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Mobilizing the Event
by Marie-Josée Jean and Patrice Loubier
The hypermobility of individuals today, Montréal’s
urban development as a sort of archipelago of specialization,
mass tourism and the consequent multiplication of cultural
and festivalrelated activities—all of this will
change the way the downtown core is used and how people
move around within it. Mobile Space aims to
observe and investigate the transformations imminent
in this area where VOX has been headquartered since
2004.
This famed neighbourhood, at once artistic centre and
red-light district, is remarkable not only for its key
role in Montréal’s history, but also as
a locus of cross-pollinization, be it linguistic (St-Laurent
Boulevard, which bisects it, is the traditional dividing
line between English-speaking west and French-speaking
east), ethnic (it is home to Chinese, Italian, Jewish
and Portuguese communities, among others) or social
(its usage is diverse: here one finds cultural infrastructures,
government offices, the sex and entertainment trades,
the criminal underworld, retail businesses). It is now
poised to undergo profound transformation, because of
changes about to be made to the urban fabric—development
of public spaces, revitalization of downtown with implementation
of the new Quartier des spectacles, and so on—but
also due to the increasingly frequent use of surveillance
systems, justified by the obsession with security characteristic
of modern societies. The neighbourhood’s cultural
redefinition is being accompanied by increased efforts
to secure it, in response to the criminal activities
and delinquency that continue to exist there. The area
now seems divided, torn even: on the one hand, it is
a venue for festive celebrations and creative effervescence
(drivers of recreation and tourism), and on the other,
a public space fraught with tension, increasingly patrolled
by police and monitored by surveillance and data archiving
mechanisms.
Seven artists were invited to conduct a series of visits
to this urban environment and subsequently offer the
public several routes, with the intersection of St-Laurent
Boulevard and Sainte-Catherine Street as the epicentre
of their explorations. Far from being limited to a strict
visual transcription of the area’s physical or
urban geography, these guided itineraries will sound
out its varied strata—ranging from aural spaces
to tourist representations, gentrified spaces and surveillance
systems, among others. Proceeding for the most part
from a work in progress paradigm, the projects will
be deployed throughout the duration of the event in
the form of maps and suggested routes, photographic,
sound or video documentation, scorecards, or bona fide
guided tours. The map will thus be concretely superimposed
over the territory, pointing the way to actions such
as samplings, encounters, investigations and walking
tours. The formula will also activate a process of back-and-forth
journeys between the gallery and the urban environment,
between documentation and the raw experience of the
neighbourhood. Indeed, the title Mobile Space
speaks to the need for artists and audiences alike to
travel between artspace and cityspace.
Public debate, May 3, 2008 at 2 p.m.
For the occasion, VOX will be transformed into a site
for interventions and meetings where one can view works,
try out itineraries, consult documentation and listen
to debates featuring sociologists, social groups, artists
and members of the public.
Discussion Forums and youth workshops
Cellular phone and GPS technology are transforming social
and urban interactions. This shift to mobile communications,
less futuristic than one may imagine, is bringing with
it a profound cultural transformation, which will be
the topic of discussion forums organized for adolescents.
Under the supervision of an educator, young participants
will also be invited to roam around St-Laurent Boulevard
and its surroundings, capturing images from perspectives
that they have previously not explored.
See the calendar of meeting and the educational activities
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