Dear friends and supporters of Arts on the Ave,
Black Friday and Cyber Monday have passed, but the year's biggest deal awaits you! After a weekend of shopping indulgences, #GivingTuesday is a day to give back and support the causes YOU believe in. This year, find true value by donating to Arts on the Ave charity. Not only will you be supporting the local arts and entertainment that enrich you and your family, but also the equity, health, safety, and vibrancy of Edmonton's core communities.
How does it work? Art has the ability to transcend cultural boundaries and act as a strong binding force that unites people no matter where they are from. That ability is only possible when art is accessible to everyone. With your donation, you are helping us create safer places with creative spaces. By bringing art and beauty to Alberta Avenue, Arts on the Ave supports local artists and encourages positive activity and engagement among residents, business owners, and visitors. This year, we focused on food security, neighbourhood safety, and community arts through our projects: Families Helping Families, Green Alleys, Kaleido Family Arts Festival, Deep Freeze Byzantine Winter Festival, The Carrot Community Arts Coffeehouse, and more!
In honour of Giving Tuesday, we think we're a good choice! Make your dollar go a little further this giving season and donate to Arts on the Ave registered charity with a one-time donation or monthly to provide ongoing support for our programming and many other amazing projects. If there was ever a day to make a contribution to our small charity, it’s today! Your generous donations, volunteerism, and the sharing of our story are helping to regain life, connectivity, and joy in the Alberta Avenue District.
Arts on the Ave Edmonton Society is a registered charity, and we would be pleased to offer a tax receipt for your donation. Thanks for being a difference-maker!
Gallery - November 2022
Noel Rile • Transcendent
Noel Rile
Noel Rile is a Filipino Canadian artist, who specializes in acrylic painting. Popular themes in his masterpiece are train rails. In his gallery exhibition “Transcendent” he will be showcasing different techniques on creating abstract forms with using bright primary colours to emphasize rail forms. Noel hopes every piece of his art revealed his inner soul with his prolific ideas. As well as sharing his workmanship to the community to bring great pleasure and tranquility.
Noel Rile’s work will be on display from November 1 - December 3. Please join us for the opening reception on November 8 at 6:00 pm.
Gallery - October 2022
Islamic Heritage Month
Canadian Prayer Rug
The Canadian Prayer Rug is a tapestry that celebrates the many communities and people who helped nurture and develop the Canadian landscape: from our Indigenous brothers and sisters who worked alongside the early Lebanese and Ukrainian pioneers to build Canada’s first mosque, the Al Rashid, to the thousands of Syrian newcomers who are establishing a home and future in this country. This locally designed and woven tapestry honours the history of our city and celebrates our spirit of collaboration in building thriving and welcoming communities.
The Carrot Islamic Heritage Month gallery exhibition will be on display from October 4 - October 29. Please join us for the opening reception on October 13 at 6:00 pm.
Gallery - August 2022
Julie Drew - Let the Rivers Flow
Julie Drew
Julie Drew
Bio
Julie Drew waits and listens, letting the details of the world around her speak beauty and wonder. Adding her own distinct expression using watercolor and mixed media to capture the depths and nuances of color, light, and shadow, she creates paintings that proclaim peace, mystery, and wonder. Her passion for art led to a BFA in Painting and Drawing from Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, WA, USA in 1987. Julie has been painting for over 35 years. In 1997, Julie moved with her family to Edmonton, Alberta. Although Julie works predominantly in watercolor, she also uses mixed media with her own handmade paper. Julie teaches watercolor, mixed media, acrylic, oil and papermaking. Her art work has been exhibited around Alberta.
Julie’s work will be on display and for sale from August 2 - August 27 . Please join us for the opening reception on August 4 at 6:00 pm.
Gallery - June 2022
Robin Light - House and Home
Robin Light
Robin Light
Bio
Robin Light is an Edmonton based artist living and working in Alberta Ave. She finds inspiration everywhere: this show, House and Home, is influenced by the older homes in her neighborhood, and by the small slices of indoor life, not seen from the street.
Robin’s work will be on display and for sale from May 31 - July 2 . Please join us for the opening reception on June 9 at 7:00 pm.
