TEST SITE: Jaime Angelopoulos, Eshrat Erfanian, Elle Flanders, Zev Farber, Lauren Goldman,
Risa Horowitz, Anthony Koutras, Catherine
Lane, Julieta Maria, Troy Ouellette, Cheryl
Rondeau, Dustin Wenzel

January 23 - March 21, 2010
Opening Reception: Saturday, January 23, 2 - 4 pm

Scrabble Tournament
with Risa Horowitz
Saturday, February 6, 1 - 4

Road Movie
Elle Flanders
Friday, March 12, 7:30

Nuclear weapons tests are carried out to determine effectiveness, yield, and explosive capability. Throughout the twentieth century most nations that developed nuclear weapons experimented with their potential and strength. These tests are conducted on barren terrain or underwater. The experiments generate vital information about how the weapons work and behave under varying conditions, as well as how surrounding structures ‘react’ to the explosions. Nuclear tests are also overtly political, being used to demonstrate both scientific mastery and military strength.

The Fine Art graduate and doctoral students in Visual Arts & Culture at York University are conducting their own experiments for Test Site, an exhibition at the Durham Art Gallery, investigating the impact of their work on new audiences. In preparation for their upcoming theses defenses, the graduating students will be able to study the effects of their work though engagement and critical feedback. As a site for new ideas, projects, and exchanges, the gallery’s grounds are being used to review the potential of ideas and the strength of mediums, gauging the force of the work at this critical juncture in their education. Most are works in progress, pliable and open for interpretation, making visible layers of information and results of labour.


Troy Oulette

Anthony Koutras’ mock-ups are one example of this visibility. Koutras allows us behind the scenes as the trickery of his photographic practice becomes transparent. Manipulating scale, he unveils the models used to create his carefully constructed photographs. Documenting banal urban objects (garbage cans, mailboxes, pylons, etc.), he builds three-dimensional models, photographs the minute replications, and then greatly enlarges these images creating a visible lineage of reproduction. Troy Ouellette also controls scale with his maquettes of satellites. Built from recycled plastic bottles, the translucent structures hover in space surrounded by schematic drawings of the fnal productions. While Ouellette diminishes the size of his hypothetical models, sculptor Jaime Angelopoulos blows hers up with large-scale works on paper that act as plans for dimensional designs.


Zev Farber

Examining a new direction, Lauren Goldman’s abstract work is still in development and brings together the studio and the white cube. The work is a replication of one of her studio walls that has been transported from York University to the gallery in Durham. The wall presents a series of figurative paintings. The haunting video of Dustin Wenzel shows another work-in-progress: A rotating three-dimensional graphic constructed from schematic diagrams of organic forms which have been doubled, shifted, or otherwise altered. An adaptation of Zev Farber’s is also proposed, with a selection from a much larger, ongoing fictitious narrative investigation. Julieta Maria’s videos are decidedly more abstract, documenting performances of destruction, reconstitution and the carefully positioned works of Catherine Lane that weave into the administrative fabric of the Durham Art Gallery’s office and visitor information section, creating a comic book effect in clerical surroundings.


Cheryl Rondeau

Cheryl Rondeau’s chronicles come by way of quick video flashes from the bike lane. Her expeditions transport the viewer from point A to point B via video recorded from the perspective of the handlebars of her bicycle. The monotony of repetition is played out through the interweaving and multiplication of both time-lapse photography and video taken over the course of a few weeks. 43˚38’23”N 79˚25’55”W <--> 44˚00’33”N 79˚33’50”W is a mesmerizing view of one commuter’s journey. Eshrat Erfanian produced a new video installation specifically for this exhibition. Two seemingly homogenous landscapes shift into one another, making it difficult to discern the origin of either. These landscapes are, however, very different geographically, politically, and socially. One world (Tehran, Iran) is a major city in a country fraught with conflict while the other (Durham, Ontario) is a small rural community with a quiet simplicity. Shown in tandem, the two scenes resolve to become one with the innocence of a child’s winter play.

Testing presentation strategies of video installation, Elle Flanders will stage a one-night screening of a series of short films. Road Movie is a preview of a twelve-screen installation developed for the Toronto Palestine Film Festival. Each film takes us on a small journey on what have become known as the ‘Apartheid Roads’ in contemporary Palestine. In another event, Risa Horowitz builds an arsenal for future works of word play by hosting a friendly challenge to the local residents in a Scrabble throw-down. The word game has become a hobby informing her practice through research and accumulation, creating pairings and points that are recognized in the secret world of competitive Scrabble. All of the artists in this project are responding to new interests, breaking ground for new ideas, and allowing the reverberations to change the shape of their practice. Test Site addresses the explosive potential in the presentation of their work and hope to measure  the  seismic  effects  of  interaction  and dialogue.

The Durham Art Gallery has a history of supporting visual art graduate programs, bringing  in  students from  the Ontario College of Art & Design, Guelph University,  the University  of Western Ontario,  the University  of Waterloo, Georgian College in Barrie and UofT at Sheridan. Like the Nevada Nuclear Test Site, now a tourist attraction garnering hundreds of observers to see the mushroom  clouds, the gallery has lured an audience to view the work  of  recent graduates. We thank them for their continued support and recognition.

— Suzanne Carte-Blanchenot

 


COMMON GROUND

Last spring, our artistic director Ilse Gassinger spearheaded a community art project to engage and connect seniors, students and unemployed people through creative activities. The exhibition Common Ground is a snapshot of the project and features original art works and photographic documentation. Eighty-three people from our community, from two to 107 years of age, contributed to the success of the project.


Senior citizens took the lead in transforming the gallery’s backyard into a vibrant and aesthetically pleasing landscape. A paved courtyard (installed to perfection by Paul Lefebvre and family) surrounded by raised flower beds is the stunning focal point of the gallery’s backyard area. The latest addition is a large metal sculpture mounted on the back wall of the building in the first week of January. Come summer, flowers and vine will grow along this elegant structure created by John Smith, Michael Elvidge and Dan Duquette.


Tony Luciani


Pief Weyman


Michael Tweed

Local artists Tony Luciani, Pief Weyman, Gina Duque, and Michael Tweed provided their expertise to the project and engaged students from the Edge Hill School, Kids ’N Us and seniors from Rockwood Terrace in reminiscence-based creative activities. Some of the results are on display on the main floor of Rockwood Terrace, 575 Saddler Street East, in Durham (accessible to everyone during day time).

The next steps will involve the creation of collages based on images and texts that came out of this project. The final works will be transferred to photo panels and banners for outdoor display on gallery grounds and along the Heritage Walkway Bridge, marking our 30th anniversary.

Many thanks to all the wonderful people who helped and contributed to the project as well as to The Government of Canada’s New Horizons for Seniors Program, the Community Foundation Grey Bruce, the Municipality of West Grey, Paul Lefebvre’s Gardenworth and Georg Maier’s The Hedges.

 


 

Ontario Arts Council

 

 



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