{"id":2382,"date":"2010-04-13T08:00:42","date_gmt":"2010-04-13T12:00:42","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spacingottawa.ca\/?p=2382"},"modified":"2013-01-21T09:13:26","modified_gmt":"2013-01-21T14:13:26","slug":"the-line-of-parting-ottawas-two-sublimes","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/spacing.ca\/ottawa\/2010\/04\/13\/the-line-of-parting-ottawas-two-sublimes\/","title":{"rendered":"The Line of Parting: Ottawa&#8217;s Two Sublimes"},"content":{"rendered":"<figure style=\"width: 267px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" style=\"margin: 10px;\" src=\"http:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/en\/f\/fc\/Voice_of_Fire.jpg\" alt=\"Stunted mockery of Toronto or New York\" width=\"267\" height=\"600\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">Voice of Fire: the template for curatorial controversy since 1989<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>You might remember the ink spilled several months ago over Maria Cook&#8217;s <a href=\"http:\/\/communities.canada.com\/ottawacitizen\/blogs\/designingottawa\/archive\/2010\/01\/21\/tall-sculpture-and-park-redesign-planned-for-nepean-point.aspx\">Ottawa Citizen article<\/a> revealing plans for a 10-storey Roxy Paine sculpture, a kind of giant stalagmite atop Nepean Point. Online commentators quickly lashed the New York artist&#8217;s Hundred Foot Line, and in the tradition of <a href=\"http:\/\/www.walrusmagazine.com\/articles\/2010.03-visual-art-firestorm\/\">taxpayer critiques<\/a>, ridiculed the commission as yet another foreign and aloof New York abstraction pushed onto the &#8220;suckers&#8221; at the National Art Gallery. Not to be outdone, the curatorial establishment rallied to defend the installation, apparently eager to assume the role of a cultural bastion desperately resisting the philistine masses. (A Mount Carmel complex which says a lot about the gallery&#8217;s PR doctrine and its evolution since the early 90s, but let me concentrate for a moment on what seems vital.)<\/p>\n<p>These art controversies may strike us as naive, foolish, or ridiculous, but I believe they present some otherwise unavailable clues or code outlining larger processes in Ottawa&#8217;s historical development. More specifically, these public art installations are likely the latest phase in Ottawa&#8217;s well-known spatial mutation, beginning in the 1950s, when the horizontal city \u2014 the &#8220;Edinburgh of the West&#8221; whose only towers were the spires on churches and on Parliament \u2014 burgeoned into the familiar vertical experience of glass and concrete, the stunted mockery of Toronto or New York. (With all that came packaged: wild architectures; kaleidoscopic visual stimulation, etc.)<!--more--><\/p>\n<p>Let me begin by trying to outflank an art establishment which now incorporates public outrage into its media strategies to better neutralize popular indignation (&#8220;Still, nothing gets Canadians talking like Voice of Fire!&#8221;) The problem, as I see it, is simple. Controversy, even a miniaturized one, allowed the Gallery&#8217;s curatorial mandarins and strongmen to short-circuit debate by positioning themselves as the bearers of progress and enlightenment, braving all danger to protect &#8220;culture&#8221; from the horrors of fire and sharpened sticks. We need reminding that the contemporary art establishment&#8217;s own guiding logic \u2014 the urge to break out of the &#8220;boring&#8221; museum and its stifling, dead air \u2014 places it on the same plane as the mass-produced cultural junk from which it still, without much justification, claims to elevate or distract us. The point is to remind ourselves that what makes &#8220;official&#8221; art profitable, its whole excitement or thrill, is precisely the invasion of people&#8217;s common space and its illicit appropriation of popular anger as proof of its own value or success.<!