Gallery - May 2022
Maryann Borch and Elvira Falconer
"Willow and Wool" | May 3rd - May 28th | Gallery Closing Reception: May 24 7-8pm
This May, we are excited to present "Willow and Wool" a collaboration exhibition by Maryann Borch and Elvira Falconer's at the Carrot gallery. Maryann will showcase her baskets and wreaths, focusing on functional art that combines locally grown willows. Elvira's collection of wool felt made of silk and merino captures the whimsical of nature through her wool textile pieces. Through the exploration of natural materials that were use in Maryann's and Elvira's work, promotes discovery and connection with nature.
Maryann Borch
Maryann's focus is on functional art that combines locally grown willows into compostable, yet durable, pieces of useable art. Any activity that brings humans together creating with their hands, soothing in its repetitive gestures, will heal.
Visit Maryann’s facebook for more
Elvira Falconer
Elvira’s relationship and gratitude to the land is enchantingly encapsulated in her whimsical wool felted textile art pieces. She spends many hours in nature among trees and water, capturing their intimate moments by memory or in photographs. She is also a dedicated mistress permaculture artist to her urban food forest in the city of Edmonton, where she was born, and lives with her husband and two children.
Elvira is self taught and has woven her colourful and rich Ukrainian, Slavic and Italian heritage into her textile tapestries spirituality and organically. she blends her culture, post secondary education in the arts and education, dance, and life experience with uninhibited wisdom and practice into all her creations.
Her work is at once inspired by and reflection of her desire for much needed stewardship and kinship to the land, and a reminder to tread sustainably while renewing our relationship to the beauty that nature has gifted us.
Maryann and Elvira’s work will be on display and for sale from May 3 - May 28.
Gallery - April 2022
Robin Light and Olga Duk
Robin Light is an Edmonton-based artist in many respects; she acts and writes in addition to painting in oils and watercolor. Her paintings are influenced by the iconic Bob Ross, who emphasized simplicity and the incorporation of nature. Light's work brilliantly thematically fuses both the industrialized urban landscape of the city, with gorgeously saturated tress, sapling, and shrubs.
View more on Instagram or on Robin’s website
Olga Duk is an award winning Russian-born painter, she began her art training at the age of ten. Working as an Illustrator and as a commission-based artist, she had exhibited in group and solo shows. Now proudly making her home in St. Albert, Alberta. Olga is a member of Painters Guild of St. Albert (SAPG) and VASA (Visual Art Studio Association). She is nominated as an Artist of the year 2013 and 2015 by Art Trends Magazine: her art works got honors of the "People Choice" at the annual St. Albert Painters Guild art shows.
View more on Olga’s Facebook page
Robin and Olga’s work will be on display and for sale from April 1 - April 30.
Black History Month: Black Music Innovation and Influence
Author: Tony Flanagan
Black musicians throughout history have had a rich tradition of innovation and excellence. The popular music of the last several centuries cannot be had without a deep dive into the history of Black music; the Black music of the past several centuries has greatly influenced almost every era of popular music since the colonization of the Americas. All contemporary genres of popular music can be traced back to the music of Black slaves arriving in the Americas. The characteristics and rhythms of this music proliferated throughout the United States, fusing in innumerable ways with the music of other cultures.
The spiritual is perhaps the first notable expression of African-American music, the spirituals being religious songs sung on plantations following the conversion of slaves to Christianity. African-American music began to enter into the American mainstream with the emergence of blackface minstrelsy in the 19th century, racialized performances of African-American “culture,” usually by white performers in blackface. And yet, the American public began to become aware of African-American culture in a major way for the first time. The early 20th century saw the emergence of jazz music, originating from the funeral bands of New Orleans. By mid-century, jazz music had entered the “Swing” era, its heyday as the pop music of its day. In this era, although often performed by white musicians, the music of African-Americans had entered the homes and dance halls of white Americans in a definitive fashion. Simultaneous to these developments in the United States, African music was foundational in the development of the music of Latin American, influencing major styles such as Samba, Bossa Nova and Afro-Cuban.
