Showing 2266 results

Authority Record
Person

Cooke, Jennifer

  • Person
Jennifer Cooke is a set and costume designer based in Quebec and a graduate of the National Theatre School of Canada. She has designed for the Young Neptune Company, the Prairie Theatre Exchange, Centaur Theatre, and Théâtre Français de Toronto.

Cook, Gregory, A., 1950-

  • Person
Gregory Cook was born in 1942 in Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia. In 1958, he began attending Acadia University. He became involved in editing The Athenaeum, the student newspaper, and then founded and edited Amethyst, a student literary quarterly. Cook graduated in 1962 with a Bachelor of Arts in English but remained at Acadia University to edit Amethyst until 1964. Through his work with Amethyst he had begun a correspondence with many Canadian writers including Ernest Buckler, Alden Nowlan and Irving Layton. Upon leaving Acadia University in 1964, he founded and edited The Crier, a magazine that focused on the arts from a Maritime perspective. The Crier was short-lived, lasting only four issues. Next, in 1964, Cook formed Crier Publications Ltd., a publishing company that did numerous printing jobs for many Nova Scotia organizations such as Acadia and Neptune Theatre. In 1966 Cook returned to Acadia University where he completed his Masters in English, writing his thesis on Ernest Buckler. Several years later, he was hired as a lecturer in the English Department at Acadia University. In 1972, he edited the book Critical Views of Canadian Writers: Ernest Buckler. In the 1970's he also worked as a freelance journalist and had articles published in Maclean's and The Atlantic Advocate. In the late 1970's he served as Executive Director of the Writers' Federation of Nova Scotia. Gregory Cook continues to work as a reporter, freelance writer and lecturer. His poems have been published as books, in numerous periodicals and broadcast on CBC radio. He is a member of Writers' Union of Canada, The League of Canadian Poets, and the Writers' Federation of New Brunswick and honorary member of the Writers' Federation of Nova Scotia.

Conover, Shirley A.M.

  • Person
  • 1929 - 2007
Shirley Conover was a Leslie Pearson Senior Fellow at Dalhousie University's School for Resource and Environmental Studies and made significant contributions to the field of environmental assessment and management in Canada and internationally. Born 9 July 1929 in Brantford, Ontario, to Hazel and Carter MacMillan, she was educated at Oberlin College and Yale University before earning her PhD in marine zoology at Dalhousie. In the 1970s and early 1980s she led teams carrying out environmental impact assessments for the Davis Strait, Sable Island and Hibernia oil fields. Later she became director of two CIDA international development projects through Dalhousie University: Environmental Management Development in Indonesia and the Environment and Resource Management Project in the Philippines. Both projects supported government and academic infrastructure development and provided heavily used baseline ecological information. They were also a fertile training ground for many distinguished professionals in Canada, Indonesia and the Philippines. In 1990 Conover was appointed to chair the Environmental Assessment Panel for the Halifax Harbour Clean-up Project. She was a member of the Canadian Environmental Advisory Council to federal environment ministers for eight years, served as secretary to the International Association for Impact Assessment and, in 2002, she was awarded the Rose Hulman Award for her contributions to environmental assessment in The Hague, Netherlands. Conovers died 8 January 2007 in Cobourg, Ontario.

Connelly, Marcia

  • Person
Marcia Connelly became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1995 because their video recording “Social Dance” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Comeau, Steve

  • Person
Steve Comeau became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1990s because of their involvement in a compilation tape which became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Collyer, Gillian

  • Person
Gillian Collyer is a Canadian performance and video artist. Her education includes a BFA from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (1995) and a MFA from the School of Art Institute Chicago (2007). Collyer has exhibited nationally and her work belongs in collections in Halifax and in Ontario. She became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1997 because their video recording “Surge” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Cohn, Rebecca

