Showing 4086 results

Authority Record

Paul Cram Orchestra

  • Corporate body
  • [1985]-
The Paul Cram Orchestra was first formed in Toronto in 1985. The group put out a Juno- nominated album "Beyond Benghazi" with guest saxophonist Julius Hemphill. Cram reformed the ensemble in Nova Scotia in 1997. Its members included Cram (leader, composer/arranger, tenor sax, clarinet), Don Palmer (alto sax, soprano sax, flutes), Jeff Reilly (bass clarinet, clarinet), John Scott (electric cello), Rick Waychesko (trumpet), Tom Walsh (trombone), Steven Naylor (piano/keyboard/sampler), John Gzowski (guitar), Al Baculis (electric bass), and Dave Burton (drums). The new group played many re-arranged compositions from the original Orchestra, the Hemispheres ensemble, and the Upstream ensemble, and also produced original works. The reformed Paul Cram Orchestra debuted at the Atlantic Jazz Festival in 1998. They completed multiple Canada-wide tours; the first in 2000 and the second in 2001 to accompany their record put out under the Victo label, "Campin Out". They embarked on third Canadian tour in 2002 and upon completion, recorded their second album 'Walkin the Wall".

Peacock, Jan (1955- )

  • Person
  • 1955-
Jan Peacock is an internationally known Canadian mixed media artist, born in Barrie, Ontario in 1955. Peacock received a BFA from the University of Western Ontario (1978) and a MFA from the University of California, San Diego (1981). Peacock has been a prominent Halifax artist since the 1980’s, and much of her media and video art has been associated with the Centre for Art Tapes (MS-3-46). Peacock currently is a Professor in the Department of Media Arts and Director of the MFA program at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design University. Peacock received the Governor General’s Award in Visual and Media Arts in 2012.

Pearce, Richard Samuel

  • Person
  • 19--
Richard S. Pearce taught in the department of agricultural biology at the University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, United Kingdom. He was co-author with J.H.M Willison, a former professor of biology at Dalhousie University, of a paper published in the Canadian Journal of Botany 61 (1983).

Pearson, Alex

  • Person
Alex Pearson became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2004 because they were featured on the video recording "Lis van Berkel", which became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Pearson, George Frederick

  • Person
  • 1877 - 1938
George Frederick Pearson was a graduate of Dalhousie University. Born in 1877 in Truro, Nova Scotia, he was the son of Julia Reading and the Hon. B.F. Pearson, a noted Halifax lawyer, publisher and financier. He graduated with his LLB from Dalhousie in 1900, the same year he was called to the Nova Scotia bar. In addition to his law practice, Pearson was chairman of the Nova Scotia Housing Commission, director of Maritime Telephone & Telegraph, and honorary president of the Nova Scotia Good Roads Association. He was also chair of Dalhousie's Board of Governors, a position from which he resigned after his failed campaign to oust Carleton Stanley from the presidency. Pearson was married twice, first to Ethel Miller, with whom he had one daughter; later he married Agnes Crawford, with whom he had two children. He died in 1938.

Pearson, Mrs., fl. 1898

  • Person
Mrs Pearson was in correspondence with Reverend James Rosborough of Musquodoboit Harbour, Nova Scotia.

Pedersen, Stephen Alan

  • Person
  • 1935-2019
Stephen Pedersen was a Canadian musician, composer and journalist. After graduating from the University of Alberta with a BA in English in 1957, he moved to Ontario where he received certificates in both teaching and instrumental music. For a decade he taught English at Danford Technical High School and Centennial College before moving to Nova Scotia in 1969 to play with the Atlantic Symphony Orchestra. He played the flute and piccolo with the ASO until the orchestra's collapse, when he began work as a freelance musician, composer and journalist. He was a founding member of Nova Music, a Halifax group of composers and performers dedicated to the presentation of new or seldom-performed music. Between 1988-2000 he served as both a Canada Council and Juno Awards jury member.

