Vancouver Magazine
Opening Soon: A Japanese-Style Bagel Shop in Downtown Vancouver
The Broadway/Cambie Corridor Has Become a Hub for Excellent Chinese Restaurants
Flaky, Fluffy and Freaking Delicious: Vancouver’s Top Fry Bread and Bannock
Protected: The Wick is Lit for This Fraser Valley Winery
Wine Collab of the Week: The Best Bottle to Welcome a Vancouver Spring
Naked Malt Blended Malt Scotch Whisky Celebrates Versatility and Spirit
Coyotes, Crows and Flying Ants: All of Your Vancouver Wildlife Questions, Answered
The Orpheum to Launch ‘Silent Movie Mondays’ This Spring
5 Things to Do in Vancouver This Week (March 27-April 2)
What It’s Like to Get Lost on a Run With a Pro Trail Runner
8 Things to Do in Abbotsford (Even If It’s Pouring Rain)
Explore the Rockies by Rail with Rocky Mountaineer
The Future of Beauty: How One Medical Aesthetics Clinic is Changing the Game
4 Fashion Designers From African Fashion Week Vancouver to Put on Your Radar
Before Hibernation Season Ends: A Round-Up of the Coziest Shopping Picks
Having noticed that the art he most admired rarely found its way into local shows, WAAP art proprietor Wil Aballe decided an exhibition space in his 450-square-foot Scotia Street apartment was as good as anywhere. “There are so many great young artists in Vancouver, but very few avenues to exhibit,” Aballe, 36, explains in his trim home, “but ultimately, art flourishes where there is a will.”
Or a Wil. In January 2013, after a three-year stint programming for the Contemporary Art Society of Vancouver, he set his sights on his studio’s “perfectly good” walls. “Galleries needn’t be stark cubes,” he says. Soon WAAP (“very Lichtenstein, like ‘BAM!’ It sounds like a slap”) had its first show. “Art is most interesting in a domestic setting where it’s integrated within a life.” For Aballe, that life coalesces comfortably with the challenging work that fascinates him, even when his daily existence is just that. “Most often I’m lying on the couch, laughing at YouTube videos. Then somebody rings the buzzer to come see the show, and it’s business as usual.