logo
#

Latest news with #OddOneOut

Vancouver Art Book Fair 2025: from zines to monographs, a celebration of books as art
Vancouver Art Book Fair 2025: from zines to monographs, a celebration of books as art

Vancouver Sun

time03-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Vancouver Sun

Vancouver Art Book Fair 2025: from zines to monographs, a celebration of books as art

Vancouver Art Book Fair When: July 4-6 Where: Roundhouse Community Arts & Recreation Centre, 181 Roundhouse Mews, Vancouver Info: In a new book, Cathy Busby documents her attempts to connect with her spouse, Garry Neill Kennedy, during their final years together. A Vancouver-based artist, curator and writer with a PhD in communications, Busby has often created art using collections of materials, such as public apologies, corporate slogans, and portraits. Kennedy, who passed away in 2021, was a renowned conceptual artist credited with making the Nova Scotia School of Art and Design an internationally respected institution. They had been doing big wall paintings together for years. To help Kennedy through his dementia, Busby embarked on a project that would recall their artistic collaborations. Get top headlines and gossip from the world of celebrity and entertainment. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sun Spots will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. 'It was about keeping something going, and creating familiarity,' Busby said. 'And about maintaining dignity through the process of his decline.' She began by painting the walls of his room in a care home the same white as their home. Then, when he moved to a new facility, she began a text-painting on the wall of his bathroom that read 'I Wonder,' a phrase that he often repeated. After Kennedy passed away, she began working on what would become I Wonder: Art + Care + Dementia. I Wonder: Art + Care + Dementia is among the books that will be on display at this year's Vancouver Art Book Fair (VABF). The books range from photocopied 'zines to DIY zines to elaborately bound museum catalogues. Along with a chance to peruse and purchase these volumes, visitors can engage directly with the artists, editors, and publishers behind the books. 'I think what's exciting about the fair is that, though the work is grounded in visual art, that extends many places,' said Jonathan Middleton, co-manager of VABF. 'The interests of a large museum and someone photocopying a zine aren't always the same. But there's a lot of crossover there, too.' The fair features over 100 local and international exhibitors. Among these are 29 new participants, including Odd One Out, Hong Kong's first illustration, graphic arts, and printmaking gallery; Now Place, a San Francisco-based art space and independent publisher that empowers emerging artists from the Asian diaspora; and Nothing New Projects, an independent risograph print and publishing studio based in Ottawa. Vancouver-based artists launching new publications include Hazel Meyer, whose A Queer History of Joyce Wieland is a culmination of the author's years-long research into the legacy of the pioneering Canadian artist. 'Content-wise, on one end of the scale you'll find exhibition catalogues or monographs or anthologies of more theoretical writing about art, maybe mixed with illustration,' Middleton said. 'And on the other side of the equation there are artists who are expressing their ideas and personal experiences and politics. The zine movement, for example, has a very long history and connection to activism. And there is a long history of artists using the book as a medium, as they might use canvas or clay or video.' Middleton credits the New York Art Book Fair, which was first held in 2006, with launching 'this global movement.' The Vancouver Art Book Fair, the first of its kind in Canada, launched in 2012 — two years before the closing of Oscar's Art Books, an emporium of visual delights missed by many longtime Vancouverites, including Middleton. 'I was hired there as a student, and my job was to put their entire stock into inventory. There were thousands and thousands of books. That was a very unglorious way to learn about art books.' Busby says that for her, an art book is one in which every aspect of the design and contents add to the final product. 'For example, I thought very seriously about the cover of I Wonder: Art + Care + Dementia. It's a bit of a puzzle. It's a photo of green tape on the wall. You have to get into the book to understand what it is. However, I'm very big on giving clues. I don't want people to look at the work and go, 'What the heck is this?''

With tariffs on the horizon, is your boba habit at risk?
With tariffs on the horizon, is your boba habit at risk?

Business Insider

time24-04-2025

  • Business
  • Business Insider

With tariffs on the horizon, is your boba habit at risk?

