to London and the United States, respectively (Franz dropped the extra N from his family name “Reichsmann” when he immigrated).

Reichsman took up the struggle of his aunt, who tried for half a century to reclaim the property. He recalled that “she traveled to Zagreb every summer and met with gallery directors, government officials and anyone she felt could help her in her attempts to retrieve the art.”

Scodoba died more than two decades ago and was unable to witness a Zagreb Municipal Court ruling in December 2020 that determined the pieces legally belonged to her.

A subsequent decision in 2021 affirmed her nephew as her heir.

Reichsman’s Croatian laywer, Monja Matic, said she valued her client’s patience after she had worked on the case for some 20 years.

“This is a positive step in dealing with outstanding Holocaust Era restitution issues in Croatia,” said Gideon Taylor, President of the World Jewish Restitution Organization.

The National Museum of Modern Art said in a Facebook statement it was “working intensively on researching provenance” of artworks suspected of being looted during the war.

The institution regretted that the resolution took as long as it did.

Croatia rebuffed restitution claims by descendants of Holocaust victims until last year when its government and the World Jewish Restitution Organization published a joint report detailing the looting of art by the fascist regime. Stolen property was subsequently seized and nationalized by the country’s communist government.

The Nazi-allied Ustaše regime, which ran the Independent State of Croatia from 1941 to 1945, persecuted and killed hundreds of thousands of ethnic Serbs, Jews, Roma and anti-fascist Croatians.

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Can David Salle Teach A.I. How to Create Good Art?

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The totem pole previously displayed at the Orillia Opera House has officially and permanently been removed from the city’s public art collection.

Created by artists Jimi McKee and Wayne Hill more than 20 years ago, the formerly prominently displayed work tells the story of Orillia from the days of the ancient fishing weirs at The Narrows through the present, in the fashion of totem poles created by west coast Indigenous communities.

JimiMcKee
Jimi McKee, a local artist, is shown in this file photo.

Last summer, after the piece developed deep cracks and structural instability, the city received two public complaints regarding the structural issues and its “insensitivity” to west coast Indigenous communities.

Council voted to remove it from the Opera House for health and safety reasons, and to undertake consultation with relevant Indigenous groups regarding potential repairs or updates to the work.

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In Friday’s council information package, city staff announced the piece would be permanently removed from the city’s public art collection after consultation with McKee and experts from the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia (UBC).

“The subject experts from the Museum of Anthropology at UBC support deaccessioning the piece from the city’s collection due to concerns surrounding cultural appropriation and misrepresentation of Indigenous cultures from the West,” staff wrote.

City staff said they support UBC and the city’s art in public places committee (APPC) recommendation to remove the totem pole to help ensure the city’s public spaces are “welcoming and inclusive.”

“Given the feedback from subject experts at UBC, the sacred nature of the totem pole, and the health and safety concerns identified by the joint health and safety committee, staff support the APPC’s recommendation to remove the artwork from the (Opera House) and deaccession the art from the city’s permanent collection,” staff wrote.

“As understanding of Indigenous culture grows, this step looks to ensure the municipality’s public spaces are welcoming and inclusive places for our Indigenous peoples who visit and call Orillia home.”

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Art

Opera House totem pole permanently removed from city’s art collection

Published

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The totem pole previously displayed at the Orillia Opera House has officially and permanently been removed from the city’s public art collection.

Created by artists Jimi McKee and Wayne Hill more than 20 years ago, the formerly prominently displayed work tells the story of Orillia from the days of the ancient fishing weirs at The Narrows through the present, in the fashion of totem poles created by west coast Indigenous communities.

JimiMcKee
Jimi McKee, a local artist, is shown in this file photo.

Last summer, after the piece developed deep cracks and structural instability, the city received two public complaints regarding the structural issues and its “insensitivity” to west coast Indigenous communities.

Council voted to remove it from the Opera House for health and safety reasons, and to undertake consultation with relevant Indigenous groups regarding potential repairs or updates to the work.

300x250x1

In Friday’s council information package, city staff announced the piece would be permanently removed from the city’s public art collection after consultation with McKee and experts from the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia (UBC).

“The subject experts from the Museum of Anthropology at UBC support deaccessioning the piece from the city’s collection due to concerns surrounding cultural appropriation and misrepresentation of Indigenous cultures from the West,” staff wrote.

City staff said they support UBC and the city’s art in public places committee (APPC) recommendation to remove the totem pole to help ensure the city’s public spaces are “welcoming and inclusive.”

“Given the feedback from subject experts at UBC, the sacred nature of the totem pole, and the health and safety concerns identified by the joint health and safety committee, staff support the APPC’s recommendation to remove the artwork from the (Opera House) and deaccession the art from the city’s permanent collection,” staff wrote.

“As understanding of Indigenous culture grows, this step looks to ensure the municipality’s public spaces are welcoming and inclusive places for our Indigenous peoples who visit and call Orillia home.”

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