  • Person
  • 1870-October 23, 1942
Rebecca Cohn was born in Galicia in 1870. She emigrated from Europe to New York, and then in 1910 emigrated to Nova Scotia. Cohn married Moses Cohn, who died in 1922. When Rebecca first arrived in Halifax, she was a rag merchant. She was eventually able to invest in the real estate market and built a fortune. When her financial situation had improved, Cohn contributed large sums of money to various charities but insisted on remaining anonymous. She died on October 23, 1942 at Victoria General. Since she was childless, she named her nieces and nephew as executors of her will. In the will, Rebecca laid out what she wanted done with her estate and this included a sizeable amount of money set aside for charitable donations. Rebecca stated that the money should be saved for 20 years after her death and then be donated, preferably to Jewish charities in Poland. However, there was a suggestion that after World War II, it would be too difficult to make such donations. By the time of the donation to Dalhousie University in 1962, the money had grown to a total of $400 000. The donation to Dalhousie University had stipulations put in place by Louise and Marion Keshen. One of the stipulations was that the Arts Centre would have to be completed within 5 years. If the building was not built in the 5 years or any of the other stipulations were not met, the money would be repaid to the donors. Dalhousie University was able to build the Dalhousie Arts Centre with these funds in addition to several other donations. The Arts Centre features an auditorium named the Rebecca Cohn Auditorium in honor of the donation from Cohn’s estate.

Cohn, Norman

  • Person
Norman Cohn is a Canadian filmmaker. Cohn became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1984 because of their involvement in a video recording entitled “Halifax cable show- 4 works”, which became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Cohen, Fay G.

  • Person
Fay Cohen taught in Dalhousie University's School for Resource and Environmental Studies from her initial appointment as an honorary research associate in fisheries and community development in 1981, until her retirement in 2009 as Professor of Environmental Studies. She was educated in anthropology and law, receiving her BA and MEd at Harvard University and her PhD from the University of Minnestota and her enduring research interests focused on indigenous peoples and natural resource issues.

Cochrane, Andrew G.

  • Person
  • [195-]-
Andrew G. Cochrane joined Henson College as acting dean in 2000 and went on to become the inaugural dean of the Dalhousie University College of Continuing Education. He was born and raised in Windsor, Nova Scotia, received a BA in Physical Education from Acadia University in 1977 and an MBA from Saint Mary's University in 1984. He retired from Dalhousie in 2019.

Cobb, Andrew Randall

  • Person
  • 1876-1943

Andrew Cobb was born in the United States in 1876. At the age of 14, he moved to Greenwich, Nova Scotia, with his mother and sister. After graduating from Acadia University he earned a master’s degree in architecture from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology before moving to Paris to study at the Ecole nationale des Beaux-Arts from 1907–1909.

He began practising in Halifax in partnership with Sydney P. Dumaresq, whom he had met at Acadia, collaborating on the memorial tower, known as the Dingle, erected in Sir Sandford Fleming Park in 1912. Cobb went on to become known for his domestic architecture in Halifax and Bedford, as well as for institutional designs such as Dalhousie University's Science Building, Macdonald Memorial Library and the University of King’s College, constructed on the Studley campus of Dalhousie from 1928–1931. He died in 1943 in a motor accident.

Coalfleet, Carrie (Bigelow), 1849-1931

  • Person
Carrie Coalfleet née Bigelow was born 13 April 1849 in Canning, NS, to Ebenezer Bigelow and Waite Bigelow née Sanford. In 1885 she married widower Captain Hiram Coalfleet of Hant's Port, NS. After his death she operated a school for girls. She died in 1931.

Clifford, Mark

  • Person
Mark Clifford became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1984 because of their involvement in a video recording entitled “3 videos by Halifax independent producers” which became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Clattenburg, Mike

  • Person
Mike Clattenburg is a Canadian television and film director and writer, most known for his work on the Trailer Park Boys. Born in Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia, Clattenburg has been active in the local Nova Scotian film industry since the 1990s. He has also been involved in the Canadian Broadcasting Company with productions such as Street Cents, and directed numerous music videos. Clattenburg became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1995 because a video recording they were featured on became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Class, Geoff

  • Person
Geoff Class became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1997 because their video recording “Dance Performance Feb. 1997” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Clarko, Chris

