 |
| September
2003 |
 |
Vol.22
No. 7 |
| A
publication of the International Sculpture Center |
Forum:
Odyssey in the Okanagan
by Jon Barlow Hudson
<Back
to Contents page>

Work by Bill Vazan created at OTISS. |
The Austrian
model sculpture symposium was initiated in 1959 by sculptors Karl
Prantl and Mathias Heitz, who were inspired by previous symposia in Yugoslavia
in the early 50s. In this type of symposium, an entity, whether
sculptor-run or otherwise, invites sculptors to a community, quarry, or
work-site to make sculpture with locally available materials, such as
stone or wood, and to work in full view of the public. The sculptors are
provided with room and board, sometimes with a travel allowance and honorarium
as well. The resulting sculpture usually remains with the host community.
Since the sculptors live, work, and sympose together in close
proximity, i.e., eat, drink, and discuss, a camaraderie develops among
them.
The Okanagan-Thompson
International Sculpture Symposium (OTISS) took place in the valley of
the Okanagan Lake, in south-central British Columbia, Canada. It was scheduled
to last for three months, from mid-May to the end of August 2002 (though
in reality the process took much longer), and included eight different
host communities with 20 sculptors divided among them, 10 Canadian and
10 international. OTISS was planned as the most geographically extensive
symposium in Canada, with the largest budget, estimated at 1.5 million
Canadian dollars.
A panel of five notable
professors, critics, and artists chose the participating sculptors from
3,500 slide submissions. Many of the sculptors arrived in British Columbia
expecting their materials to be on hand so they could begin work, but
in some cases it took up to a month to obtain appropriate materials and
get started with the project. The materials used include granite, marble,
jade, steel, bronze, stainless steel, wood, saplings, and environmental
elements.

Work by Jon Barlow Hudson created at OTISS. |
All of the overseas
sculptors came with experience at other international symposia following
the original Austrian model. As it transpired, the Okanagan symposium
was more of an association of sculpture commissions than a symposium.
Since the sites spread over 200 mountainous kilometers, the original model
became impractical. Even within a community that hosted four artists,
such as Penticton, the sculptors lived and worked in different areas of
town, using unrelated materials and facing transportation and communication
problems. Despite the hurdles and distances, most of the sculptors in
the symposium became good friends, thanks to individual initiative and
various planned social events in the communities. The photo-documentary
team of Joyce and Bill De Meester of Kelowna, who brought friendship,
information, and assistance during their visits to each work-site, also
helped to unify the sculptors.
The sculptors were
dispersed as follows: the British team of Philip Bews and Diane Gorvin,
Marion Jamieson of British Columbia, Dawn MacNutt of Nova Scotia, and
Zhao Lei of China were based in Kelowna; Giles Kent of England, Geert
Maas of British Columbia, Percy Zorrilla Soto of Peru, and Bill Vazan
of Quebec were installed in Kamloops; Caroline Ramersdorfer of Austria,
Tanya Preminger of Israel, and Deborah Wilson of British Columbia were
billeted in Vernon; Fahcheong Chong of British Columbia, Lorna Green of
England, Yoshio Yagi and his friend/assistant Mitsunori Koike of Japan,
and myself were in Penticton; Toru Fujibayashi of British Columbia and
Zhu Shangxi of China worked in Lake Country; Steward Steinhauer of Alberta
camped in Summerland; the team of Don and Amy Dickson were situated near
the U.S. border in Osoyoos; and Jock Hildebrand of British Columbia, who
helped bring the symposium to fruition, was established in Westbank, headquarters
of OTISS.
For those sculptors
working in stone, the majority of the material was donated: white marble
from Vancouver Island and both granite and marble from outside Vernon,
the acquisition of which was an adventure in itself. Some pine logs were
donated, but steel, stainless steel, bronze casting, and earthworks had
to be paid for or supplied with in kind arrangements.
Not long after the
sculptors arrived, OTISSs Board of Directors announced that because
a significant portion of the funding had fallen through, construction
budgets would have to be cut in half. The artists were also asked to accept
cuts in their contracted commissions. The news was not enthusiastically
received and cast a tone of uncertainty over the symposium. As time went
on, the limitation on construction expenses caused more difficulties for
some than others. When the second progress payments began to be doled
out piecemeal and then not at all and expense-reimbursement went on hold,
dissatisfaction mounted. Frustration turned to action very near the end,
as most of the artists collaborated in a letter to OTISS, requesting that
it honor the contractual commitment.
About mid-way through
the project, the sculptors were asked if they would be willing to donate
a small-scale sculpture for a fund-raising auction, to be held at a spectacular,
de Chirico-esque hilltop winery overlooking the Okanagan, near Westbank,
which most of them did, although two artists (supported by the others)
boycotted it. Works were sold and funds raised, but finances still fell
far short of the requisite sum, despite the heroic efforts of the OTISS
staff, many
of whom were volunteers.
Despite the various
difficulties, the sculptors continued optimistically. It is a tribute
to their professionalism and dedication that they all completed and installed
their sculptures as they had contracted to do. These installations continued
into May 2003, when the last ones were completed. OTISS continues to seek
funds and has recently received a significant grant, but only for present
and future expenses, supporting the vision of another symposium. As of
June 2003, a local paper reported that the last community was paying off
the final installments owed the sculptors. This project has been an example
of what can go right and what can go wrong with public art projects; but
with vision, dedication, and a mountain of hard work by a lot of folks,
it can be successful.
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