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  #501  
Old Posted Dec 13, 2013, 5:38 PM
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They have also painted the sculptural "trees" at banker hall and updated the lighting on each one. They looks really sharp and they change colour independently. Also the have a set of strip lights lining the edges and separate spot lights continuously changing hue. Im happy to see the city maintaining some of the stuff they have installed.
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  #502  
Old Posted Dec 13, 2013, 6:11 PM
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Solar Flare is fantastic! Didn't know about the interactive element until after I got home though.


Stephen Avenue by tallisrh, on Flickr
What interactive element?
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  #503  
Old Posted Dec 13, 2013, 10:37 PM
TallisRH TallisRH is offline
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Originally Posted by kw5150 View Post
They have also painted the sculptural "trees" at banker hall and updated the lighting on each one. They looks really sharp and they change colour independently. Also the have a set of strip lights lining the edges and separate spot lights continuously changing hue. Im happy to see the city maintaining some of the stuff they have installed.
Yeah, I like what they did with them. Certainly makes that stretch feel more vibrant (and, right now, Christmasy).




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What interactive element?
Apparently it has a motion sensor that controls the shimmering effect - http://www.getdown.ca/2013/12/11/solar-flare-sculpture-shines-on-stephen-avenue/
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  #504  
Old Posted Dec 17, 2013, 2:20 PM
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anyone know what's up with cloud ring?

according to the city website it was supposed to be done by october 2013.
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  #505  
Old Posted Dec 17, 2013, 2:30 PM
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anyone know what's up with cloud ring?

according to the city website it was supposed to be done by october 2013.
I bet this won't be installed until Spring along with the finishing touches to the park.
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  #506  
Old Posted Dec 20, 2013, 1:09 AM
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Light artists shine with Stephen Avenue installation, Solar Flare


Light artists shine with Stephen Avenue installation, Solar Flare

Cloud creators Caitlind r.c. Brown and Wayne Garrett stand under Solar Flare, their new light installation on Stephen Avenue in downtown Calgary.
Photograph by: Lorraine Hjalte , Calgary Herald

Caitlind r.c. Brown and Wayne Garrett have gone from thousands of light bulbs to one big, bright one.

The Calgary light artists behind Cloud have created Solar Flare, a new installation they hope will shine a little light on Stephen Avenue during the darkest, coldest part of the winter.

It’s on display now, hanging over Stephen Avenue between Centre Street and 1st Street S.W., where it shares the night with holiday lights, signs (Flames Central!) all with the Calgary Tower looming overhead like some sort of overzealous helicopter parent.

The unlikely merging of public art with Stephen Avenue came about when the Calgary Downtown Association, which got a first-hand look at the frenzy that Cloud caused when it was unveiled in Olympic Plaza at Nuit Blanche in September, 2012, asked Brown and Garrett to create something for Stephen Avenue.

“They were really open with us,” Brown says.

The downtown association gave the duo a budget, a time of delivery and complete freedom to create whatever sort of light installation they wanted to create.

Not that complete freedom is all its cracked up to be.

“When you have infinite options and possibilities, it’s hard to whittle it down,” Brown says.

The answer lay in the winter challenges that face the street itself, a quirky blend of retail, heritage buildings, the Hudson's Bay, a diverse array of bars, restaurants — as well as a demographic that ranges from corporate to culture worker to Mayor Nenshi to the down and out.

“We wanted to build an artificial sun,” says Brown.

“(We asked ourselves) what would be really good for Stephen Avenue in the winter time, when it’s cold and it’s dark?” Brown asks. “That’s (the darkness) part of what makes winter sort of lonely.

“So we thought we’d just sort of re-install the light back into the space.”

Made of fibre optic rays, Solar Flare is lit by a single large light bulb, creating the impression of a sun at magic hour, splitting into dozens of shards of light.

“Light is a social entity,” says Brown. “People are drawn to light. It’s evidence of civilization.

“And also,” she adds, “who doesn’t love that golden hour moment when the sun is setting? We were kind of trying to recreate that.”

They also needed to create an installation that wouldn’t require security.

(It turns out that interactive art installations take a real beating from passersby, which the duo learned presenting Cloud around the world and also at Wreck City in Sunnyside, which they also participated in).

The solution was to create something high and light and bright over the pedestrian mall, suspended by wires.

It was originally going to feature LED lights and lots of technological bells and whistles, but then — perhaps recalling Cloud, which was built with thousands of recycled light bulbs — they opted for a more old-school, analogue approach.

That approach is part of a growing trend by artists to take obsolete technologies and media, such as celluloid film, or LP records, or burnt-out light bulbs, and repurpose them as art, giving them a whole new life.

“I think that ended up being a blessing in disguise,” says Brown. “We really like the analogue technologies. There’s something so much more human — something you can relate to — on a very physical level (when you use analogue stuff).”

