Kotama Bouabane: We'll Get There Fast and then We'll Take It Slow


We’ll get there fast and then we’ll take it slow examines the relationship between object and image through an experimental ethnographic approach. The exhibition explores the construction of tropical non-places – ones that exist only in the North American middle-class imaginary.

 
DateFriday, February 23, 2018 - 12:00pm to Thursday, March 29, 2018 - 6:00pm

Phone

+1 403 233 2399

Cost

Admission is free and all are welcome

Email

info@thenewgallery.org

Website

http://www.thenewgallery.org/well-get-there-fast-and-then-well-take-it-slow/

Location

The New Gallery 208 Centre St SE T2G 2B6 Calgary, AB Open Tuesday to Saturday, 12:00 to 6:00 PM

February 23—March 29, 2018

Opening reception on Friday, February 23 at 8PM. Admission is free and all are welcome.

Exhibition Description

We’ll get there fast and then we’ll take it slow examines the relationship between object and image through an experimental ethnographic approach. Taking its title from the Beach Boys 1988 song “Kokomo”, which describes a lush fictional island off of the Florida Keys, the exhibition similarly explores the construction of tropical non-places – ones that exist only in the North American middle-class imaginary – through numerous familiar tropes in travel photography. Just as Kokomo becomes a stand in for all island locals, images featuring palm trees, coconuts or dewy cocktails conjure ideas of exotic escapes, leisure and luxury. The accumulation of coconut imagery destabilizes an easy or unified reading of the coconut as symbol. The coconut appears again, humorously out of context mounted to the end of a selfie stick as Bouabane poses with tourists at a lookout on a mountain hike in Banff. The wide-open and pristine mountain expanse captured in the background of these images is often used to depict Canada in postcards and travel brochures, and potently portrays the landscape as a sight for leisure. The absurdity of recreating the familiar gesture with the coconut camera underscores the seemingly bottomless human desire to document and locate ourselves in relation to place, and foregrounds the complacent roll of photography in fostering economies of leisure and travel.
-Leila Timmins

Exhibition Text

The most common injury in Banff National Park is caused by tourists feeding ground squirrels and subsequently requiring stitches from bites sustained to their fingers—one of the many bad tourist behaviours witnessed in the Rocky Mountains. Banff is a place so beautiful it seems fictitious ; elk crossing residential streets and fuschia sunrises over mountain peaks. Its landscapes are reduced to postcard images, simplifying the town as an idyllic community. Banff acts as an intersection between desire, fantasy and reality; although its reality is a parallel with conflicting versions of nature, frontierism, nation-building and conservation. Within this confluence of Banff, Toronto-based artist Kotama Bouabane undertook the making of this body of work for the exhibition We’ll get there fast and then we’ll take it slow— although, examining these same issues toward other fictitious elsewheres.

The exhibition takes its impetus from an instructive image on colour correction from a 1970s Kodak manual; the artist questioned the positioning of coconuts deliciously cracked opened, ready to be consumed and its inclusion in a mundane technical manual. The dramatization of the photo, exemplifies photography’s historic complacency with its subject. Bouabane, used this as a starting point to further investigate stereotypes of Western ideals and ideologies of island life and leisure. The materials used in the exhibition—coconuts, tiki torches and bamboo—embody notions of escapism and commodification of culture, that perhaps symbolize a supposed better elsewhere, however fraught with a colonial gaze.

In the work, the coconuts are transformed from the subject of the photographs to becoming the photographic tools themselves. First, the coconuts are positioned into a series of photograms with anthropomorphized bewildered expressions in Faces #1-#50 (2015). The coconuts are also made into pinhole cameras, their guestural landscapes are shown in the Mountains series. Through a sense of play and humour, Bouabane manipulates and exhausts the materials, investigating the idealizations imposed on them. Further, the coconuts become new objects; the mural in the back of the space shows the artist at the summit of Sulphur Mountain in Banff, Bouabane, poses with his futile coconut selfie-stick, amongst the other tourists, and against the “awe-inspiring” backdrop of the Rocky Mountains. The artist humorously performs the tourist, further exploring these notions of commodification of place and material.

In Prop Down (2017), the artist examines the tiki torch’s contrived history and the unfixed nature of how images linger or as a potential residue of memory, through the gestural imprint of the tiki torch on the paper. The slippage of meaning, object and symbolism comes together in this work. Questioning ideas of representation, versus what is actually represented.

The title of the exhibition, We’ll get there fast and then we’ll take it slow adopts its name from a lyric in The Beach Boys 1988 hit Kokomo , describing an exotic but fictitious island off the coast of the Florida Keys. This glorification of a place, has a likeness to that of Banff, with the dichotomy of idealization and reality. However, in Banff it’s at the very moment the ground squirrel bites the tourist, that these illusions are shattered and unmasked .

