Itâs the elephant in the corner of the room, only the room is the boulevard in front of the ±«Óătv Arts Centre, and the elephant is a white marble sculpture shaped like something else entirely. What, no one is quite sureâjust something else entirely.
Donât make the mistake of asking the students what itâs supposed to represent. Theyâll dissolve into helpless giggles. In fact, until I descended into the hallowed halls of the ±«Óătv Art Gallery, no one even tried to answer my questionââWhat is that thing?â
The sculpture, it turns out, is called Marine Venus. Itâs by Robert Hedrick and was installed at ±«Óătv in 1969, the Summer of Love. According to the ±«Óătv Art Galleryâs director/curator Peter Dykhuis, Marine Venus is only the tip of Dalâs artistic iceberg. ±«Óătv hosts two separate collections of art â the âUniversity Collection,â and the art galleryâs own permanent pieces, including Marine Venus.
Marine Venus is one of the pieces from the collection installed in a public space, says registrar/preparator Michele Gallant. The galleryâs pieces often end up in protective storage; the gallery, which showcases temporary exhibitions, has no dedicated space for display of its permanent collection.
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âOur holdings are incredible, we have impeccable historical works⊠(but our) vaults are full right now,â explains Ms. Gallant. When NSCAD students visit for a class on printmaking, the gallery has to showcase its prints collectionâwhich includes two Goyasâon folding tables.Ìę She would like to see accessible storage, providing full access to the art ±«Óătv already possesses. Itâs called âopen storageâ, and there are precedents â itâs already been installed at UBC. âWe have a mandate not only to collect and preserve, but also to exhibit,â Ms. Gallant says. âItâs the double-edged sword.â
âIt (the gallery) is off the beaten path,â she adds. âItâs so important in looking at the big picture in an education⊠(but) students graduate and may not know we exist.âÌę
And make no mistake â art, and the art gallery, is vital to ±«Óătvâs culture. âWeâre not just part of the decorating department,â Peter Dykhuis points out dryly. âVisual literacy informs so much about our world.â So what would improve the situation? âStreet level gallery! Street level gallery! Street level gallery!â Mr. Dykhuis exclaims â a separate, more accessible space to showcase the permanent collection. âThe motto of this whole enterprise is âKeeping art presentâ!â
Even with its constraints, the gallery has placed art wherever it can on campus â the McCain Building, for example, hosts Mitchell Wiebeâs âDigital Dragon Meets Analog Unicornâ above the elevators and Donna Hiebertâs âContainmentâ in the courtyard.
For years, the gallery has had virtually no money for new art. New acquisitions are thanks to donations. âWe donât accept everything, though⊠itâs a matter of quality, not quantity,â Mr. Dykhuis interjects. As for the art the gallery does showcase, âItâs not just flights of fancy out of my curatorial head. It has relevancy⊠visual art often addresses philosophical issues but through visual means⊠A gallery is like a blank book. What are you going to write in it?â
And Marine Venus? He grins infectiously. âI realize it draws a certain attention⊠Itâs a period piece.â Anyway, he points out, you canât judge a sculpture that is still technically incomplete. Marine Venus was meant to be mounted in a reflecting pool, but due to cost and upkeep concerns, that never occurred.
âThe whole aspect of the marine nature of it isnât there.â Yes, it looks like certain unmentionables, âbut it also looks like a big barnacle!â Mr. Dykhuis says Marine Venus also serves a utilitarian function. âDuring frosh week sometimes students are given a scavenger hunt and one of their things is that sculpture.â Trying to find the name of the work and artist âGets them down into the art gallery, so theyâd know we exist.â
Who knows? Maybe thereâs a generous benefactor out there, just waiting to provide Marine Venus with her long-lost watery home. If not, at least a few more people will be aware of the galleryâs existence. âThe university has a great resource within its community,â enthuses Mr. Dykhuis.
Admission is free, movie nights are frequent, and Mr. Dykhuis and Ms. Gallant are patiently awaiting the public.
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