Thanks to motion sensors that react to passersby, Solar Flare is the rare piece of art that reacts to its audience every bit as much as they react to it.

“When the space is empty, it doesn’t move at all,” says Garrett.

“It has two different speeds it can move,” he adds, “depending on whether there’s people on both sides of it, or just one.

“So you can see it sort of change speeds — if it’s the middle of the night and no one’s here, it just gets kind of static, and then, it starts to animate as people get closer.

“It just brings it to life so hopefully you notice it as you come by — and look up.”

While the installation is already up and shining brightly, on Thursday night Calgarians can experience both Solar Flare and its creators — Brown and Garrett will be on hand at the Art Gallery of Calgary, across from where Solar Flare hangs, between 6 and 8 p.m. (they’re giving an artist talk from 7:30 to 8:30).

“We’re going to have a community performance with light,” Brown says.

Solar Flare will be hanging over Stephen Avenue through February 1.

As far as Brown and Garrett go, they’re off again to Kentucky, to build a new light installation in Lexington in January and February.

Following that, they are off to Singapore, where Cloud will be featured in a light festival there (it’s being shipped on a boat from Rotterdam), continuing an improbably global journey that started in Olympic Plaza in September, 2012, when tweeted images of Cloud went viral around the globe, giving the two Calgary artists’ careers a charge.

“Light,” says Brown, “is an amazing material.”

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http://www.calgaryherald.com/entertainme...ue+installation+Solar/9301555/story.html
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  #507  
Old Posted Dec 20, 2013, 1:12 AM
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Three Calgary arts groups merge to create new contemporary gallery

Museum of Contemporary Art and Institute for Modern and Contemporary Art to join Art Gallery of Calgary in Stephen Avenue building

By Stephen Hunt, Calgary Herald December 19, 2013 5:37 PM



Three Calgary arts groups merge to create new contemporary gallery

Patrons walk through H2O, currently running at the Museum of Contemporary Art Calgary, one of three visual arts societies in the city merging to create Contemporary Calgary.
Photograph by: Christian Grandjean

Three leading Calgary contemporary arts organizations on Thursday announced a merger that will create a new gallery that will take over the site of the scandal-plagued Art Gallery of Calgary building downtown.

The Museum of Contemporary Art Calgary, the Art Gallery of Calgary and the Institute for Modern and Contemporary Art all supported motions at recent board meetings to consolidate their respective arts societies into a single entity, to be known as Contemporary Calgary. The new organization will operate out of the brick building on 8th Avenue that has housed the Art Gallery of Calgary for several years.

The organization named three transitional working board co-chairs, one from each of the former organizations: Carol Ryder, David Rehn and Daryl Fridhandler.

In a phone interview, Ryder said she hopes the merger will bring stability and dynamacism to the city’s long fractured contemporary art scene.

“The big thing was that we wanted to bring three (separate organizations) together to create financial stability, which is really important in the arts world — but also to create a more concise thing for funders and donors.

“I know the AFA (Alberta Foundation for the Arts) and CADA (Calgary Arts Development Authority) and the province are really happy that we’ll be one entity, because it saves them dealing with three.”

The move is part of a consolidation of the visual arts community as it seeks to build a contemporary art museum, something the arts community has been trying to do for several decades. Calgary is one of the new big cities in North America that lacks a public art gallery.

Earlier this year, City Hall accepted bids for use of the old Science Centre building downtown. Ryder confirmed that the group submitted a proposal to the city.

“We brought together a group of 30 people. We worked on it for four months, getting together almost every single week.”

While the city has made no announcements about the space, Ryder says the group remains hopeful.

“We’d love to have that space, but we made a commitment when we got together as Contemporary Calgary that that would be a space we bid on and work toward, but if it doesn’t happen, we’ll still be looking forward at growing bigger and better
.

“But doing it wisely,” she added, “with a good, sound business plan.”

The merger will put an end to the Art Gallery of Calgary, which was working to emerge from a financial scandal after former CEO Valerie Cooper was sentenced in November to a year in prison for defrauding the organization of $100,000. While the merged group reorganizes — there’s a meeting scheduled for January — the new art society will occupy the space of the former Art Gallery of Calgary.

“It’s got Class A (exhibition) space,” said Ryder, “it’s bigger, and we can do more things in it (than in MOCA’s space).

“Once our papers are filed and approved in January, the sign will change on the front door.”

Staff members from the Art Gallery of Calgary will now work with Contemporary Calgary.

No decision has been made about what will become of the Museum of Contemporary Art Calgary space, which is currently inside the Calgary Municipal Building.

Information about 2014 exhibits, programming and special events will be revealed at a January reception for new members, patrons, community leaders and sponsors.