--more--><\/p>\n<p>But I want to suggest another purpose to the dramatic coup d&#8217;\u00e9tat at Nepean Point and more generally, to the whole catalogue of chaotic architectural transformations in Ottawa and elsewhere. I believe we are witnessing the spatial byproduct of a civic demolition project at work since roughly the late sixties, with the corporate art-products celebrating a new global system emerging from the compost heap of decomposing nations. (Otherwise one is at odds to explain why art sponsors prey so voraciously on civic temples and heritage buildings. Take I. M. Pei&#8217;s pyramids outside the Louvre or Daniel Buren&#8217;s marauding columns, a roving cannibal army seemingly bent on prying open the royal palace and devouring the rotting innards of French classical civilization.) Fredric Jameson used to call this a &#8220;hysterical sublime,&#8221; a sort of aesthetic euphoria or rush which he identified as the defining property of curvaceous, seductive postmodern arts and architectures \u2014 Paine&#8217;s giant trunk fitting the bill as much as anything. This art flourishes by plastering fragments of California or New York out on a planetary scale: all the flash and motion of international commerce and digital media, of untold networks of financial and informational power. (Behind this polished surface lies the sordid picture of refugee caravans, structural unemployment, ethnic war, debt, ghettos, etc. This might account for part of the public&#8217;s well-deserved suspicion, as if they guessed somehow the brutality and class violence behind the art institution&#8217;s human mask.)<\/p>\n<p>Which brings us to Roxy Paine&#8217;s artificial trees. I doubt on other grounds that Paine has anything new or philosophically meaningful to say about the violent subjugation of Nature or the triumph of technical engineering. My impression \u2014 and the tepid, shifting arguments from <a href=\" The theme is loosely how we will ourselves into distracted inaction, through consumption, vices, and even in the end, imagination.\">Paine&#8217;s apologists<\/a> sustain it \u2014 is that Paine&#8217;s belated philosophical meditations are merely a formal residue, outmoded habits left over from an arthritic modernism with a foot in the grave. Which explains why no one clung to them very long; NAG curator Marc Mayer, <a href=\"http:\/\/communities.canada.com\/ottawacitizen\/print.aspx?postid=429450\">in a moment of desperation,<\/a> even tried to sell the public on Paine being &#8220;a very nice man,&#8221; as if art commissions somehow depended on the artist&#8217;s character.<\/p>\n<p>But what motivates my rejection is a conviction that Ottawa&#8217;s built environment, in its relation to the area&#8217;s natural features, once offered a unique aesthetic experience more in line with the older &#8220;Kantian&#8221; sublime, in this case the juxtaposition of human and geological timescales. What often struck me, living in Ottawa, is the city centre&#8217;s weak centre of gravity against the backdrop of nature, the missing sense of permanence. Even the National-Capital-Commissionized Ottawa, even this Ottawa of architectural heterogeneity, ambassadorial pomp, and precision landscape surgery, retained, I think, this odd feeling, this charm \u2014 despite every effort, Gr\u00e9ber on, to &#8220;build a proper capital&#8221; and, more recently, to pattern the city to a familiar North American urban background noise. The shanties and the lumber camps have all gone and yet the whole place sometimes feels like a camp in the wilderness, a temporary lodging: Viewed against the Gatineau Hills, everything threatens to regress, to decay, to break down. As if what we fear above all is a return to our inglorious origins: the provincial backwater, the military camp marooned in a trackless wilderness somewhere between Montreal and Kingston. (A &#8220;return to the primitive&#8221; which the anarcho-punks visibly embrace as they prowl neon-bathed Rideau Street.)<\/p>\n<p>If modernism, as cultural history tells us, was an artistic attempt to express the jarring contrast between the Old and the New \u2014 to come to terms with the New&#8217;s radical newness and liberating potential, which is largely lost to us today (where everything is both &#8220;new&#8221; and a product), Ottawa was once the ideal illustration: What is older than the Precambrian crags of the Canadian Shield brooding on the horizon, and what is less complete than the schoolyard &#8220;capital,&#8221; the parliament in the wilderness, the blip on a placid river leading nowhere?