Pederson, Andy

  • Person
Andy Pederson became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2001 because their video recording “Neil’s Old Boat” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Peirce, Elizabeth

  • Person
Elizabeth Peirce is a Canadian director, videographer and editor. Peirce is a graduate of Ryerson University’s Radio and Television Arts program. Peirce became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2002 because their video recording “Ode” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Pelluet, Dixie

  • Person
  • 1896-1990

Dixie Pelluet was born in London, England. She studied botany and graduated with an MA from both the University of Toronto and Bryn Mawr in Pennsylvania, where she also obtained her PhD in biology. She was a laboratory assistant in zoology in Alberta and taught zoology in various American colleges before being hired at Dalhousie as a lecturer in elementary zoology. Pelluet became an assistant professor of biology in zoology in 1931, appointed by President Stanley Mackenzie. Three years later in 1934, she married fellow zoologist Ronald Hayes at Dalhousie and became one half of a greatly respected academic couple. At the time, Pelluet was concerned that her marriage to Hayes would threaten her position as a professor. Before her marriage, Pelluet raised her concerns with President Carleton Stanley. The marriage went on as planned and Stanley made Pelluet an associate professor in 1941, but her salary remained frozen until 1947.

Pelluet was an outspoken advocate for equal gender treatment in academics, and wrote to President Kerr stating that she was “being quite unjustly penalized” for her gender and marriage. Her research focused on cellular differentiation. She and her husband were the first husband and wife team to receive honorary Doctors of Laws degrees on May 13, 1965.

Pelluet retired from Dalhousie University in August 1964 after working at the university for 26 years. She was 68 years old when she retired, during a period when women were not allowed to work at the university past 65 years of age. She was promoted to full professor three months before her retirement. Dixie and her husband are honored through the Ron Hayes and Dixie Pelluet Bursary in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 
awarded annually by Dalhousie.

Penney, Renée

  • Person
Renée Penney is originally from St. John’s Newfoundland and is currently a PhD candidate in the Faculty of communication at Carleton. Penney received her BFA at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in 1988, and a MA in Film Studies at the University of British Columbia in 2010. After completing her BFA, Penney worked within artist run centres as an arts administrator and artist. Penney became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1992 because her video recording “Lily & Christian “Dish”” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Pennington, Marion

  • Person
  • 1910-1991

Marion Pennington was one of two faculty members hired by Dalhousie's nascent School of Nursing. She was born in Cranbrook, BC, graduated from Vancouver General Hospital in 1932, and receiving her degree in nursing from UBC in 1933. In 1943 she joined the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps and later worked for the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration in Germany as a nursing supervisor in camps for displaced persons.

In 1949 she obtained her MA at Columbia University and was appointed Assistant Director of the new School of Nursing at Dalhousie University. She left in 1952 to become the Director of the Teacher Training Program for graduate nurses in Ankara, Turkey, under the auspices of WHO. Later she returned to Cranbrook, where she was a school teacher from 1965-1971. She died in 1991.

Penson, Art

  • Person

Art Penson was born and raised in Creston, British Columbia, and is now based in Ottawa. He became interested in theatrical design after joining the drama club at university where he was studying to be an art and music historian. He worked with the Bastion Theatre in Victoria and later went to the Kootenay School of Art in Nelson, BC. At Kootenay he won a scholarship to continue his studies at the Pasadena Playhouse in California.

Penson's relationship with Neptune goes back to the 1970s. He met his wife Barbara Howatt there and served as Head of Props in the 1971/1972 season before earning a Canada Council grant allowing him to study theatre in England for three years. Recently he has been a regular designer for Neptune under the artistic directorship of Ron Ulrich. He has designed costumes, sets, props, and furniture for productions of Jesus Christ Superstar, Chicago, Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, and The Rocky Horror Picture Show. His costume designs for this latter production won a Merritt Award in 2004.

Perchaluk, Brian

  • Person
Brian Perchaluk is a set and costume designer based in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He studied at the University of Winnipeg, the National Theatre School of Canada, and the Banff Centre. He has worked with various theatre companies across Canada for the last 25 years, including Neptune Theatre, Atlantic Ballet Theatre, The Canadian Stage Company, Theatre Passe Muraille, The Grand Theatre, Blyth Festival, National Arts Centre, Persephone Theatre, Theatre Calgary, Alberta Theatre Projects, Citadel Theatre, Vancouver Playhouse Theatre Company, Arts Club Theatre Company, the Belfry Theatre, Stratford Festival, and the Shaw Festival.

