Ā鶹ֱ²„app

From Mississauga to Massachusetts: Sonic 'Futurity Island' art installation hits the road

Photo of the Futurity Island installation
ā€œFuturity Islandā€ was part of a 10-day outdoor art festival exploring climate change, environmental crisis and resilience that was curated by Christine Shaw, the director of Ā鶹ֱ²„app Mississauga's Blackwood Gallery (photo courtesy of the Blackwood Gallery)

What does it take to move an island? Lots of planning, a big truck and plenty of patience.

ā€œFuturity Island,ā€ a towering art installation built from blue water pipes, is being moved from Mississauga to its new home at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, Mass. where it will be reassembled on site next to the Charles River.
 
Created by MIT-based artists Gediminas & Nomeda Urbonas, ā€œFuturity Islandā€ was a showcase feature of The Work of Wind: Air, Land, Sea, 10-day contemporary outdoor art festival exploring climate change, environmental crisis and resilience that was curated by Christine Shaw, the director of the University of Toronto Mississaugaā€™s Blackwood Gallery.
 
Installed next to Clean Harbours Canada, the pile of municipal water pipes broadcast an ambient sonic creation inspired by swamp creatures and environmental contamination.
 
ā€œThis is not just a sculpture,ā€ says Shaw, who is also an assistant professor, teaching stream, at Ā鶹ֱ²„app Mississaugaā€™s department of visual studies. ā€œItā€™s a transmission device. Thereā€™s a sense that itā€™s meant to be on the move, or that similar ā€˜Futurity Islandsā€™ could be formed.ā€
 
Itā€™s no small feat to move the intsallation, which was presented by the Blackwood Gallery in partnership with the MIT Program in Art, Culture and Technology. Plans to relocate the sculpture, which is constructed from 20,000 lbs. of municipal water pipe donated by The Work of Wind sponsor IPAC Services Corp., have been in the works since December 2018. Thatā€™s just a few months after The Work of Wind closed and ā€œFuturity Islandā€ was packed away into shipping containers stored on the site of another festival sponsor, Musket Transport Inc.
 
Over the past week, Blackwood Gallery project co-ordinator Fraser McCallum has been working with the Musket Transport team to re-pack the pipes into a single tractor-trailer container. ā€œItā€™s really just figuring out how to fit it all in and keep the pipes organized so it can be reassembled in exactly the same way,ā€ says McCallum, who will accompany the piece on its cross-border trip.
 
 
The resurrection of ā€œFuturity Islandā€ coincides with the launch of climate change action initiatives at MIT. ā€œThere is a gathering of minds that is happening around that initiative for the university,ā€ Shaw says. At MIT, the sculpture will be reassembled in time for .
 
Shaw will attend the opening celebrations on Sept. 6 and  Sept. 7, where she will deliver a talk about the The Work of Wind and ā€œFuturity Islandā€ alongside the artists and Etienne Turpin, editor of the . Chilean artist and ā€œFuturity Islandā€ collaborator Nicole Lā€™Huillier will contribute a live performance of the sculptureā€™s ā€œAmphibian Songsā€ experience.
 
ā€œSending the work to MIT enables the Blackwood Gallery to think about different ways to tour an exhibition, which is standard practice for museums and galleries,ā€ Shaw says.
 
ā€œI love the thought of ā€˜Futurityā€™ on the move. I would love to see ā€˜Futurity Islandā€™ travelling from site to site, to different localities, inspiring more thinking about the environmental conditions of each place.ā€

 

Topics

The Bulletin Brief logo

Subscribe to The Bulletin Brief

UTM