Although jazz would continue to develop and evolve throughout the 20th century, the new style of post-war African American music fell under the name “Rhythm and Blues,'' and would soon dominate the American mainstream under its synonymous name, “Rock N’ Roll.” Soul music soon emerged as an offshoot from Black gospel music, and together with R&B influenced the emergence of surf rock. As well, the founding of Motown Records in 1959 spawned the Motown Sound, a version of soul music with pop influence, which achieved major commercial and crossover success. These innovations would lead also to the emergence of funk music in the 60s. In 1964, the Civil Rights Act banned many major forms of discrimination, and more African-American artists began to cross over into the mainstream. In the 70s, a tradition of rhyming fused with spoken-word artists resulted in a major new genre, hip-hop, which would develop into rap a decade later. The arrival of Micheal Jackson and his best-selling albums in the 80s served as a definitive turning point and led to a new era of mainstream success for Black artists.
These genres and styles have lasted until today and are still actively pursued by musicians of a variety of ethnicities the world over. However, without the influence of Black musicians, many of these great styles would never have seen the light. Innovators such as Louis Armstrong, Miles Davis, Fats Domino, James Brown, Stevie Wonder, Micheal Jackson and many others changed popular music forever. As well, contemporary song elements such as improvisation, call and response, the backbeat and innumerable others are owed to the influence of African music and Black musicians.
For more information, consider visiting:
What is Black Music? | Center for the Humanities (wustl.edu)
Afrofuturism in Black Music — Timeline of African American Music (carnegiehall.org)
Library - Black Music History Library (blackmusiclibrary.com)
Celebrating Black Music Month | National Museum of African American History and Culture
Gallery - February 2022
Keita Kankam - The Journey, The Journey, Journey, Journey!!!
Keita Kankam
Keita Kankam
Bio
As we travel through, lets hope, be courageous, love and vision be our main aim. Let's express ourselves through our art and music which has always been out source of revelation and inspiration to our ideas and happiness. Let's enjoy the journey for better is the end of it.
Keita’s work will be on display and for sale from February 1 - February 26. Please join us for the closing reception on February 24 at 6pm.
Gallery - November 2021
Noel Rile - Riles
Noel Rile, Riverside, acrylic, 3’ x 4’
Noel Rile
Bio
Noel Rile is a Filipino Canadian artist who specializes in acrylic painting. Popular themes in his masterpieces are train rails. In his gallery exhibition “Riles” he will be showcasing different techniques on creating abstract forms by using bright primary colours to emphasize rail forms. Noel hopes every piece of his art reveals his inner soul and his prolific ideas, as well as sharing his workmanship with the community to bring great pleasure and tranquillity.
Noel’s work will be on display and for sale from November 2 - November 28, 2021.
Gallery - October 2021
Cathy Bible & Jeff Penner
Carrot Gallery & Carrot Front Window Gallery
Cathy Bible
Bio
Cathy Bible lives and works in Edmonton, Canada. Her work has been shown in the Lyrical Art Gallery, A+ Gallery, Kassa Gallery as well in the VASA Gallery.
As an intuitive artist, Cathy’s paintings are never pre-conceived. They come from within, where creativity, expressiveness, and originality reside. Through her hands, fingers and large tools, Cathy captures her intuition through mixed medium on canvas. Spirituality, vitality and a voice mystically emerge. With each glance, one experiences new insights and images emanating from the canvas. The viewer is drawn into a thoughtful, provoking journey. The audiences’ interpretations of her work and their reactions always amaze her. Every individual sees something different which is the reason she doesn’t reveal what she herself sees; that would ruin their experience.
Cathy’s work will be on display and for sale inside the on the Carrot Gallery Walls from October 5 - October 30, 2021
Jeff Penner
Bio
Jeff Penner is an Edmonton based artist and photographer. Since 2008 his work has been featured in a variety venues as he has developed his niche in Edmonton’s photography scene. Much of his photo’s consist of Edmonton landmarks, and the gorgeous nature of Alberta.
Jeff often utilizes hyper-saturation to give his photographs a deep sense of colour, or B&W to illustrate depth, simplicity, and elegance. He also masterfully superimposes photos onto others (demonstrated in the sample photo). His style of work can be described as dreamlike, visionary, and fantastical.
Jeff’s work will be on display and for sale in the Carrot Front Window Gallery from October 5 - October 30, 2021
Gallery - August 2021
Karen Blanchet
Onening
Artist Statement
Oneing
“Oneing” is an ancient English word composed by Julian of Norwich, a twelfth century mystic. She lived through the Black Plague, invasion and social disintegration. Yet, she declared, “All will be well and all manner of thing will be well.” “Oneing” is about hope, the union of creation with the Creator. We have not yet learned how to be one and we can see how, once again, our world is falling apart. The cracks are showing. Perhaps, this time we will see the light. In the meantime, beauty abounds between the cracks and hope springs eternal.