<\/p>\n<p>The river. Nepean Point, precisely, offers a view to the far shore (ignoring Gatineau&#8217;s federal government complex high-rise condos); to the interior with its silent hills, the sentinels of an unimaginably ancient and vast Canadian Shield. Only here does one begin to feel the presence of the North American Continent, its weight and its illimitable expanse: And even the native-born feel like interlopers, like tenants. Ottawa might have been a Caspar David Friedrich sketch, an arena or testing ground between the pretensions of culture and its eternal adversary, Nature \u2014 an encounter of Man with More than Man, or better yet, the crumbling of the social in its collision with the Earth.<\/p>\n<p>But Paine&#8217;s crooked metal pole will command one of the few remaining sites where residents and visitors could experience this sensation and, more simply, view the valley relatively unimpeded by modernity&#8217;s twin faces; the soaring glass and, at its base, all that scrap and decaying infrastructure. Here the <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ottawacitizen.com\/travel\/bought\/2515348\/story.html\">&#8220;nationalist&#8221; objection <\/a>to Paine&#8217;s work, which invited so many rehearsed sarcasms from newspaper columnists and other professional scoffers, surfaces again with renewed urgency and clarity: Hundred Foot Line stakes out civic ground and rewrites it into an alien script which is no longer Nepean, no longer Ottawa. It neutralizes, releases from all history and memory, as if by planting this metal stake, the curators hoped once and for all to dissolve into dust any bond with the past, to set up a private theatre or playground where the image-shopper (of which the &#8220;art lover&#8221; is simply the purest class) may linger in amusement before moving on to another forgettable pavilion in the global corporate art gallery.<\/p>\n<p><em>photo by Evan Thornton<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>You might remember the ink spilled several months ago over Maria Cook&#8217;s Ottawa Citizen article revealing plans for a 10-storey Roxy Paine sculpture, a kind of giant stalagmite atop Nepean Point. Online commentators quickly lashed the New York artist&#8217;s Hundred Foot Line, and in the tradition of taxpayer critiques, ridiculed the commission as yet another<a href=\"https:\/\/spacing.ca\/ottawa\/2010\/04\/13\/the-line-of-parting-ottawas-two-sublimes\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"sr-only\">&#8220;The Line of Parting: Ottawa&#8217;s Two Sublimes&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":7063,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"ngg_post_thumbnail":0,"_ef_editorial_meta_paragraph_assignment":"","_ef_editorial_meta_date_first-draft-date":"","_ef_editorial_meta_checkbox_needs-photo":"","_ef_editorial_meta_number_word-count":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[5300,5304],"tags":[1097,404,676,1695,1698,1709,1703,1701,1696,1693,915,1361,1702,1707,336,1019,1704,1183,1699,1700,729,1708,1710,1706,794,1694,394,878,1705,975,421,1697],"class_list":["post-2382","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-culture","category-history","tag-artist","tag-arts-culture","tag-california","tag-corporate-art-products","tag-crooked-metal-pole","tag-curator","tag-daniel-buren","tag-david-friedrich","tag-digital-media","tag-edinburgh","tag-evan-thornton","tag-flash","tag-fredric-jameson","tag-gatineau-hills","tag-historical","tag-kingston","tag-marc-mayer","tag-maria-cook","tag-media-strategies","tag-metal-stake","tag-montreal","tag-mount-carmel","tag-nag","tag-national-art-gallery","tag-new-york","tag-online-commentators","tag-ottawa","tag-ottawa-citizen","tag-the-louvre","tag-the-national","tag-toronto","tag-untold-networks"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v26.5 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>The Line of Parting: Ottawa&#039;s Two Sublimes - Spacing Ottawa<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/spacing.ca\/ottawa\/2010\/04\/13\/the-line-of-parting-ottawas-two-sublimes\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"The Line of Parting: Ottawa&#039;s Two Sublimes - Spacing Ottawa\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"You might remember the ink spilled several months ago over Maria Cook&#8217;s Ottawa Citizen article revealing plans for a 10-storey Roxy Paine sculpture, a kind of giant stalagmite atop Nepean Point. 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