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CCA Bulletin 35/06
Ottawa,
August 23, 2006
The
Canadian Conference of the Arts announces its National Arts
Awards winners for 2006
Just
the facts
The
Canadian Conference of the Arts (CCA) is pleased to announce
Pat Durr and Bluma Appel as its National Arts Awards winners
for 2006. The 2006 National Arts Awards ceremony will be hosted
by the Lieutenant Governor of Ontario, the Honourable James
K. Bartleman, at Queen's Park in Toronto on September 15,
2006.
The
Diplôme d'honneur will be presented to arts
activist, Bluma Appel, while the Keith Kelly Award for
Cultural Leadership will be presented to one of Canada's
long time arts advocates, Pat Durr.
Over
the course of her career in the cultural sector that spans
over 50 years, Bluma Appel has dedicated
immeasurable hours and financial resources, not only to theatre
but to opera, orchestras and artist-run coops. "The list of
beneficiaries is probably longer and more extensive than we
will ever know," writes Alberta G. Cefis, Chair of Opera Atelier.
An Officer of the Order of Canada and recipient of the Order
of Ontario, Bluma Appel has sat on the Boards of many cultural
institutions over the years including the Ontario Crafts Council,
the Canadian Opera Company, Opera Atelier, the Niagara Symphony,
Telefilm Canada , the Ontario Trillium Foundation, the Royal
Ontario Museum , and the Kennedy Centre in Washington. Besides
providing financial awards for the Dora Mavor Moore Awards
and the Canadian Comedy Awards, she has established scholarships
at the Royal Conservatory of Music. A recent recipient of
an Honourary Doctorate from the University of Toronto, Dr.
Appel continues to flourish in her many diverse causes.
Contributing
over four decades to Canadian arts and culture, Pat
Durr has been relentless and successful in securing
the rights of artists in matters of copyright, taxation, as
well as health and safety. An activist dedicated to both local
and national affairs, Pat Durr has extensive experience tenaciously
defending Canadian visual artists before federal and municipal
governments. "Highly intelligent, persistent and analytical,
she uses reason and strategy to step by step dismantle bureaucratic
roadblocks," writes Jennifer Dickson, C.M.
Tell
Me More.
Recipients
of the Canadian Conference of the Arts National Arts Awards
are selected by the CCA's Awards Committee, based on nominations
received from CCA members.
The
Diplôme d'honneur is presented annually in
recognition of a sustained contribution to the cultural life
of the country, whether through volunteer activity, mentoring,
patronage, individual arts practice or other recognized support.
More than 70 of the visionaries and creators of Canada's rich
cultural identity, including Glenn Gould, Maureen Forrester,
Oscar Peterson, Pierre Juneau and Roch Carrier have been recognized
since the award's inception in 1954. The award is in the form
of a silver talisman desig ned by the late West Coast craftsmith,
Bill Reid.
The
Keith Kelly Award for Cultural Leadership has been
awarded annually since 1998, when it was established to recognize
the leadership shown by the former National Director of the
CCA during his tenure from 1989-98. It is presented to a Canadian
who has made a significant contribution to the arts through
advocacy work or the development of cultural policy, or who
has otherwise demonstrated leadership in the field. The award
is an inscribed medal designed by Ottawa medallic artist Susan
Taylor.
Bluma
Appell, 2006 recipient of the CCA Diplôme d'honneur
Perhaps
the greatest monument to Bluma Appel's achievements is the
theatre named in her honour. Reopened in 1983, the St. Lawrence
Centre's main stage was dubbed the Bluma Appel Theatre recognizing
the significant financial contribution that greatly facilitated
the theatre's rebuilding.
Bluma
Appel's dedication has been felt not only within the cultural
sector but in matters of health as well. Along with her husband,
Bram Appel, she has led a nutrition and art education program
at an elementary school in North Bay, Ontario . She is Founder
and Chair of the Canadian Foundation for AIDS Research (CanFAR).
She helped establish the Clinical Simulation Learning Centre
(SINS Lab) at the Faculty of Nursing, University of Toronto.