"Oneing" est un ancien mot anglais composé par Julian de Norwich, une mystique du douzième siècle. Elle a vécu la peste noire, les invasions et la désintégration sociale. Pourtant, elle a déclaré : "Tout ira bien et toutes sortes de choses iront bien." "Oneing" parle d'espoir, de l'union de la création avec le Créateur. Nous n'avons pas encore appris à être un et nous pouvons voir comment, une fois de plus, notre monde s'effondre. Les fissures sont visibles. Peut-être, cette fois, verrons-nous la lumière. En attendant, la beauté abonde entre les fissures et l'espoir est éternel.
Karen’s work will be on display and for sale from August 3 - August 29
Please join us Thursday, August 12 from 7-8pm for the Opening Reception (9351 - 118 Ave)
Gallery - July 2021
Olga Duk & Marina Bazos
Romance is in the Summer
Artist Bios
Olga Duk is an award winning Russian-born painter, she began her art training at the age of ten. Olga continued her art education at the Fine Art Academy, mastering the principles of the "Academic style" and developing a passion for her preferred mediums, oil and watercolor. Working as a an illustrator and as a commission-based artist, she had exhibited in group and solo shows in Russia. Now proudly making her home in St. Albert, Alberta. Olga has begun exhibiting her work in Canada. Olga Duk is a member of Painters Guild of St. Albert (SAPG) and VASA (Visual Art Studio Association). Olga was nominated as an Artist of the year 2013 and 2015 by Art Trends Magazine: her art works got honors of the "People Choice" at the annual St. Albert Painters Guild art shows. Her works can be found in private collections in Canada, Greece, Germany and Russia.
Marina Bazos paints using oils on canvas. Her paintings show her appreciation for cityscape. The language of her painting was developed through the process of her life experiences. She combines the technique of old masters with more modern ones. Through the use of these techniques, she attempts to endow specific moods to her paintings. She creates paintings that invoke a specific emotions or feeling from the viewer.
Olga & Marina’s work will be on display and for sale from July 6 - August 1.
Honouring and celebrating the life of Dr. Dick Au
A dear friend and champion in the community, Dr. Dick Au was our superhero
His supersonic heart made him attuned to the needs of others, although some may argue he also had mind-reading superpowers. Morphing and rolling with the punches, he was an ironman cast who could play any role. As a volunteer, Dr. Au waited until everyone signed-up, then filled the empty shifts he could. He teleported from managing fires to giant puppet stilt-walking, and even tried his hand at chestnut roasting. If he had a super-suit, it would have to include his signature finger-toe shoes.
Dr. Au was a familiar and friendly face at every Deep Freeze Festival and Kaleido Family Arts Festival. Each year, he made it a family affair by bringing along his family and their friends, also known as the “Au Crew.” He was a role model to the youth volunteers, and we’ve watched his son Eric grow into being the Robin to his Batman.
We’re so grateful for the traditions we’ve made together. Memories of Jingle Jammin’ and belting our hearts out together as we carolled through the streets of Alberta Avenue will be forever cherished.
Altruistic and full of energy, Dr. Au inspired many others to give back. We’ll always remember the year when Dr. Au found twelve friends to volunteer when his family couldn’t make it. His work and commitment to the community is a reverberating legacy that makes him the ultimate immortal superhero.
A private funeral service will be held at St. Thomas More Parish. A livestream of the service will be available at www.youtube.com/watch?v=I8q11evpZ_M. In lieu of flowers, please consider donating in his memory to Arts on the Ave's Dr. Au Memorial Celebration Fund. To send condolences, please visit www.connelly-mckinley.com.
To help continue Dr. Au’s work of community making, click here to stay in the know about Arts on the Ave’s initiatives and how you can be a part of it.
Gallery - June 2021
Darren Kooyman - 2016 + 1
Darren Kooyman is an Edmonton artist whose work consists primarily of abstract acrylic painting. He also work in screen-printing, digital imaging, and musical composition.
Artist Bio
Darren Kooyman, June Artist
For Darren Kooyman, art has always been a part of his life. From creating mesmerizing art pieces, to performing with several bands, art flows in his veins, the same as blood. Drawing inspiration from everything around him, his creativity has no true bounds.
