Œuvre d'art public

Save Me

Justin Wonnacott , Save me, 1993
Location:
Café Aux Quatre Jeudis, 44 Laval, Gatineau, QC, J8X 3G7, Canada
Artwork creator(s): 
Wonnacott, Justin
Text author(s): 
Wonnacott, Justin
Installation year: 
1993
Remarks on location: 

Ciné-terrasse (l'écran de cinéma monté à même le mur adjacent à la terrasse, projections à tous les étés, dès juin.)

Description: 

Projection d'images à l'extérieur

Text of the artwork: 

Save me

Text theme: 
Appel à l’aide
Artwork theme: 

Interprétations d’images animées (exploration de)

History: 

Exposition «Ex site, Axe Néo-7=Outside Gallery 101», Ottawa, ON-Hull, QC, du 9 juillet au 31 août 1993. (Artistes : Pierre Dalpé, Diane Génier, André Martin, Richard Nigro, Michael Robinson, Justin Wonnacott, Anne-Marie Zeppetelli.) Commissaire: Richard Gagnier. Commissaire: Cindy Deachman. Onze artistes ont été invités à investir 6 sites urbains pour créer des œuvres in situ. Les projections avaient lieu à l’entracte, une fois par semaine, au cours de l’été.

Event date(s): 
1993
Note(s): 

«The viewer could take it or leave it. The static nature of the image allowed people to study the image and assign meaning to it in ways that are different from how they would approach the moving images they usually saw presented there. The picture suggests that some action is desired of the reader ie: save me but the "product" is ambiguous and open to many interpretations. The photographs are nineteenth century cartes de visite. The image held in the woman's hand shows a long dead quadriplegic civil war veteran in a studio. The man's hand holds a picture of a black man with what appears to be sugar cane on his shoulder. The red stripes are positioned as if they were a "comp" that would later be the place where the explanatory text would be placed. The image is an extended set of puns intended to connote diverse readings. The overall shape is like a flag, the predominant colours are red and black, the womans hand is the "distaff" side, the action is in the present but the images proferred refer to memory and the past but their meaning is determined by the present use of them as historical documents. This was the first digital work I produced for exhibition.»

 

Justin Wonnacott (2008). Justin Wonnacott posts
<http://www.aregeebee.net/pages/justinp.html>

Document(s): 

More Public Art. Public Art Commissions. Save Me

Wonnacott, Justin (2008).  More Public Art. Public Art Commissions. Save Me. <http://www.aregeebee.net/pages/justinp.htm> : Justin Wonnacott webpage