this post was submitted on 25 Jun 2023
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New Westminster

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Located in BC, Canada along the Lower Fraser River, on the homelands of the Halkomelem-speaking people, New Westminster is at the center of Metro Vancouver. It has long been a crossroads of people, pathways, and ideas, where innovation and culture are interwoven and celebrated, making this city a great place to live, work, and visit.

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I just went to see the current exhibition at the New Media Gallery, DUST:

Search and you will find dust woven through the universe; swept up, dispersed and deposited across the globe; collecting in every corner of our lives. All of humanity lives on a fragment of cosmic dust…and we are dust. Visible, invisible, meaningful, reviled; dust has been exploited by artists as material, subject, ontology and here as landscape…full of properties, concepts and relationships and the potential to convey expansive ideas, Dust has been handed down to us through histories, words and images. In this exhibition it is interpreted through complex technologies, data collection, augmented videography and sound. DUST brings together three award-winning artists who have created extraordinary, populated landscapes, each underscored with striking aggregations of sound.

Features 3 artists:

  • Denis Beaubois, No longer Adrift (2013, updated 2023)
  • Herman Kolgen, Dust Surface (2010)
  • Michael Saup, DustVR (2018-2023)

All three are amazing. GO SEE THIS SHOW

Also shout out to Director/Curator Gordan Duggan who was our guide for the show. We try and catch all the shows here and he's very often the person there, and he's a great guide and personally excited about all the pieces and artists.

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

We FINALLY got there today on "the last day" - only to discover they've extended it for a week :)

I'll admit not my favourite - I prefer the exhibits where you can see workings and watch machines work. But very interesting, as always - there's always great conversations and thoughts to have around the exhibits and personally I find that as fascinating as the exhibits themselves. Like today we realized that, in "No Longer Adrift", the focus is on the microscopic fragments of dust gathered from the airport lounges, but the same patterns of dust movement seen in the other two exhibits can also be thought of as similar, on a larger scale, to the movement of the planes and the people that brought the dust into the airport lounges.