Three Towns on a River
John Dickson, Jim Hong Louie, Max Streicher
In- and out-door sculptures
July 4 - August 4, 2002
The Durham Art Gallery has commissioned
three site-specific, sculptural installations in the Saugeen
River as it winds through the neighbouring towns of Durham,
Hanover and Walkerton. John Dickson, Jim Hong Louie and
Max Streicher have installed new works that address the
symbolic and cultural significance of the river to the
communities it has historically linked. The Durham Art
Gallery is exhibiting other pieces by the three artists,
contextualising their work in the present project.
Gallery curator, Tony Massett, selected
the three artists who have each created previous work,
which has elements in common with this project:
- John Dickson has employed water as
the sculptural focus in his work, evoking an elemental
metaphor for the conscious and subconscious relationships
to environmental anxiety.
- Jim Hong Louie has created installations
which simulate natural phenomena, such as eel migration,
and address the symbolic value animals and fish play in
various cultures.
- Max Streicher has used the public domain
as the backdrop for his inflated sculptures, deploying
his giant figures into an architectural and intensely
public setting.
The Saugeen River was chosen as the site
for this project because it has played a significant role
in the commerce and development of the three towns. This
artery of trade and communication was the binding force-the
symbol of power that drove industry in the area during
the nineteenth century. The Walkerton crisis and the Durham
flood brought increased attention to the essential role
of water in our lives. While rural towns and communities
everywhere share many characteristics, this exhibition
will mark the Saugeen River as the symbol of our commonality.
John Dickson presented in Durham
at the Middle Dam
The house that sinks but also rises.
A scale replica of a house roughly 3 feet by 4 feet that
will float in the deep water above the dam. Connected
to the shore by a rubber umbilicus that leads to an air
compressor which, as its brain and lungs, allows the house
to submerge on cue and likewise return back to the surface.
The model home as an ideal stable environment
is somewhat challenged by this precarious position of
floating on water. The housing market in which one floats
or sinks, a necessity of circumstances to which we fall
victim. Water: the medium of decision and reflex, sink
or swim.
Dickson views the challenge of home ownership and the
accompanying desire of rearing family, juggling debt and
peace of mind, as unstable in an anxious environment.
John
Dickson
The dam- demands the smothering of vast tracts of land
to serve its purpose. One need only observe the Three
Gorges Dam in China and the widespread displacement of
people, submerging its culture to placate the whims of
progress and economic power. Power like the wind, not
visible, assessed only by its repercussions.
Jim Hong Louie presented in Hanover,
up-stream from the bridge at Karl-Speck-Wilken Park
Four carved, wooden, over life-size Atlantic
salmon swim the current in their inevitable quest of instinct
and desire.
The Atlantic salmon was at one time
a native to these streams and rivers.
The demise of the fish occurred over
a hundred years ago due the environmental impact that
civilisation had on the landscape. The land locked salmon
of the Great Lakes upstream from Niagara Falls evolved
into a different fish due to its inability to complete
the salt water cycle of its predestined life. The salmon
that Louie has contrived is an ideal,the
Jim Hong Louie
shared characteristics of both these fish.
The work addresses the indomitable spirit and celebration
of a species. To anthropromorphise the salmon as an extension
of our own desire is to imbue nature with the awe of a spiritual
revelation.
Max Streicher presented in
Walkerton at the Lobies Park Bridge, Yonge St. North
A large, lightweight inflated head,
14 feet by 10 feet, lolling in the stream of a river,
metaphor of continuity and change.
Streicher fabricates his sculptures out of 'Tyvec,'
the industrial fabric of a paper-like quality used
in the construction industry. Having developed the
pattern making skills of a seamstress, the pieces
are formed and transformed with the aid of a sewing
machine into sculptural forms of a fragile, ephemeral
nature.
Working the figure in the monumental continues as
a preoccupation, be it a marker or artefact of lost
time or ideal. The disembodied head as a Colossus
of Rhodes, the demise of culture, or the mind body
split. The elevated importance signified in monumentalising
the human form, the cult of the personality, or
the glorious oppression by the state.
The Head of State or the State of the Head, another
ruin, another broken pediment, a lost ideal floating
in the stream of unconsciousness.
Max Streicher
- Tony Massett, curator
Special thanks to The Great Lakes Frame
Company who generously supplied the materials for Jim
Hong Louie's installation.
|