Archive for ***Canada

Montreal’s first grant party!

Sunday, December 11th, 2011

Mixing a love of Montreal with a healthy dose of community building, over 40 people gathered at Bar La Quincaillerie near Lafontaine Park to celebrate the first round of applicants to La Fondation Formidable.

The Fondation’s first round grant winner is Bobbi Jo Hart, whose project Alley Kids is a Mile End alley-greening project designed and documented by local kids. With her Awesome Foundation grant, Bobbi Jo intends to “create closer and more awesome relationships with our neighbours (many meeting for the first time) with the shared goal to beautify our alley space for our children and local community”.

The goal of the Awesome Foundation is not simply to share financial resources, but to encourage and recognize change agents. As such, two other applicants presented their projects.

Mariangiola Fabbri and Sonia Rousseau presented a food recuperation project in Rosemont / Petit-Patrie. Along with 2 other Katimavik interns they are working with local restaurants to gather extra food and serve it in a collective kitchen to local residents living with food insecurity.

Boards of the Boroughs founder Tay wants to create “longboards (a type of skateboard) with distinctive shapes and graphics representative of the many boroughs of Montreal”, hoping that the boards will “generate dialogue as to why we fall in love with these neighborhoods as we do. As people see these boards, I hope that they will see the connection between civic pride and alternative transportation.”

Awesome events are fueled by the ideas presented and the energy and relationships they generate. Money might be the catalyst, but it’s ultimately not a game-changer. Anthropologist Margaret Mead writes, “A small group of thoughtful people can change the world. Indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has”.

People, relationships and networks in the service of community are at the heart of the work of the Montreal Awesome Foundation. Money and events are just tools to achieving the greater goals of bringing people together and supporting great ideas. Nevertheless, they are important tools and we like holding events and funding projects, so look for us to do more of both throughout 2012.

Posted by Chad Lubelsky at 4:00 pm Comments

A spoonful of process helps you adjourn to the bar.

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

As the Awesome Foundation continues to expand – Chicago launched just recently – I’m struck by the endless variation. Each city takes the premise, $1000 for being awesome, and makes it their own. You’re empowered to do whatever you want with the model.

The freedom is alluring. A formal, considered, and informed rejection of process. And this simplicity is a big part of why the Foundation is growing.

But it’s also a huge challenge. The first thing that happened when the Toronto folks got together is that everyone looked at each other and wondered what was supposed to happen next.

There’s a lot to be said about just letting things happen. But there’s a lot more to be said about making things happen. And, usually, doing that quickly and easily requires a clear path.

“Awesome is getting shit done.” – Matt

The Toronto group is an interesting mix of people. Many – not all – of us have day jobs that require politely navigating large, complicated, group-based decision-making. Last thing we want is to spend our free time engaged in more of the same. But we’re also uniformly lazy and impatient and wanting to get to the bar. So we’ve come back to process.

We’re still playing with it, but we’re arriving at a model that strikes the right balance of all the things that matter. People get to be generous, indignant, supportive, evil, and conciliatory. Everyone gets to laugh, argue, debate, sympathize, and scheme. And we get from 50+ submissions down to 1, consensus-driven winner in less than an hour.

YMMV and we’ll keep changing it up, but here’s how we get it done.


1.) Individual Short Lists

Everyone enters their short lists of no more than 10 submissions into a common Google spreadsheet. We total the number of times each submission appears to get a sense of the emerging consensus.

2.) Fall on Your Sword Round

About half the submissions will have only appeared on one or two lists. The people who put these projects forward are asked if they are willing to pull the entry from contention. All the Trustee has to say is ‘no’ and it stays for the next round. This gets the list down to the entries with widespread support plus a handful of personal favourites.

3.) Ruthless Round

The conversation opens up and people get to single out entries for elimination. Someone is given a chance to defend the project, everyone chimes in, and then it’s put to a vote. If 7/10 trustees vote to kill it, it’s gone. This goes on till we have 5 to 10 solid projects for the short list.

4.) Weighted Voting

By this point there’s been a lot of discussion about the merits of each submission. Each Trustee ranks the projects from 1 to 10. The math determines the top 3.

5.) Deal-making and The Winner

The people backing the emerging favourite make their case to those who are still holding out. Deals are struck regarding what types of projects are going to be prioritized the next time around. The deals win over the balance of the Trustees, we unanimously declare the winner, and head out to celebrate.

Posted by Geoffrey MacDougall at 3:33 pm Comments

Ottawa Announces Our New Project: Transplant!

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

“Let not the world’s deceitful cares
the rising plant destroy;
But let it yield a hundredfold
the fruits of peace and joy.”

- Rev.John Cawood, 1815

This summer, Emily Comeau (a fibre artist from Quebec) and Emily Cook (a book and paper artist from Ontario) will be collaborating to create an immense and interactive tunnel book made from local plant materials to install in a barren patch of city.

The “book” will be 10 feet high and 12 feet long and contain 6 “pages” featuring a cut paper story of urbanism in archway shapes that people can walk through and interact with. The structure will be made of live willow branches and the paper pages made of flax paper infused with seeds. As the elements erode the paper, the sculpture will disintegrate and the seeded paper will sprout. This way the sculpture will have a changing life and meaning as the urban world we create with the cut paper will be eroded and changed by the living materials.

Emily Comeau is a recent graduate of Concordia University, majoring in Fibre Arts and was awarded the Prix Diagonale for her artistic achievements. Her art practice is largely fibre based. She has participated in numerous exhibitions and events in Ontario and Quebec. More information about her and her art practice can be found at her website.

Emily Cook holds a BFA in printmaking from Ontario College of Art and Design and an MFA from Louisiana State University. She is now practicing in Toronto . She makes paper based sculptures and books, and sometimes teaches at the Ontario College of Art and Design. She has won numerous awards and shown in both the US and Canada. You can see some of her work at her website.

Emily-Comeau

Emily-Comeau

Emily Cook

Emily Cook

Our award ceremony will be hosted at The Code Factory on Friday July 16th at 6pm. Please RSVP in the comments or via Twegather: “@twegather #awesomeottawa http://bit.ly/dvA7W5 Yes/No/Maybe”.

Posted by Cate Huston at 8:00 am Comments

Awesome Ottawa awards first $1000 grant

Saturday, June 5th, 2010

The Ottawa chapter of The Awesome Foundation is proud to announce that today we will be awarding our first grant of $1000 to Alicia Dobson of Project Y. Project Y is a group of young and passionate change-makers who aspire to make positive change and change the face of their community. There are all different types of individuals: students, social entrepreneurs, musicians, artists, scientists, and others. Many are Millennium Laureates, some are TD Scholars, and others are individuals with an unbelievable commitment and determination to make positive change.

For their kick-off event, Alicia and her team are organizing an Art Flash Mob to show people the beauty that exists here in our city. In Alicia’s own words, “The music, art, and culture in this city is astonishing – we want people to see it.” This exciting first event will take place in downtown Ottawa on the afternoon of May 12th. Look for them and join in the fun!

See their video proposal here: Project Y: Art Flash Mob

The Awesome Foundation for the Arts and Sciences was founded in Boston in June 2009 and has now spread to six cities. The Ottawa Chapter (Awesome Ottawa), founded in April 2010, awards $1,000 grants monthly to projects that advance the interest of Awesomeness in our universe and in particular in our city. There are no requirements for applying, no definite criteria for deciding the winner, and no limitations beyond the necessity for being awesome. Do you have an awesome idea? Apply today!

The award party was generously hosted by Ian Graham at The Code Factory.

Cross posted on the Awesome Ottawa Blog.

Posted by Cate Huston at 9:58 am Comments