The simulation learning centre will have the capacity to educate
Nurses in post graduation training skills, i.e. infection
control using the SARS room. The Infectious Disease Isolation
Room, which is the only training facility of its kind in North
America , bears her name.
Over
time, Bluma Appel has repeatedly put her own credibility on
the line to support what she believed in and has never committed
to a cause or project half-way. Her passion radiates from
everything she does and endlessly inspires those around her.
What
people say about Bluma Appel:
"Canadian
theatre would probably not exist in its relatively healthy
state without the work that Bluma has given to it. A fair
amount of money, yes. But thousands of volunteer hours and
ideas have made the difference." - Joan Chalmers, arts
advocate and volunteer
"She
has been and still is particularly involved with theatres,
museums, orchestras, opera companies, artists' cooperatives
and film production. She is, without doubt, one of the most,
if not the most generous person in Canada." - Jean-Louis
Roux, C.C., C.Q., membre Société Royale du Canada
"Her
spectrum of interest, influence and activity, includes the
largest international organizations and the smallest of local
organizations - opera, theatre, music, comedy - the list of
beneficiaries is probably longer and more extensive than we
will ever know."
"Bluma,
while a philanthropist, brings much more than financial contributions
to the causes she supports. She is a consummate networker,
bringing together people and organizations." - Alberta
G. Cefis, chair of Opera Atelier
"There
is no one in this country that can boast the same contribution
to the artistic, cultural, political, social or health sectors
- let alone all of them!" - Martin Bragg, Artistic Producer
CanStage
" The
Grande Dame of Canadian Theatre " - Theatre
News
Pat
Durr, 2006 recipient of the CCA Keith Kelly Award for Cultural
Leadership
Although
Pat Durr has dedicated her life to supporting other artists,
much of her advocacy work is informed by her own artistic
practice as a painter and printmaker, a practice she regularly
put on hold whenever she felt an advocacy issue needed attention.
Despite her numerous obligations she has indeed succeeded
in maintaining a vital art practice and continues to exhibit
work nationally and internationally.
Early
in her first of two terms as National Representative for Canadian
Artists' Representation (1980-84, 2002-05), Patt Durr succeeded
in moving CARFAC's national office to Ottawa. More recently,
she has been Project Manager in a joint CARFAC/CAHSP effort
to develop CARFAC services for indigenous and northern artist
communities in the Yukon and Nunavut. During her tenure as
a Board member of the CCA (1984-86), she chaired the Copyright
and Tax Committees - the latter being instrumental in presenting
the conference Taxation and the Arts. In 1995, she
chaired a successful national committee of visual arts experts
convened by the CCA that recommended alternatives that would
allow the Canada Council's Art Bank to remain open. As the
Vice-Chair of Health and Welfare Canada's ad-hoc Committee
on Health Hazards in the Arts and Crafts (1982-86), Pat Durr
has also been heavily active in ensuring safety in artists'
studios. She organized both seminars and publications on health
and safety which reached Artists in Canadian studios and universities.
This material was subsequently disseminated in the USA and
England.
What
people say about Pat Durr:
"She
has worked not only with intelligence and tenacity, but also
with grace, humour and style" - Charlotte Wilson-Hammond,
RCA
"I
do not know of any other artist with as long and as fearless
a track-record as Pat in advocacy for artists and the arts.
Her generosity - her unfailing willingness to take on yet
another campaign or cause or assignment - is absolutely remarkable.She
has never lost touch with young and emerging talent and continues
to give her best wherever and whenever asked to do so."- Jocelyn
Harvey, Arts consultant
"She
has contributed significantly to the evolution of cultural
policy in Canada. Her continued diligence to increase awareness
and support for the arts in Canada makes her a remarkable
asset to the cultural community." - April Britski, National
Director CARFAC
"She
showed incredible generosity during her two terms as CARFAC
National Representative, because she worked full-time (with
no financial remuneration) and led CARFAC through some very
challenging situations. During these years, she was not able
to devote herself to her own creative practice as an artist.
In a milieu which is often egotistical, her generosity of
spirit and unselfishness are incredible" - Jennifer Dickson,
C.M., R.A.
For more information
on the CCA Awards, visit our website at http://www.ccarts.ca/en/awards/
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