Saturday, June 26, 2010

Little Child won't you dance with me?
Native Aboriginal Days in Jasper National Park

Two dancers share a moment after performing in the Welcome Dance ceremony, part of the National Aboriginal Days celebrations in Jasper on June 20, 2010.

Most natives - including non-status Indians, Métis and First Nations - left the area when it became a national park. It wasn't exactly their idea.

Many of those native groups with traditional ties to the land were back in Jasper for the June 19-20 weekend.
Scores of white folks who joined in the Friendship Dance thought that it was about time.

Photo copyright Stephen A. Nelson

Little Big Man: National Aboriginal Days in Jasper National Park, June 2010

Two Mountain Cree dancers pose after performing traditional dances as part of the Aboriginal Days celebrations in Jasper, June 19 and June 20.
Many of the natives taking part in the festivities - including First Nations, Métis and non-status Indians - were descendants of the native people who lived, hunted and trapped in the Jasper area before it became a national park.

Photo copyright Stephen A. Nelson

Friday, June 25, 2010

Kyoto, Japan: Temple of the Golden Pavilion


The Kinkaku-ji (Temple of the Golden Pavilion) is a Zen Buddhist temple in Kyoto, Japan. It's also known informally as Rokuon-ji (鹿苑寺, Deer Garden Temple).

Photo taken during a trip to the Kansai District  - cultural centre of Japan.

Photo copyright Stephen A. Nelson


Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Edmonton First Impressions: More to Alberta's
Capital City than Oilers, Eskimos and Folk Festivals

By Stephen A Nelson
The Brandon Sun
June 19, 2010

You never a get a second chance to make a first impression.
And, to be honest, our first impression of Edmonton was, um ... unimpressive.

“Grey sky, grey city, grey people,” said my friend Andrea — a traveller from
Switzerland who was visiting the city for the first time.

Still, Edmonton does have some great offerings for visitors.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Upcoming Story: Going to the Zoo
Siberian Tiger Burns Bright

Tyger, Tyger

Siberian Tiger Baikal at the Calgary Zoo. The 430 lbs. cat is a relatively new arrival at the zoo and is there to be part of the Species Survival Plan breeding programme.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Old Strathcona District: Maybe Not Exactly
the Champs-Elysée but best part of Edmonton

photo copyright Travel Alberta
Old Strathcona District

“I thought it would be like the Champs-Elysée , but it's not.”
That was Andrea's first reaction when we arrived in Edmonton's Old Strathcona District.

The travel magazines promising theatres and cinemas, boutiques and bookstores, restaurants and sidewalk cafés had clearly captured Andrea's imagination – and she was most keen to go to what I had called “the best part of Edmonton.”

Clearly Andrea had failed to factor in two things: Edmonton is not Paris, and Old Strathcona's famous Whyte Avenue lacks the more temperate nature of those foreign climes. In fact, Whyte Avenue might have more in common with Toronto's Queen Street than it does with Paris' tree-lined avenue. But that's not all bad.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Royal Alberta Museum: Not So Many Dinosaurs
but Lots of Fossils in This Corner of Edmonton


Royal Alberta Museum

First things first: There aren't many dinosaurs at the Royal Alberta Museum. For dinosaurs, you have to go to the RAM's sister museum – the Royal Tyrell Museum – in Drumheller. Or at least across the lane to Alberta's Government House, where the provincial cabinet meets.

What you will find at the RAM are galleries and exhibitions that are classic and contemporary, eternal and engaging at the same time.

The RAM's contrast with the Art Gallery of Alberta couldn't be more obvious:
The revamped AGA is cool and ultra-modern in an urban renewal setting. The museum, on the other hand, seems like an historic manor house that is part of the landscape. When you enter into the main hall, you half-expect a huge fireplace and a warm fire.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Art Gallery of Alberta: Guggenheim of the Prairies




Art Gallery of Alberta

“It looks like the Guggenheim,” Andrea exclaimed when she first caught a glimpse of the remodelled Art Gallery of Alberta. “They copied it."

And certainly anyone who sees what they've done with the re-imagined repository of art would have to admit that the architect was at least inspired by the curved lines and open spaces of the Guggenheim. And that's not a bad thing.

But the people at the AGA will also tell you that the architecture was inspired by the city itself – a rigid grid of streets and avenues, superimposed on the flowing lines of the river and valley.

It's an interesting synthesis. And wherever you go in the gallery, you feel like you're inside some synthetic jewel looking out to see the different facets of the city.

Well, at least you would on an clear day.