Tall Tale Postcards

Posted by on Oct 9, 2018 in Uncategorized | No Comments

A product of Big Rock Candy Mountain, QA CHEW’s BUBBLE TROUBLE was developed with the Grade 6/7 students in Karen Sandu’s class at Queen Alexandra Elementary School in East Vancouver.

Multiple Elementary

Posted by on Oct 9, 2018 in Uncategorized | No Comments

A product of Big Rock Candy Mountain, QA CHEW’s BUBBLE TROUBLE was developed with the Grade 6/7 students in Karen Sandu’s class at Queen Alexandra Elementary School in East Vancouver.

SOUR Hat Edition

Posted by on Oct 9, 2018 in Uncategorized | No Comments

A product of Big Rock Candy Mountain, QA CHEW’s BUBBLE TROUBLE was developed with the Grade 6/7 students in Karen Sandu’s class at Queen Alexandra Elementary School in East Vancouver.

QA CHEW’S BUBBLE TROUBLE UNLIMITED GUM EDITION

Posted by on Oct 9, 2018 in Publications, Texts, Uncategorized | No Comments
QA CHEW’S BUBBLE TROUBLE UNLIMITED GUM EDITION

A product of Big Rock Candy Mountain, QA CHEW’s BUBBLE TROUBLE was developed with the Grade 6/7 students in Karen Sandu’s class at Queen Alexandra Elementary School in East Vancouver.

DISRUPTING BARRIERS EVENT IMAGES

Posted by on Oct 1, 2018 in Events, Uncategorized | No Comments
DISRUPTING BARRIERS EVENT IMAGES

Thanks to everyone who was able to join the conversation at the Disrupting Barriers in the Area of Accessibility event on September 29 at the Lost & Found Cafe. Also, a BIG thanks to the event speakers and to Carmen Papalia for creating and organizing this event.   All images were taken by Thomas Quirk.

Sour vs Sour – Chocolate Bar Edition

Posted by on Jul 23, 2018 in Publications, Texts, Uncategorized | No Comments

Big Rock Candy Mountain – Sour vs Sour – As part of a 3-month engagement with a Queen Alexandra Elementary School grade 3/4 class, artists Hannah Jickling & Helen Reed taste-tested a range of flavours and developed a miscellaneous vocabulary to describe them: sounds, shapes, words, elaborate fonts, synesthetic line drawings and emojis. With visits to-and-from East Van Roasters, the group learned about single-origin, fairly traded dark chocolate and navigated its tense (and tacky) conflation with cheap candy from the gas station nearby.