Lorna Mills and Sally McKay
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I'm in a show called Waypoint that opens tomorrow, in the Case Studies gallery at the York Quay Centre. Each of the artists has been working with a GPS device to create a geocache in the harbourfront area, or at least, refer to that idea. The show is curated by Patrick Macaulay, and the artists are Scott Berry, Dave Dyment, Karen Henderson, me, Gwen MacGregor, Paola Poletto, Mitch Robertson, and Laurel Woodcock. Friday evening is the big opening for all of York Quay Centre's summer exhibitions, come on down.
Waypoint is on from July 16 - September 11, 2005
Opening is Friday, July 15, 2005
6 - 9 pm York Quay Centre
235 Queens Quay West, Toronto
Shinobu Akimoto
Emily Vey Duke & Cooper Battersby
Matthew Evans
G.L.N.
Jean-Paul Kelly
Sandy Plotnikoff
Tanya Read
What a line up! Where can you see this show of excellent Canadian artists? Why, Japan, of course. Smart artist/curator Shinobu Akimoto has put together the Canadian component of the + Video Awards 2005, at Plus Gallery in Nagoya. More info here.
detail
Today I rode my bike past the AGO (Superbuild project underway, architect Frank Gehry) to a meeting at the ROM (Superbuild project underway, architect Daniel Libeskind). Which is better so far?
As I mentioned earlier, I like what I've seen of the AGO's 'swing-space' programming. The galleries are way reduced, but the let's-let-our-hair-down-and-do-some-contemporary-programming attitude is good. I wrote about Swintak earlier, but neglected to mention the exquisite installation by cartoonist/artist Seth of Palookaville fame. Seth has been making 3-d cardboard building. Each is about the size of half a bread-box. The surfaces are painted, details illustrated down to individual bricks, in Seth's characteristic and coherent style. Painted in lush, bluish-grey tones, Dominion City, looks like a town in twilight, simple and surreal and well worth a visit.
drawing by Seth, image from Lambiek
Today I had a browse around the ROM's appease-the-public-with-something-to-look-at-while-we-reno exhibit, Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Flight. The set-up felt a bit tawdry, tucked off to one side, but there were tons of very cool fossils to look at from Liaoning in China. For some reason I didn't take in, the rock in this quarry allowed for unusual preservation of soft tissue and tons of dinosaurs with feathers intact! There are also perfectly preserved insects—spiders and flies— and one very cool little flightless bird with a stomach full of rocks.
fossil from Liaoning Province of China, image from fossilmuseum.net
I'd say I'm more impressed with the AGO's transitional programming efforts, but the ROM still wins for one important reason. Their construction hoarding includes a passageway for pedestrians (and it's wide enough you can sneak through on a bike if you want). The AGO's hoarding, on the other hand, interrupts a bike lane, and completely blocks off the sidewalk between Beverly and McCaul, with a sign admonishing pedestrians in orange lettering not to walk along the road.
nice hoarding w/sidewalk, thanks ROM! image (cropped) from skyscraperpage.com