Four blocks from the Belvedere is the Western Front artist-run centre, where Allison Collins is the Media Arts Curator and Western Front co-founder Eric Metcalfe (above) awoke this morning to his 76th birthday!
Happy Birthday Eric!
In a 2015 Art Lab Gnesta presentation on Vancouver’s
2012 Institutions by Artists conference, Allison pretty much begins and ends with Vincent Bonin’s “Here, Bad News Always Arrives Too Late”. The text below (from Bonin) is the penultimate passage in her presentation:
followed
by Allison in her own words:
So
this is the promise, the space of potential that exists as a commitment as well
to self-criticality and in whatever form that takes a constant kind of
re-evaluation of whether the structures that we are building do what we need
them to do and live up to the ideas set forth by our forbearers – or surpass
them.
I
am interested in – and indeed committed to -- “self-criticality” with respect
to the structures “we” are building, especially in “whatever form that
takes.” I am also interested in -- critically interested in -- that part of “we” that includes “certain groups
of artists,” designers and curators who do not fit easily into Bonin’s streamlined camps, who have not quite rejected “individual entrepreneurship” and
who assert their autonomy in part by forsaking pubic funds for funds derived from private enterprise – in this instance, as well-paid, non-profit property managers who marginally undercut an already hyperbolic rental market to provide studio space
for artists, and in doing so refer to themselves as “benevolent”? (Compare that benevolence with that of Eric and the other former owners of the Western Front building, who, as Eric is fond of telling everyone, sold the building and the property it sits on to the Western Front Society for less than market value.)
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