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| September
2004 |
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Vol.
23 No. 7 |
| A
publication of the International Sculpture Center |
Site
"Shore/lines:"
Responding to Place in Barrie, Ontario, Canada
by Gil
McElroy
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to Contents page>
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John
McEwen, Babylon and the Tower of Babel, 1991.
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About an hours
drive north of Toronto, Ontario, the city of Barrie (pop. 103,000) is
a place that seems to exist for the benefit of any reason other than itself.
To some people, its little more than a bedroom community for Toronto-bound
commuters. To others, its an unofficial gateway to the
relative wilds of northern Ontario. And to still others, it marks the
beginning of an area known as the Muskokas, a region of innumerable lakes
that has long been a summer and winter playground for those who can afford
it.
Barrie is, in fact,
all of those things. But it is also a long-established community in its
own right, one that celebrated its sesquicentennial in 2003. As part of
that celebration, the McLaren Art Centre in Barrie organized "Shore/lines:
Responding to Place," a major exhibition of site-specific artworks
situated at 15 different locations scattered throughout the city between
May and October. Thousands of years ago, this area was part of the shoreline
of a large, glacial lake; in more recent history, it was a stopone
end of a long portage between lakes, actuallyalong a route used
by the native (or First Nations) inhabitants and, later, European explorers
and fur traders. Appropriately, then, the 18 participants in Shore/lines
included regional, First Nations, national, and international artists,
all of whom were asked to respond to the environmentsecological,
social, and commercialthat now form this small city in Ontario set
along the shores of Kempenfelt Bay. Works were mounted by Betty Beaumont
(U.S.), Bill Vazan (Canada), Gilles Bruni and Marc Babarit (France), Derek
Martin (Barrie), and Mike MacDonald (Canadian First Nations), among others.
Location, as they say, is everything, and when the aesthetic dust settled
it was two separate worksone by Alfio Bonanno, a Denmark-based artist
who was born in Italy, the other by John McEwen, a prominent Canadian
sculptorthat posed the most interesting responses to the relevance
of site-specificity and the meaning of responding to place.
With his installation
Between Land and Water (2003), Bonanno chose to work with a section of
living shoreline in order to explicate the relationship between land and
water in this transitional zone. While scouting a location for his work,
Bonanno made an aesthetic link between the pods of common milkweed plants
he found littered around the shorelines of Kempenfelt Bay and the burgeoning
growth of non-indigenous zebra mussels, which are progressively destroying
the natural freshwater ecosystem here and throughout a large part of eastern
North America. (The mussels were introduced into North America 20 years
ago by freighters discharging ballast waters in which they were stowaways.)
Bonannos investigation of site resulted in a series of five large
pod-like formseach several meters in length and made of woven saplings
weighted down with a ballast of small stonesinstalled in a line
that runs from the top of a sandy ridge overlooking the water, down along
its slope, and finally out into the water itself.
Bonannos pods
carry other baggage, starting with likeness. There are obvious formal
and material resemblances to watercraft, such as the reed watercraft common
to several cultures. Perhaps the pods even reference the craft constructed
of papyrus that Thor Heyerdahl sailed across the Atlantic in 1970 (from
Africa to the Americas) to demonstrate the possibility of such voyagesand
perhaps even migrationsoccurring well before Columbus. With the
specter of mobility and migration raised, Bonannos exploitation
of the tensions between indigenous and non-indigenous has an powerful
applicability that goes far beyond simply the regional issue of invasive
mussels and into areas of ethnicity and national identity. Between Land
and Water transcends its site-specificity while firmly rooting itself
in the local.
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Alfio
Bonanno, Between Land and Water, 2003.
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The flip side of
all of this was McEwens Babylon and the Tower of Babel (1991). Its
not a new work, nor was it ever intended for placement along the Barrie
waterfront. But, as part of "Shore/lines," it has found itself
right at the very edge of Kempenfelt Bay in a popular waterside park,
paralleling a biking/walking path and situated directly opposite two small
rocky islands. Theres a history here that needs telling. Babylon
and the Tower of Babel began its aesthetic life as an outdoor installation
at the McMichael Collection of Canadian Art, located just north of Toronto
in Kleinberg, Ontario. Its home to a large and renowned collection
of early 20th-century Canadian landscape paintings originally assembled
by collector Robert McMichael and donated to the province of Ontario in
1965. McEwens work was permanently acquired by the collection in
1993 after having been shown on site for two years. When McEwen made an
addition to the work, a crisis ensued. Robert McMichael, who had been
increasingly alarmed by the collections focus on the acquisition
of contemporary works of art, launched a lawsuit (eventually settled in
his favor in 1996), asserting that the collection had strayed too far
from its mandate. (McMichael died in November of 2003.) McEwens
work, among others, was out.
Cut to Barrie, seven
years later. The new setting for Babylon and the Tower of Babelalbeit,
a temporary oneis far more high profile than its original siting
at the McMichael Collection, where it was located along the very edge
of a long curving driveway, which made it difficult to step back and see
the piece in its entirety. Here, set on the waterfront with downtown Barrie
just on the other side of Kempenfelt Bay forming a backdrop, the entire
work can be seen either close up or from a distance across a wide expanse
of grass sloping gently upward from the waterfront toward a road that
demarcates the edge of the park: a series of seven rusted metal pedestals
in which the letters of the word Babylon are formed as interior
voids. Mounted atop one pedestal is a large urn set at a tilt, and atop
another is one of McEwens trademark images: a steel silhouette of
a wolf seen in profile. Just offshore on the rocky islands is another
wolf silhouette and a small sculpture of a satellite dish (the Tower of
Babel portion of the work, and the addition that sparked the McMichael
crisis). Though both wolves and satellite dishes co-exist in this part
of North America, Barrie itself can hardly be likened to an ancient Mesopotamian
city.
But then, neither
could a tree-lined, landscaped driveway leading up to an art gallery in
a large log cabin in Kleinberg, Ontario, so literalism obviously has no
place in the interpretive scheme of things. According to McEwen, Babylon
and the Tower of Babel finds metaphorical locale in the song Rivers of
Babylon and in Psalm 137 in which the ancient Israelites mourn the loss
of Zion during the period of the Babylonian Captivity. It is the story
of a homeland lost. How ironic, and yet, how singularly appropriate. Though
it makes for a jarring recontextualization of a popular grassy waterfront
park, as well as an unexpected frame for a view of downtown Barrie, set
here in exile on the Kempenfelt Bay waterfront McEwens work speaksperhaps
even singsof the aesthetic and social meanings (and price) of expulsion
and banishment. Dislocation too can be everything.
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