UTM's Christine Shaw brings force of the wind to Nuit Blanche
Hot lava, a human glacier and thousands of paper moths are just a few of the sights you’ll see this weekend if you head into Toronto for the annual Scotiabank Nuit Blanche artfest.
This year marks the tenth anniversary of the annual all-night traveling art walk, with an exhibit roster that includes more than 110 works by nearly 400 artists on display at indoor and outdoor locations around downtown Toronto.
For the first time in the event’s history, Nuit Blanche will embrace the city’s waterfront, with a city-sponsored exhibit curated by Christine Shaw, director and curator of U of T Mississauga’s Blackwood Gallery and a lecturer with UTM’s Visual Studies program. The Toronto Star has named The Work of the Wind as one of the 10 can’t-miss stops on the Nuit Blanche route.
Works in the series include a 12-hour lava flow, a 75-person human glacier, floating and video projection installations, and a swarm of 30,000 black paper moths. The exhibit showcases a dozen artists and collectives, including Tim Knowles, whose work is also featured in the current Blackwood exhibit The Pen Moves Across the Earth, U of T professor Charles Stankievech, director of the Visual Studies program in the Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design, and Christof Migone, former director and curator of the Blackwood Gallery. UTM students in Shaw’s Visual Arts summer internship course assisted with development of the exhibition.
Shaw has organized large-scale collections before, including Public Acts 1-29, a collection of 29 works along the Trans-Canada Highway between British Columbia and New Brunswick. When Shaw discovered the Beaufort scale—“the most exquisite 110 words ever written,” she says she knew it “was full of potential for experimentation.”
“So many forces impact us that we can’t see, like climate change or global currency,” Shaw says. “This is about harnessing the power of art to make the invisible visible, and the inaudible audible.”
“I hope the audience feels the force of the wind,” she says. “I hope they get caught up in the operatic experience, from floating in the sky to the impact of an explosion, and feel the connection between each of these pieces.”
The Work of the Wind, a selection of artworks:
Beaufort 0: Cumulus is a video installation by Tomás Saraceno that explores the idea of living in the clouds. (Victoria Soya Mills Silos, Parliament Street)
Beaufort 1: Dispersal Zone by Knowles will see smoke billowing from the streetlights, providing a cloudlike interplay with the air currents and atmosphere. (Artscape, Gibralter Point)
Beaufort 4: Lava Field No. 2. by Robert Wysocki includes a mobile coke-fired volcano that will spill lava across the parking lot at George Brown College for 12 hours. (51 Dockside Drive)
Beaufort 11: The Cleaving by British duo Ivan and Heather Morison, features a rubble barricade across Queens Quay East (at Lower Jarvis).
Scotiabank Nuit Blanche runs from Saturday, October 3 from 6:55 p.m until sunrise on Sunday, October 4. Find The Work of the Wind along Toronto’s waterfront, between Parliament Street and Harbourfront Centre.
Read more about The Work of the Wind and Nuit Blanche here >