After receiving a Digital Arts degree from Red Deer college, Darren played in several bands in Alberta, eventually leading to him and his wife, Diane, to move to Vancouver. After the band he was performing with had broken up, Darren had decided it was time to “shake himself loose”, and express his artistic desires in other ways. His solution? Return to his roots of painting. Finding a warehouse close to Downtown where he could operate out of, Darren immediately jumped back into painting. Finding some success within the Vancouver art scene, Darren and Diane moved to Ottawa, Ontario. It was with this move where Darren began a proper practice. Immediately on the hunt for a new space for his arts, he began to make connections, leading to his art to be featured in galleries such as Studio Sixty-Six Art Gallery.
Eventually it was time for Darren and his family to move back to Alberta. However, this would not be done without one last exhibit. One last grad show; an accumulation of everything he had been through at this point. That exhibit was 2016 + 1. An autobiography of Darren Kooyman.
Now being featured in The Carrot Community Arts Coffeehouse for the month of June, 2016 + 1 has found a space within the 118th Avenue Community. When asked how Darren felt about being a part of our community and our mission, he stated that “What’s happening at The Carrot, and the whole, and how they’re throwing their weight behind the arts, more areas need to do that. It makes things better for everybody”.
As a group that agrees that art has the power to transform everything around them, we are excited to feature Darren Kooyman’s exhibit 2016 + 1 at The Carrot, and to have him be a part of the community.
Artist Statement
In this body of work my approach is from a technical area of painting. I wanted to put as little space as possible between the vision and the performance of creating the work. I used a limited palette and spent very little time mixing colours using most paint straight from the tube.
Many of the works are smaller than I have done in the past, which is largely due to a smaller work environment. This down sizing has also led to a more economical use of materials and a deeper connection from painting to painting.
Darren’s work will be on display and for sale from June 1 - July 4.
Website: darrenkooyman.com
Carrot Window Gallery - May 2021
Robin Light Window Gallery Feature
Robin Light, Alberta Ave Alleyway, 24” x 48”
Robin Light is an Edmonton-based artist in many respects; she acts and writes in addition to painting in oils and watercolour. Her paintings are influenced by the iconic painter Bob Ross, who emphasized simplicity and the incorporation of nature. Light’s work brilliantly thematically fuses both the industrialized urban landscape of the city, with gorgeously saturated trees, saplings, and shrubs. Furthermore, Light’s focus on traditional and rural architecture gives their work a dreamy rural-Albertan undertone.
Light’s brick and mortar structures, picketed fences, and their vibrant pigmentation, calls back to an era of calm familiarity and captures Canadian traditionalist culture. The integration of nature into the city’s urban environment is seamless, the congested proximity of the buildings enhances the work’s sense of community and belonging. The rustic style of the buildings offers a homey and welcoming ambience. Their oil-based texture creates a highly stimulating sense of depth and detail that respects the complexity of the building’s architecture.
Instagram: @robinlight
Website: www.robinlight.com
Robin Light, In the Alley, 8” x 16”
Robin Light, Side Alley Stroll, 8” x 16”
Robin Light, Laundry Day in Parkade, 20” x 20”
Gallery - May 2021
The Haykowsky’s - Dother Maughter
Carmella and Mika Haykowsky — a mother/daughter duo based in Edmonton, AB, are featured in this month’s gallery.
Ten years ago, they presented their work together at The Carrot, which was Mika's first time exhibiting. A decade later, with more insights into their creative practice, more experience exhibiting, and more education, these two accredited artists are eager to show new work. The exhibition title is a play on the mother-daughter, "Dother Maughter," and their hope is to play on the collaborative influence of close family bonds on their creative work. This manifests in many ways, namely through depictions of each other in artwork.
Carmella Haykowsky contrasts her daughter Mika’s surreal work with a dramatic yet realist portrait-style. The work takes a darker approach to the ordinary life of a mother, with shots of women figures sitting alone, pondering, and of course drinking coffee. The use of a grey scale brilliantly contrasts the deep oranges and warm colours which brings the portraits to life. The scale offers a calming and authentic experience to its audience. While some of the subjects within the portraits express a sense of tranquillity and peace, others express a deep sense of anxiety and even distress which gives these works a true feel to the life of the ordinary individual.
