
Detail of Totem Pole, Ken Mowatt, Guy Pierre and Denis Charrette. 1992,
35 George Street in the Byward Market area.This Totem is a collaborative
work citing diverse communities and cultures who were each responsible
for different portions of the pole. Commissioned by the Ottawa School
of Art.
Some
general information about these pictures:
Like
many other photographers, I have often made pictures of art for institutions
and artists. While doing this I have learned much, made many friends
and occasionally a little money. However much fun doing that kind of
work is, my satisfaction from it has always been tempered by the creative
limits placed on me as someone else's hired "shooter". The
client always provides the subject, approves the treatment and judges
its success.
This
new body or work is made outside of those constraints. The pictures
are of artworks from the National Capital Region. This project has several
dimensions.
There is the documentary component that designates a time, place and
creator (usually) to the works photographed but this is not a catalogue
or index to this kind of artwork in the NCC region. I have picked and
chosen according to my interests and I photograph them as I please.
Some of the artworks are displayed at a distance, in some cases merely
a detail is seen or the artwork is not the strongest part of the image.
I
am doing this because of a my curiosity and affection for these objects
and as a creative mechanism for learning and knowing. With these images
I hope I can articulate some ideas and and connections that I see and
put questions about living with this kind of art which is a such a defining
aspect of seeing my city. As this project grows in size (- currently
there are at least 125 images -) many themes and issues become
easier to see and illustrate.
These pictures show a wide spectrum of stuff including temporary public
works, a few graffiti works, some commercial appropriations of well
known artists, monuments and works that exist in the exotic territory
of the contemporary fine arts milieu. . There are good, bad, neglected
, expensive, forgotten , reviled, sentimental and sometimes wonderful
things that suggest issues common to much of our public art in our cities.
What is it for? Who paid for it? Has it lasted. Should it last? How
does it work? What does it mean? And what does it mean to me?
The
pictures are accompanied by brief texts that tell you the name of the
work, the artists, where it is and who owns/commissioned it. Sometimes,
there are additional texts which discuss issues that are relevant to
thinking about public art in more general terms. Any errors in fact
will be corrected promptly if they are brought to my attention.
I
hope you like them - I will continue adding to this site for quite a
long time I expect...... December 2003
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