Pereira, Elio

  • Person
Elio Pereira became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1996 because their video recording “A moitié bum” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Perina, Peter

  • Person
  • [194-]-
Peter Perina is a theatrical scenographer and professor emeritus of theatre at Dalhousie University. He graduated from the School of Fine Arts in Prague in 1964 and worked professionally in Czechoslovakia for three years before moving to Ottawa in 1967. He taught at the University of Saskatchewan from 1970-1972 and joined the faculty of Dalhousie's Department of Theatre in 1972. He has designed 343 productions and lectured across Canada, USA and the Czech Republic. He is the Chair of the Baroque Theatre Foundation at the Castle of Cesky Krumlov and a member of the Board of Perspectiv, Association of Historic Theatres in Europe.

Perkyns, Richard, 1932-2008

  • Person
Richard John Hardy Perkyns (1932- ) was a professor and drama specialist in the English department at Saint Mary's University (1968-1998). He directed and performed in a number of plays for the Saint Mary's University Drama Society, the Theatre Arts Guild, and Pier One Theatre, and was also a founding member of the Halifax Independent Theatre (1978). Born in England, Perkyns married Dorothy Perkyns. He graduated with a PhD from London University in 1968 and moved to Halifax, Nova Scotia, the same year. Richard Perkyns published numerous articles on theatre in scholarly journals including Canadian Drama and Theatre History in Canada . He is the author of The Neptune Story: Twenty-Five Years in the Life of a Leading Canadian Theatre (1989) and editor of two others, Major Plays of the Canadian Theatre 1934-1984 (1984) and Introduction to Literature: British, American, Canadian (1981).

Peterson, Betty

  • Person
Betty Peterson was associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1986 with the co-creation of “Invasion of our homeland”.

Petheric Press

  • Corporate body
  • [ca. 1967]-1984
Petheric Press was founded by William Hue McCurdy, a graduate of Dalhousie University and former president and owner of McCurdy Printing Co. Petheric was located in Halifax and was one of the first small publishing companies in Nova Scotia, active from about 1967 to 1984. The press specialized in Nova Scotia history books of non-fiction and in 1971 began publishing The Nova Scotia Historical Quarterly, which featured works by Thomas Raddall, W.R. Bird, and Evelyn Richardson, among others. In 1981 the Public Archives of Nova Scotia (PANS) assumed management of the serial and changed its name to The Nova Scotia Historical Review and its frequency to twice yearly.

Pfeiffer, Amy

  • Person
Amy Pfeiffer was associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in the Halifax region in 1979. An untitled video work of hers belongs in the Centre for Art Tapes tape collection.

Philipp, Isidor

  • Person
  • 1863-1958
Isidor Philipp was a French pianist, composer, and teacher.

Phillips, Stephen James

  • Person
  • [195-] -

Stephen Phillips is a clinical and research neurologist widely regarded as a leader in stroke care in Nova Scotia and across Canada. Born and raised in southwest England, he was educated at King’s College, London, before receiving his clinical training at St. George’s University of London (Class of 1979). He emigrated to Nova Scotia in 1981 and served for 33 years on Dalhousie University’s Faculty of Medicine before retiring in December 2021.

In 1999 Dr Phillips helped to found the Canadian Stroke Network, collaborating with Heart & Stroke to develop the Canadian Stroke Strategy, which led to the first evidence-based guidelines on stroke care in Canada. A regional and national advocate for the adoption of coordinated multidisciplinary team care provided on dedicated stroke units, in 2002 he published a study showing the positive impact of this approach on patient outcomes at the Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre in Halifax.

An avid photographer, his artwork decorates the walls of the stroke unit at the QEII hospital and has been reproduced and sold to support fundraising for stroke unit staff professional development. Among other honours received in recognition for his research and clinical work, Dr Phillips was invited to present the 2021 Hnatyshyn Lecture ‑- Canada's most prestigious annual lectureship in the field of stroke.

Phoenix, Catherine

Catherine Phoenix is an artist who works in digital imaging. Phoenix works as the Director of Operations at the Centre for Art Tapes in Halifax. Phoenix became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1990’s because their video recording “Poppinsville” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.
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