Jeren Calinisan and Dominique Nguyen are worried about the price of one of their favorite indulgences: boba tea, a popular Taiwanese sweet beverage, chock-full of chewy tapioca balls. "$8 already is the most I've ever paid for a boba drink," Nguyen said as she sipped her champion milk tea with jasmine silk boba. It was mid-April, and the two friends had made a pit stop at Odd One Out, a tea shop in Pasadena, California, two weeks after President Donald Trump announced 32% tariffs on Taiwan, which he later paused for 90 days. Tariffs on China, a major source of other boba supplies, are also still in flux. The tea shops, producers, and boba lovers Business Insider spoke to are already preparing for price hikes. "As someone who drinks boba a lot, it's already kind of expensive living here in Los Angeles to get boba. So this is a new concern," said Calinisan, 29, who drinks boba around twice a month. Calinisan is Filipino American, and Nguyen is Vietnamese American — for both of them, drinking boba was a popular pastime growing up in the Bay Area. The Taiwanese treat has grown in popularity in the US, as brands like Starbucks and Jack in the Box have attempted to cash in on the boba craze. The US imported 38 million pounds of tapioca for consumption from Taiwan in 2024, up 927% from 2004, per the United States International Trade Commission. Odd One Out specializes in its own unique creation of silk boba, a mixture of tapioca and jelly. As a smaller franchise with two stores in Taiwan and three in the US, it's trying to delay the impact of future tariffs for as long as possible. "We're probably going to try to stockpile as much as we can," said cofounder Patrick Sun. Many of its botanical ingredients are imported from Taiwan, and Sun said it's difficult to find equivalents in the US. "We're not willing to really yield on quality. So for us, it's just going to impact our bottom line." Selling boba requires importing nearly everything The gummy consistency of boba comes from the tapioca starch made of cassava plants, a starchy root vegetable predominantly grown in hot tropical climates of Southeast Asia, said David Fan, one of the cofounders of US Boba Company, which produces boba for over 2,000 stores nationwide. Cassava is not as widely grown in the US, and the US Boba Company is one of the few domestic boba manufacturers. A lot of components that go into selling boba, like machinery, tea leaves, and drinkware, could be hit by tariffs. Even the cups are atypical of US-made cups, due to their rims and sizes, and boba requires wide straws to fit the little balls. Fan said the company imports tools and tea from China and other parts of Asia. "It's going to increase our cost as much as 20% to 30% overall, across the board." Right now, a pound of boba sold by the US Boba Company makes 10 servings and costs $11.99. Fan said that customer prices under tariffs could increase by as much as a dollar more per drink. Meanwhile, Sun said he expects the tariffs to increase the company's cost of goods by between 8% and 15%. He added that he doesn't plan to raise prices, and that profits could take a 5% hit. CoCo Bubble Tea, a major boba tea franchise with several thousand stores around the world, stocked up on three months of inventory at its stores, said Kody Wong, its director of business development. He added that he doesn't anticipate the company increasing prices in the next three to four months if tariffs are implemented. Wong is also anticipating that the company's menus might look different down the line. "We will find more local resources, like a different-flavor juice," he added. But Fan said the plan to keep prices the same for customers isn't realistic in the long term if tariffs do come into effect. "No one is going to be able to just eat the cost for a long time," Fan said. "Business people in the long haul are going to have to make a profit." Just a few blocks down the road from Odd One Out, Julianna Martinez and her coworker were sharing boba drinks at a local arcade café. Martinez said she's already feeling the brunt of inflation in her boba spending habits and is nervous about the tariffs. "I remember when boba used to be $0.50 extra," said Martinez, 23. Now she's been forgoing the tapioca toppings in her drinks to save money. "I sacrifice my preferences for the price." But Calinisan isn't ready to completely give up one of her favorite drinks. If prices go up, she'll have to buy boba less frequently. "There's also the fact that I can't make boba myself," Calinisan said. "That's another reason why I'm willing to spend so much." Do you have a story to share about how tariffs could impact your life? Contact this reporter at jdeng@

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store