[email protected]

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http://www.calgaryherald.com/entertainme...e+create+contemporary/9307943/story.html
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  #508  
Old Posted Jan 9, 2014, 6:34 AM
Allan83 Allan83 is offline
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Couldn’t find a music thread so I’m putting this in the art thread.

NMC has a new addition, TONTO!
http://vimeo.com/23970696
http://www.nmc.ca/blog/tonto-has-arrived-at-nmc/
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  #509  
Old Posted Feb 7, 2014, 5:56 AM
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Interesting read about the Glenbow's new direction. Also mentions street level improvements along Stephen including a new restaurant and the possible upcoming annoucement of a new art gallery at the former science centre:

Quote:
Glenbow rethink is the latest step in Calgary’s art-scene renaissance

MARSHA LEDERMAN

The Globe and Mail


You’d think a big city with a booming economy, bottomless ambition and no lack of self-confidence would also boast a major-league art museum. But even as Calgary has grown up and out in recent decades, and even as big players in the city’s visual-art and business communities have tried to crystallize a vision, such an institution has remained elusive.

Finally, that could be changing. On Thursday, Glenbow president and CEO Donna Livingstone outlined a new future for the museum at an event in the main-floor lobby of the downtown brutalist building. Looking ahead to the institution’s 50th anniversary in 2016, she announced what she called “an exciting new direction,” before inviting guests to a preview of the brand-new Glenbow exhibitions, Worn to be Wild: The Black Leather Jacket; and Made in Calgary: the 1990s.

Livingstone’s announcement came on the heels of another big shakeup on the city’s art scene: the formation of Contemporary Calgary – the result of a consolidation of two art galleries and an advocacy group. And this month, a decision will be announced about whether Contemporary Calgary will be awarded the former Centennial Planetarium as a place to set up shop.

What’s more, with intensifying collaboration between the Glenbow and Contemporary Calgary, the city’s art scene is primed for a renaissance.

Anyone who has been through the Glenbow knows it can be a disorienting mishmash of experiences: contemporary and historical art, international artifacts, local history. For years, Glenbow officials have had a hard time answering the simplest of questions: Is the Glenbow an art gallery? A museum? And what is its focus? The West? All of Canada? The world?

Livingstone says a year-long review has made it apparent that the real strength of the institution is its art collection, as opposed to its historical and geological artifacts. So it will reposition itself as “a new kind of art museum,” focusing on art – and what Livingstone calls “the art of making.”

“It gives us a more closely refined focus for what we’re doing, because we can’t do everything and we can’t provide meaning for all of the collections that we have. … from material from Papua New Guinea to samurai armour to Buddhist art,” Livingstone told The Globe and Mail. “So it’s a bit of a challenge, but it’s an exciting challenge.”

Livingstone’s new vision includes scrapping any plans to change her institution’s location – an idea that’s been bubbling away for years, and that her predecessor, Kirstin Evenden, had talked about with great enthusiasm even as the Glenbow was bleeding money, and, as a result, staff. “We’re exactly where we want to be, in the heart of downtown,” says Livingstone, who was initially brought in on an interim basis after Evenden resigned in 2012 following a vote of non-confidence by unionized workers. “New buildings are very expensive to build and I just don’t think there’s an appetite for it now.”

Instead, the Glenbow will undergo some cosmetic procedures in advance of its 50th, with a restaurant, new signage, and more focus on the Stephen Avenue pedestrian-mall access (rather than the entrance on busy 9 Avenue) into what can seem a fortress of a building. “In a profound sense, we have our back to our visitors with our orientation,” says Livingstone, who has had architectural renderings drawn up to demonstrate what a new Glenbow could look like.


But it’s the museum’s collection – more than 33,000 items – that will become the foundation for this shift. In her review, Livingstone heard concerns that the museum’s exhibits don’t change often enough. This is more than perception. Two exhibitions on the fourth floor – one called Warriors, one on West Africa – have been up for more than 20 years. “So it’s definitely time,” Livingstone says, for some “refreshing.”

In the new Glenbow, the fourth floor will become an ever-evolving gallery that will change every three months or so, housing items from the permanent collection – albeit presented in extremely bare-bones fashion. “There would be no curation, no label copy, no fancy mounts or anything. We’d just say: Here’s all our cameras, or here’s all our jewellery, or here’s all our quilts. So the visitor would … have to do the work. They’re going to have to make the stories around what they see,” she says.

Livingstone says she is already seeing a new, younger crowd at museum events. And the Glenbow is playing into that with exhibitions that may appeal to a younger demographic, such as those opening this weekend.

The Made in Calgary show is a collaboration with the much smaller Art Gallery of Calgary. That gallery’s name, in fact, will soon disappear, thanks to the recently announced merger of the AGC, the Museum of Contemporary Art and the Institute for Modern and Contemporary Art, which will coalesce into a new, contemporary-art museum.