  • Person
Chris Clarko became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1992 because their video recording “The Unbearable Lightness of Recycling” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Clarke, George Elliott

  • Person
George Elliott Clarke was born February 12, 1960 in Windsor, NS. He grew up in Halifax. He went to the University of Waterloo (B.A., Hons., 1984), Dalhousie University (M.A., 1989), and Queen's University (Ph.D., 1993). He was the inaugural E.J. Pratt Professor of Canadian Literature at the University of Toronto, where he still works as a professor of English and Canadian literature. He was the fourth Poet Laureate of Toronto in 2012, and is currently the seventh Canadian Parliamentary Poet Laureate. His writing focuses on Black Canadian culture (“Africadia”), race, freedom, social justice, and love. In 2001 Clarke won the Governor General's Award for poetry for his book Execution Poems. In 2008, Clarke was made an honorary Fellow of the Haliburton Literary Society, the oldest literary society in North America, at the University of King's College, Halifax. He was also inducted as an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2008 and the Order of Nova Scotia. He has won Portia White Prize for Artistic Achievement (1988) (Portia White is also his great-aunt), Governor-General's Award for Poetry (2001), the National Magazine Gold Medal for Poetry (2001), the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Achievement Award (2004), and the prestigious Trudeau Fellow Prize (2005). He has published dozens of books, articles, poems, essays, and plays.

Clarke, E.P.

  • Person
  • fl. 1850s
E.P. Clark was involved with the N.L. Clark & Co., which commercialized Peruvian syrup in Boston, Massachusetts, in the 1850s.

Clark, Patrick

  • Person
Patrick Clark is a designer who worked closely with the Stratford Festival for nine seasons. He has also designed for the Shaw Festival, Neptune Theatre, Theatre Plus, Canadian Stage, Theatre New Brunswick, and the Banff Centre for the Arts.

Clark, Jim, 1951-

  • Person
  • 1951-

Jim Clark is an award-winning photographer in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He graduated in 1971 from a Halifax Campus Community College photography course as the top student and began his career as a darkroom technician and photographer with Wamboldt-Waterfield Photography Ltd.

From 1971-1975 he worked for the Dalhousie University Life Sciences Audiovisual Department as a bio-medical photographer. He pursued freelance work from 1975-1978, while also managing a retail photography department and travelling throughout Nova Scotia and New Brunswick as a representative for Maritime Color Labs.

A year after returning to Wamboldt-Waterfield as a photojournalist in the summer of 1978, Clark became a business partner, acquiring full ownership in 1985 and changing the company's name to Clark Photographic Ltd. after Terry Waterfield's 1990 retirement. In 1998 he formed a partnership with photographer Gary Castle, and Clark Photographic became Digiscan Photographic, reflecting the changes in imaging technology.

Clark continued to work as a photographer in commercial, advertising and special events throughout the 1990s and early 2000s. From 1995-1996 he had a contract with Dalhousie's Medical Computing Media Services (later MED IT), and in 2001 he became the medical photographer and videoconferencing coordinator for Dalhousie, where he worked until 2011.

Clark, James, W.

  • Person
James W. Clark joined Dalhousie’s Psychology Department in the 1960s after completing his MA at McGill University and his PhD at Queen’s. He remained a member of the department until c. 2004.

Clark, Howard C.

  • Person
  • 1929-
Howard C. Clark was the ninth president of Dalhousie University, serving from 1986-1995. Clark was a strong advocate for affirmative action and led the university in establishing the James Robinson Johnson Chair in Black Canadian Studies. Born in New Zealand in 1929, he taught chemistry and held administrative posts at the universities of Western Ontario, British Columbia, Auckland and Guelph, where he held also served as vice-president.

