Development and Desire
Michael Banwell
Curated by: Janis Bowley
Development and Desire, an installation by Michael Banwell
January 15 to February 12, 1994
Opening Saturday, 2 to 6pm
Artist Talk: January 29, 2pm
Michael Banwell is building an administrative office within the Or Gallery. Banwell’s constructed space includes fabricated oak panel walls, an administrator’s chair and desk, a hand-made row boat, two windows with a view and brass coloured letters which read Development and Desire. Is this the office of a government agency, a forest company or an environmental organization?
Banwell carefully chose the words ‘development’ and ‘desire’ to accurately reflect two views of the way many Canadians value nature. There is the view that the value of nature is in its ‘development’ for industrial production and profit and the view that nature, due to our ‘desire’ for untouched landscape, can be ‘developed’ for its recreational and wilderness values. The ‘Words ‘development’ and ‘desire’ not only identify opposing positions but are also interchangeable. There exists the patriarchal ‘desire’ for dominion over nature. Also, increasingly there are shifts away from industrial models towards the ‘development’ of sustainable resource models.
Banwell will be giving an artist talk at the gallery on Saturday, January 29 at 2pm.
Review:
The Weekend Sun, February 5, 1994