Publication Launch 2024

In the background is a photo of people at a reception with a layer of  text on top saying: Join us for our book launch:  An Anthology Visioning Canadian Cultural Transformation: Thoughts from Canadian Artists / Arts Workers / Organizations in the Arts Ecology Volume 2.

Unfortunately, our publication launch on November 14 is cancelled due to low registration. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause and look forward to seeing you at our events next year. 

We are excited to offer our publication for purchase starting this Friday. Stay tuned for more information!  

You are invited to celebrate with us the release of our latest publication, hear about the editorial process and enjoy some refreshments! 

Join us!
November 14 from 5:30 to 7:30pm 
163QE Community Hub
163Queen Street East Toronto, ON M7A 2H6 
PWYC 

We are excited to invite you to the official launch of the second volume of An Anthology Visioning Canadian Cultural Transformation: Thoughts from Canadian Artists / Arts Workers / Organizations in the Arts Ecology. This publication builds on Volume 1 and continues the conversation on the need for sectoral change centering the voice of IBPOC visionaries for the Arts sector’s future. Featured articles (previously published / written) will complement articles from invited contributors from all performing arts and visual arts disciplines, digital / media arts and arts administration. View the table of contents and introduction here.

CultureBrew.Art: a Canada-wide IBPOC artists searchable database

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We’re delighted to partner with Vancouver-based arts company, Visceral Visions, to spread the word about their fantastic initiative, CultureBrew.Art (CBA). A digital platform created by racialized artists for IBPOC artists, CBA features a Canada-wide searchable database of Indigenous and racialized artists working in every artistic discipline: literary, media, performing, and visual arts.

As a CBA member, your profile will be visible to exciting engagers from across disciplines across the country! By subscribing to CBA, these engagers have shown a commitment to hiring BIPOC artists for their projects, events, and artistic collaborations, and they post opportunities on CBA to find artists just like you. Additionally, CBA’s private and secure message system allows Engagers to contact you directly, as well as for CBA members to connect with each other.

Check out the benefits of becoming an artist member, and if the one-time membership fee of $25 is a barrier for you, CBA offers bursaries through the Jean Yoon Bursary Fund!

Leadership Transition 

Dear friends and colleagues,

We are writing to congratulate our founder, Executive Director/ Convenor, charles c smith on his new adventure.  After 20 years of effort to develop CPAMO and bring it to its current level of professionalism, leadership and service in the arts community on issues of decoloniality, anti-racism, equity and pluralism, charles will be with CPAMO to the end of 2024 in an advisory role as he is moving on to another adventure as he leads the newly-established initiative entitled Canadian Network for Equity and Racial Justice (CNERJ), an exciting partnership between Canada, Mexico and the U.S bringing together leaders across diverse sectors, e.g., the arts, business, labour, academia, health, education, sports, etc.

The purpose of the Partnership is to share best practices and commit to taking concrete steps domestically and trilaterally to combat systemic racism, discrimination, and hate while striving towards cohesiveness between national laws and mutual commitments to international human rights conventions.

Funded by the Department of Canadian Heritage and supported by the Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants, the Chinese Canadian National Council Social Justice, Colour of Poverty-Colour of Change, charles will be the project lead for this exciting project.

We at CPAMO will certainly miss him – his leadership, vision, inclusive approach and his voice in matters of decoloniality, anti-racism, equity and pluralism in the arts.  Since the initial working days with Community Cultural Impresarios (now Ontario Presents) and the publication of Pluralism in the Arts in Canada: A Change is Gonna Come, charles pioneered many initiatives that have now become more regularly involved in conversations about the arts in Canada.  For example:

  • Writing, editing and soliciting books and articles on these issues;
  • Convening public forums first called Town Halls and now Gathering Divergence: Multi-Inter Arts Festival and Conference;
  • Organizing in-person and online panels, webinars and artistic showcases;
  • Advocating to all arts funders on the challenges and pressing needs of Indigenous, Black, People of Colour and other historically marginalized artists, i.e., the Deaf and disabled, immigrants and refugees, 2SLGBQTI, women and others
  • Conducting organizational reviews of large, medium-sized and small arts organizations;
  • Developing and delivering education and training sessions for a wide variety of organizations, including the CPAMOPOC pluralism organizational change program as well as the series of Anti-Black Racism in the Arts training program.

Just have a look at our website! www.cpamo.org

All in all, charles’ work for CPAMO has clearly made an impact in the arts world as now funders and arts organization are more involved with intent to address the issues CPAMO has raised.  While we will miss charles, we wish him all the very best for his new adventure.

And as CPAMO moves forward, we will keep you informed of how his invaluable expertise will be followed as we continue our work with our partners, colleagues and friends to embed decoloniality, anti-racism, equity and pluralism into the arts practices, goals, aspirations and concrete outcomes for funders and arts organizations.

Until the end of this year (2024), charles will be with CPAMO to start our strategic planning where we are working with BeSpoke Collective Consultants. In the interim, CPAMO will be exploring a Co-Director model with Erin Jones in the Convenor role as part of her current work as Curator, Transformational Change and Kevin A. Ormsby’s in his role as Curator, Programming will now include, engaging in CPAMO’s advocacy work with such organizations as the Canadian Arts Coalition.

Sincerely,

CPAMO’s Board of Directors