Mika Haykowsky Drawing in Circles collection brilliantly exhibits a spectrum of colours with its astral and psychedelic vibe. The soft pastel art was created with the practice of automatic drawing, which gives the work its elegant and plasmic flow. Drawing in Circles offers a dimensional expedition into the unconscious through the complexity of its organic architecture. These works were manifested with the intention for the audience to stop, pause, and experience both the arousal and dormancy that they offer.
Instagram: @kahousemi
Website: www.mikah.ca
Gallery - April 2021
Angie Sotiropoulos and Edith Chu - Home: Near and Far
Angie Sotiropoulos, Zocalo, 18” x 14”, watercolour and ink
This April, The Carrot Gallery is pleased to present a duo exhibition, Home: Near and Far, featuring works by Edith Chu and Angie Sotiropoulos. From local Edmonton storefronts to the canals of Li Jiang, China, each artist immortalizes the places and stories of communities they have lived and visited. All artwork is available for sale.
Artist Bios
Angie Sotiropoulos is a visual artist based in Edmonton, Alberta. Formally trained as a Props Artisan and Scenic Painter for theatre at MacEwan College (now university), she has been working in the entertainment industry for over 20 years. In her personal artistic practise she is a sculptor and watercolour painter that puts storytelling and world building at the centre of her creations. A member of both the Sculptor’s Association of Alberta and the International Urban Sketcher’s Edmonton chapter, she loves creating quirky creature sculptures and drawing her community on location in urban sketches. She has exhibited her work in group shows in Canada and the UK and her work can be purchased at small local galleries and online through her web store or local art and craft fairs. A lover of all things nature, when not in the studio she enjoys travelling with her partner or can be found tending to her ever-growing menagerie of plants.
To learn more about Angie’s work and upcoming shows, visit her website at www.angiesot.com.
Edith Chu, Panda Chess, 9"X12", watercolour
Edith Chu was born in Paris, France, to Chinese parents who were originally from Hong Kong and immigrated to Edmonton, Alberta when she was 2 years old. As a child, she often felt lost in class because she didn't understand the teacher's instructions. Art became her favourite subject because she enjoyed creating art, and she was good at it.
She graduated from the University of Alberta with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 2001, with a major in Printmaking. From there she worked for F & D Scene Changes, painting sets and scenery for theatre and commercial use.
She worked alongside many great artists. One of her mentors, Johnny Chong, encouraged her to pursue drawing in order to improve her art. She kept that piece of advice for later. In 2004 Edith went back to the U of A to further her studies by getting an education degree.
Ms.Chu became a professional teacher for the next 10 years. In between teaching she took several art classes that passed on the techniques of the old masters (Classical Realism).
Edith uses drawing and painting to depict nostalgic scenes. Her work often tells a story or makes a reference to how things used to be.
She currently resides in Edmonton.
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/edith.h.chu/?hl=en
Website: https://edithhchu.wixsite.com/mysite
Gallery - March 2021
Gallery - March 2021
March 2, 2021
Spyder Yardley-Jones
About the Artist
Spyder Yardley- Jones is an Edmonton artist whose art shows have shocked and awed the public in Canada and USA. He works in a variety of styles and mediums such as; cartoons, graphic art, murals, street arts, poster art, sculpture, watercolor, graphite, acrylic, and oil painting.
This March, we are exhibiting Spyder Yardley- Jones works “Euphoria”, where he demonstrates color harmony and abstract patterns to express thoughts and emotions. Viewers can interpret his works in various perpective, and with that it can start discussion about mental health.
For more, visit spyderyardleyjonesblog.wordpress.com/about/
Gallery - February 2021
Gallery - February 2021
February 2, 2021
Raneece Buddan
Artist Statement
My process is based on my research on traditional and contemporary art from each culture. I try to explore different processes from each as my foundation. The goal of each piece is to learn more about myself throughout the process..
About the Artist
Raneece’s work focuses on her cultural identity as a Jamaican woman of African and East Indian descent. She depicts the merging of both cultures with the use of fabric from each. The fabric is used as an additional identifier for who she is, rather than her skin tone. She discovers the figure within the grains of the wood adding the fabric and elements of realism.
For more, visit www.raneecebuddan.com
