Skip to main content
Arts & culture, Community events

Artists under attack by the realestate monster

A live community broadcast on CKUT 90.3 FM with Stefan Christoff


Date & time
Saturday, September 14, 2024
2 p.m. – 4 p.m.
Speaker(s)

Lauren Laframboise, Kiva Stimac, Asher Woodhead, Solidarity Economy Incubation Zone (SEIZE)

Cost

This event is free

Organization

Social Justice Centre

Where

5500 Saint Hubert
5500 Saint Hubert Montreal, Quebec

The broadcast is available to listen on CKUT.

Join Stefan Christoff, researcher at the Social Justice Centre, for a live community broadcast on Funky Revolutions (CKUT 90.3 FM) to talk about the ways that the realestate monster is attacking artists in the city.

5500 St. Hubert has served for years as a space for independent culture, art and a space for art that is not simply driven by mainstream market paradigms. 

Today this location is slated for demolition and the construction of luxury condo units. 

Join us for a live in-person broadcast and discussion at the spot. 

This attack on non-profit / non-market artist spaces is also taking place in the context of the gentrification crisis that is impacting many low income and already marginalized communities who are struggling to access affordable housing in the city. In this context it is critical to build alliances between artists and all community members who are facing the violence of the real-estate capitalist machine. 

This discussion will be co-hosted by Stefan Christoff and Khalid M’Seffar of Funky Revolutions, the weekly program on CKUT 90.3 FM that will carry this live broadcast. 

Please note that this live broadcast is open to a live audience, if you can join please register in advance by emailing stefan.christoff(at)gmail(dot).com

Speakers:

  • Lauren Laframboise, Vanier Scholar and PhD student at the Centre for Oral History and Digital Storytelling (COHDS) (profile page) and the External Affairs Officer for the Concordia Research and Education Workers’ Union (CREW–CSN).
  • Kiva Stimac, the general and artistic director of the Suoni per il Popolo festival.
  • Asher Woodhead, a Concordia student and independent musician (Doldrums / Crasher)
  • A Solidarity Economy Incubation Zone (SEIZE) researcher who co-authored the report “From Crisis to Consensus: A survey of 60 housing groups from across Canada,” looking at the state of the housing justice movement in Québec and Canada (read the report here).

CKUT 90.3 FM’s production coordinator Spencer Gilley (profile in The McGill Daily) will be the on location live broadcast sound engineer. Photographer Amru Salahuddien will be documenting this event and the Social Justice Centre at Concordia University is supporting the documentation of this live broadcast. 

Context

This broadcast is taking place at 5500 St. Hubert, a space that has served for years as a gathering point for independent artists. The location is currently the locale for a thriving independent arts network, including multiple small visual arts studios and music rehearsal locations. This address is inhabited by cultural workers with creative practices not defined by mainstream art market paradigms. 

Today this location, a former potato chip factory, is slated for demolition by UTILE, a company aiming to construct private student condo units. This process also involves massive amounts of public funding (report), as $21.4 million is going to the company just from the city of Montréal, for a larger process that involves few mechanisms for full accountability or democratic access to the decision making of the company. 

UTILE claims to be creating accessible student housing while the company is making massive profits and has little meaningful track record of creating truly affordable non-market student housing that is safe from rising rents in the long term. In the context of the current housing crisis market driven projects are not the solution. Today students and other communities who are dealing with precarious housing are being presented with false market oriented projects that are billed as solutions.

Non-market housing options, like the urgent need for public financial support for co-op housing from all levels of government, is a key element to building any real long term solutions. Demolishing affordable artist studios, where many students and community members work, thrive and create is what UTILE is doing in this case and this is unacceptable. 

This specific institutional attack by UTILE on affordable artist spaces is an example of the larger gentrification crisis that deeply impacts independent artists, students and many low income communities. 

In this city many artists, a community including many students, is struggling to access affordable spaces to create. In this context it is critical to build alliances between artists and all community members facing impacts of so-called urban development projects that are violently displacing communities, a process that is backed by a Projet Montréal administration which is still claiming to be progressive.

About the speakers

Stefan Christoff is a media maker, community activist and artist living in Montréal. Stefan hosts the program Free City Radio, broadcasting weekly on seven community radio stations in Canada and shared globally as a podcast (Spotify + Apple Podcasts). Stefan makes music with many people globally, including Rêves sonoresSam ShalabiLori GoldstonAdriana Camancho and Anarchist Mountains. Stefan is on the board of the Immigrant Workers Centre in Côte-Des-Neiges and organizes with Cinema Politica Network. Stefan works with the Social Justice Centre and is also a graduate student in history at Concordia University.

Lauren Laframboise is a Vanier Scholar and PhD student at the Centre for Oral History and Digital Storytelling in the Department of History at Concordia. Her research explores the impacts of factory closures and deindustrialization on cities like Montreal and New York City. She has worked on a variety of public history projects exploring labour and urban history, including museum exhibitions, online oral history platforms, walking tours, and documentary films and radio, including the Voices of the Immigrant Workers’ Centre oral history project. She is also the External Affairs Officer for the Concordia Research and Education Workers’ Union (CREW–CSN).

Khalid M’Seffar, the host of Funky Revolutions, was involved in ISART, a non-profit collective artist space that was shut down due to the expansion of Palais des congrès de Montréal in 2000 and never was able to reopen due to the economic impacts of the shutdown. This was an example of affordable artist space in the city during a period in the late 1990s and early 2000s when there were many affordable autonomous artist spaces operating in the city, this is an important reference point. Khalid will also share some questions about possible opportunities to create artist spaces in the empty office towers that have been left vacant due the impacts of the pandemic that created new work conditions that sees so many people working from home. Khalid will share some questions on these possibilities while also being aware of the ways that such empty office towers could be used to address the housing crisis. 

Artist, chef, printer, poet, graphic designer and entrepreneur, Kiva Tanya Stimac, is the co-founder of local ground-breaking and world famous Montreal music institutions Casa del Popolo and La Sala Rossa  as well as a co-founder, co-visionary and Executive Director behind the internationally recognized festivals Suoni per il Popolo and Lux Magna. She also is the sole force behind Popolo Press, the in-house printshop of the Casa del Popolo, which is world renowned for its graphic design, printing and artwork for music posters, book and album covers and packaging which has coloured the neighborhood she has lived in for the past 25 years.  She has been an important creative and cultural force in Montreal and continues to influence and support new generations of artists and musicians within her community (as a mentor and employer) and beyond.

Asher Woodhead (Crasher / Doldrums) will be sharing a series of tracks specially selected for this broadcast that were created at or composed at 5500 Saint Hubert, the artist space being evicted. Asher will also share some reflections about the impacts of gentrification on creativity in the city, which for independent artists relies on affordable spaces to experiment, explore and create.

Back to top

© Concordia University