Clark, David

  • Person
David Clark is a media artist who utilizes the internet as a cinematic format. Clark also uses an experimental narrative form within his media work. Clark is a professor in Media Arts at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. Clark’s education includes Fine Arts in 1984 at the University of Calgary, a BFA in 1985 at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, and a MFA in 1989 from the School of Art Institute of Chicago

Clark, Chuck

  • Person
Chuck Clark was a founding member of the Atlantic Filmmakers Cooperative (AFCOOP) in 1974. Clark became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2003 because their video recording "CFAT Cabaret" became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Citrigno, Jo-Ann

  • Person
Jo-Ann Citrigno became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1993 because their audio recording “A Oral History: CKDU/ Halifax” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Churchill, Ward

  • Person
  • 1947-
Ward Churchill is an American author, political activist and former professor of ethnic studies at the University of Colorado Boulder who writes about the historical treatment of political dissenters and Native Americans by the United States government. In 2007 he was fired by the University of Colorado investigating allegations for research misconduct.

Churchill, Augustus, Dr.

  • Person
  • fl. 1886
Augustus Churchill was a physician in London, England, in the later nineteenth century.

Christopher, Patrick, 1945-2005

  • Person

Patrick Christopher-Carter was born in London, Ontario, on 30 June 1945. He studied at the Ontario College of Art, the National Theatre School of Canada in Montreal, and he completed a one-year program at the Loeb Drama Center in Boston. Christopher's early career concentrated on acting and included performances at the Grand Theatre in London, the Stratford Festival, the Shaw Festival, the Manitoba Theatre Centre, and with The Grand Theatre Company.

Eventually, Christopher began to focus on directing and teaching. He worked as an acting instructor for the Ryerson Theatre in Toronto and then for Theatre Ontario's Summer School in Kingston. He came to Dalhousie in 1988 as an associate professor where he directed approximately twenty productions, including Cloud Nine, The Marriage of Bette and Boo, Working, Tonight We Improvise, The Art of Success, and Red Noses. He also taught acting and directing courses. In 1994 he founded Shakespeare by the Sea, the only outdoor theatre group in the province, with spouse Elizabeth Murphy.

Christopher retired from Dalhousie in 2005. To celebrate this milestone and his sixtieth birthday, Christopher and Murphy were married on 1 July 2005, after twenty-nine years together. He died shortly thereafter on 17 July 2005. Christopher had one daughter, Zoe.

Christie, Innis M.

  • Person
  • November 8, 1937 - February 9, 2009
Innis M. Christie was born on November 8, 1937 in Amherst, Nova Scotia to Alice and Harold Christie. He was a law professor at Dalhousie from 1971-2007, and Dean of the Faculty of Law from 1985–1991. He was the leading architect of the Nova Scotia Trade Union Act and Nova Scotia Labour Standards Code, a member of the Canadian Anti-Inflation Appeal Tribunal, Counsel to the Nova Scotia Labour Standards Tribunal, and served as Chair of the Nova Scotia Labour Relations Board from 1972 to 1979, and of the Workers’ Compensation Board from 1996 to 2001. He was awarded the University of Toronto Bora Laskin Award for Distinguished Contributions to Canadian Labour Law in 2008. Christie died on February 9, 2009.

Choyce, Lesley

  • Person
  • 1958-

Lesley Choyce was born in Riverside, New Jersey, in 1951. He studied at East Carolina University and Livingston College before receiving his BA from Rutgers University and MA degrees from both Montclair State College and City University of New York Graduate Centre. Choyce immigrated to Canada in 1978, where he worked variously as a farmer, journalist, rehabilitation counsellor and janitor.

His writing encompasses a variety of genres: autobiography, history, fiction, young adult fiction, philosophy and poetry. He has also worked in film, music, radio and television, hosting and co-producing Vision TV's Off the Page with Lesley Choyce. He is the founding director of Pottersfield Press and of the literary magazine The Pottersfield Portfolio. His own work has been translated into Spanish, German, French and Danish, and he has received both the Dartmouth Book Award and the Ann Connor Brimer Award for outstanding contributions to Atlantic Canadian children's literature.

Choyce teaches part time in the English Department and the Transition Year Program at Dalhousie University. Based in Lawrencetown Beach, Nova Scotia, he is well-known as a year-round surfer and a founding member of the 1990s spoken-word rock band, The Surf Poets.

For a current bibliography and further information, see http://www.lesleychoyce.com/

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