Sylvie Parent on Thu, 4 Oct 2001 16:37:12 +0200 (CEST) |
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LOCATION/DISLOCATION
http://www.deplacement.qc.ca
info@deplacement.qc.ca
Curators: Valérie Lamontagne & Sylvie Parent
Media Z Lounge & on the Web
New Museum of Contemporary Art
583 Broadway, New York, NY, 10012
(212) 219-1222
http://www.newmuseum.org
Exhibition: September 25 – October 7, 2001
Artists:
Æ (Gisèle Trudel & Stéphane Claude)
Atelier in situ (Annie Lebel & Stéphane Pratte)
Yan Breuleux
Johnny Ranger
Bill Sullivan
[The User] (Thomas McIntosh & Emmanuel Madan)
Nancy Tobin
Brad Todd
LOCATION/DISLOCATION
At a time when cyberspace is still being mapped out, this exhibition
profiles seven Web-based projects
by Québec artists investigating concepts of “place” on the Internet.
Artist Yan Breuleux compares the evolving “geography” of the internet
to the growth of a new continent,
where questions of power, difference, negotiation, and points of access
come into play. In
NeverEndingStories, Breuleux culls graphic signs whose meanings
are recognizable across borders and
cultures.
Several of the works consider how notions of architectural space are
affected by the relationship
between the physical and virtual. Green, by the Æ collective
(Gisèle Trudel and Stéphane Claude), pays
homage to the work of visionary landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted,
creator of New York
City’s Central Park and Montréal’s Mont-Royal Park. Johnny Ranger
and Bill Sullivan’s
Everywhere/tout par tout questions the place of the individual
and how identity changes through the
shifting contexts of real and fabricated environments. Brad Todd’s
Utopia PKWY takes Joseph
Cornell’s house (Utopia Parkway, Queens, New York) as a motif, and
transforms it into a Web-based
multimedia collage evocative of Cornell’s signature boxes. In
the main gallery space s(e)izing nyc, 1 :
10 000 : 1 by the architectural collective Atelier in situ (Annie
Lebel and Stéphane Pratte) has as its
central motif New York City’s measured urban grid. Within this grid,
the New Museum and the viewer
are featured in a series of spatial and temporal transpositions that
echo the experience of displacement on
the Web.
The temporal aspect of navigating on the Web is a key concern for artist
Nancy Tobin. Inspired by the
ubiquitous rest areas on North American highways, Tobin’s RESTAREA
is a “stop” in cyberspace
where the viewer is invited to wait without interaction. In contrast,
the Silophone project by [The User]
(Thomas McIntosh and Emmanuel Madan) transforms an emblematic industrial
Montréal construction,
Silo #5, into an interactive musical instrument that can be played
at a distance via telephone lines and the
Web.
This exhibition received support from Québec New York 2001, the
Conseil des arts et des lettres du
Québec and the Department of Foreign Affairs and International
Trade of Canada. Promotional support
was also provided by Parachute magazine. Artbyte is the
media sponsor of Digital Culture Evenings at
Media Z Lounge.
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