The Public Art Program is delighted to announce the successful implementation of Currents by Cheryl Pagurek. The permanent video installation is the first of its kind to enter the City of Ottawa’s fine art collection, and is unique to Ottawa as the first permanent exterior LED screen to feature uninterrupted video artwork. Prominently featuring imagery of the Jock River, Currents maintains a link to the nearby body of water in an area of rapid urban development. Through the incorporation of historical images of the area, surrounding rural lands, and footage of contemporary city transit, Currents celebrates the surrounding environment. By locating the present site within a continuum, the video harkens to the past and preserves the present for future generations. The installation situates public transit within a narrative of progress while highlighting ecological appreciation. Currents is mobile! To continue watching Currents on your mobile device as you commute, and for acknowledgements of historical image sources, visit http://www.ottawa.ca/residents/arts/public_art/commissions/sw_transit_en.html Central themes found in Cheryl Pagurek’s artwork investigate concepts of time, memory, history and the ephemeral quality of the disappearing past. A photo-based and video artist; Cheryl received her M.F.A. from the University of Victoria. Her work is featured in several collections including Foreign Affairs Canada, the Canada Council Art Bank, the Library of the National Gallery of Canada and the Ottawa Art Gallery.
Local photo and video artist Cheryl Pagurek has been selected as
the winner of the Market Place Corridor (Ward 22) public art competition. The
proposed artwork entitled Currents employs the contemporary medium of video
to embody the concepts of flow, movement, and community identity. A
free-standing LED screen will house and display two synchronized videos of
imagery of the waters of the Jock River, ensuring a link is maintained to
the nearby body of water amidst urban development. |