Contemporary Calgary could be a game-changer, led, for now, by Terry Rock, who recently left the municipal agency Calgary Arts Development, where he was founding president and CEO. Says Rock, “Our belief is that there’s a pent-up demand for great contemporary-art programming in Calgary and that we have the pieces in place to deliver that.”

It’s early days yet as the group consolidates operations while keeping the ACG and MoCA operating. Top priorities include cleaning up the mess left by a fraud case at the AGC – its former director was last fall sentenced to one year in jail for defrauding the gallery of $100,000 – a debacle that Rock says led to the institution losing close to $300,000 annually in municipal and provincial funding. Restoring that funding and building a sustainable vision is key to the success of the new group, he says. “We’re in the process of rebuilding our credibility and our relationship with our funders.”

The group has put in a bid to the city for the former planetarium on the western edge of downtown. For starved art lovers, it’s exciting to dream about a revitalized Glenbow – on the eastern edge of downtown and focusing on visual art – collaborating with a new contemporary-art space on the western edge. And all the energy of the new Calgary buzzing in between.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/art-...s-art-scene-renaissance/article16739419/
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  #510  
Old Posted Feb 16, 2014, 6:50 PM
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Nuit Blanche is back for 2014!

http://www.nuitblanchecalgary.ca/
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  #511  
Old Posted Feb 17, 2014, 6:28 PM
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Nuit Blanche is back for 2014!

http://www.nuitblanchecalgary.ca/
Looks like this is a free event according to the website??
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  #512  
Old Posted Mar 7, 2014, 7:21 PM
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http://www.calgaryherald.com/entertainme...anetarium+into+public/9591888/story.html

Arts group chosen to turn old planetarium into a public art gallery

Contemporary Calgary, amalgam of three former galleries, selected to convert former science centre into a long-discussed public gallery

BY STEPHEN HUNT, CALGARY HERALD MARCH 7, 2014 11:59 AM



Contemporary Calgary has been chosen by the city from a group of applicants to repurpose the old planetarium downtown into a public gallery to feature the visual arts.

The organization - an amalgamation of the Art Gallery of Calgary, Museum of Contemporary Art Calgary and the Institute for Modern and Contemporary Art - received the good news that their request for proposal was selected by the city in a competition that sought ways to redevelop the planetarium with cultural, art or heritage uses.

“We are excited to work with Contemporary Calgary to begin to explore the possibilities of transforming the Planetarium into a future art gallery,” says Manager of Culture with City Recreation, Sarah Iley. “In the upcoming months, we will assess the proposal’s potential in greater detail.”

rest of article: http://www.calgaryherald.com/entertainme...anetarium+into+public/9591888/story.html
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  #513  
Old Posted Mar 7, 2014, 7:23 PM
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I was going to post this. Excellent news!
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  #514  
Old Posted Mar 7, 2014, 7:52 PM
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Nice. This building has a lot of potential with a few tweaks. Seems like the west end might be coming around with this and some new mixed-use developments.
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  #515  
Old Posted Mar 7, 2014, 8:15 PM
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Wonderful news! Not only does it need to be repurposed on the inside, but the exterior needs a little work. Get rid of those tacky red and blue colours and turn that white dome into some glass and it will be perfect!
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  #516  
Old Posted Mar 7, 2014, 8:31 PM
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Aerial of the building. Bigger than I thought. Maybe they'll dedicate some space for restaurant/retail initially:


http://contemporarycalgary.com/facility-vision
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  #517  
Old Posted Mar 7, 2014, 8:41 PM
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Aerial of the building. Bigger than I thought. Maybe they'll dedicate some space for restaurant/retail initially:


http://contemporarycalgary.com/facility-vision
What this building needs is a glass gallery hall running along the side of the building like the AGO has.
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  #518  
Old Posted Mar 7, 2014, 8:49 PM
MalcolmTucker MalcolmTucker is offline
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I wonder what the square footage is of the building? IIRC when it opened as the planetarium it had a 1500-2000 seat lecture hall on the lower floor. I wonder what the climate control is like, might be the largest challenge.
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  #519  
Old Posted Mar 7, 2014, 9:53 PM
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That building, the Armoury, and the Kerby building are sort of a trifecta of historic buildings (1917, 1948, 1967). Would be nice to get a new use for Kerby lined up.
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  #520  
Old Posted Mar 7, 2014, 10:02 PM
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I'm not sure how ambitious they are, but for this to work properly, it's going to need one hell of a retrofit. It's a little too awkward of a space to really work as a gallery for contemporary art (which usually tends to be big and need a lot of airy space) so they will have to sink a ton of money into it if they want to do it right.

It will definitely be an interesting design challenge, but I still think something big like Mewata Armoury or CBE would have been better to work with.
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