-Katarina Veljovic

 

Biographies

Katarina Veljovic is an arts worker and occasional curator based in Toronto. She is a candidate for the MA Art History and Curatorial Studies degree at York University.

Kotama Bouabane has an MFA in Studio Arts, Photography from Concordia University, Montreal and an AOCAD from OCAD. His work has been exhibited in many galleries including Centre A (Vancouver), VU Photo (Quebec City) & Gallery 44 Centre For Contemporary Photography (Toronto). He has received many awards and grants from the Toronto Arts Council, Ontario Arts Council & the Canada Council for the Arts. He currently holds positions in the Photography Department at OCADU and York University.

DateFriday, February 23, 2018 - 12:00pm to Thursday, March 29, 2018 - 6:00pm

Phone

+1 403 233 2399

Cost

Admission is free and all are welcome

Email

info@thenewgallery.org

Website

http://www.thenewgallery.org/well-get-there-fast-and-then-well-take-it-slow/

Location

The New Gallery 208 Centre St SE T2G 2B6 Calgary, AB Open Tuesday to Saturday, 12:00 to 6:00 PM

image of black sand shape on white background
Friday, February 23, 2018 - 12:00pm to Thursday, March 29, 2018 - 6:00pm

February 23—March 29, 2018

Opening reception on Friday, February 23 at 8PM. Admission is free and all are welcome.

Exhibition Description

We’ll get there fast and then we’ll take it slow examines the relationship between object and image through an experimental ethnographic approach. Taking its title from the Beach Boys 1988 song “Kokomo”, which describes a lush fictional island off of the Florida Keys, the exhibition similarly explores the construction of tropical non-places – ones that exist only in the North American middle-class imaginary – through numerous familiar tropes in travel photography. Just as Kokomo becomes a stand in for all island locals, images featuring palm trees, coconuts or dewy cocktails conjure ideas of exotic escapes, leisure and luxury. The accumulation of coconut imagery destabilizes an easy or unified reading of the coconut as symbol. The coconut appears again, humorously out of context mounted to the end of a selfie stick as Bouabane poses with tourists at a lookout on a mountain hike in Banff. The wide-open and pristine mountain expanse captured in the background of these images is often used to depict Canada in postcards and travel brochures, and potently portrays the landscape as a sight for leisure. The absurdity of recreating the familiar gesture with the coconut camera underscores the seemingly bottomless human desire to document and locate ourselves in relation to place, and foregrounds the complacent roll of photography in fostering economies of leisure and travel.
-Leila Timmins

Exhibition Text

The most common injury in Banff National Park is caused by tourists feeding ground squirrels and subsequently requiring stitches from bites sustained to their fingers—one of the many bad tourist behaviours witnessed in the Rocky Mountains. Banff is a place so beautiful it seems fictitious ; elk crossing residential streets and fuschia sunrises over mountain peaks. Its landscapes are reduced to postcard images, simplifying the town as an idyllic community. Banff acts as an intersection between desire, fantasy and reality; although its reality is a parallel with conflicting versions of nature, frontierism, nation-building and conservation. Within this confluence of Banff, Toronto-based artist Kotama Bouabane undertook the making of this body of work for the exhibition We’ll get there fast and then we’ll take it slow— although, examining these same issues toward other fictitious elsewheres.

The exhibition takes its impetus from an instructive image on colour correction from a 1970s Kodak manual; the artist questioned the positioning of coconuts deliciously cracked opened, ready to be consumed and its inclusion in a mundane technical manual. The dramatization of the photo, exemplifies photography’s historic complacency with its subject. Bouabane, used this as a starting point to further investigate stereotypes of Western ideals and ideologies of island life and leisure. The materials used in the exhibition—coconuts, tiki torches and bamboo—embody notions of escapism and commodification of culture, that perhaps symbolize a supposed better elsewhere, however fraught with a colonial gaze.

In the work, the coconuts are transformed from the subject of the photographs to becoming the photographic tools themselves. First, the coconuts are positioned into a series of photograms with anthropomorphized bewildered expressions in Faces #1-#50 (2015). The coconuts are also made into pinhole cameras, their guestural landscapes are shown in the Mountains series. Through a sense of play and humour, Bouabane manipulates and exhausts the materials, investigating the idealizations imposed on them. Further, the coconuts become new objects; the mural in the back of the space shows the artist at the summit of Sulphur Mountain in Banff, Bouabane, poses with his futile coconut selfie-stick, amongst the other tourists, and against the “awe-inspiring” backdrop of the Rocky Mountains. The artist humorously performs the tourist, further exploring these notions of commodification of place and material.

In Prop Down (2017), the artist examines the tiki torch’s contrived history and the unfixed nature of how images linger or as a potential residue of memory, through the gestural imprint of the tiki torch on the paper. The slippage of meaning, object and symbolism comes together in this work. Questioning ideas of representation, versus what is actually represented.

The title of the exhibition, We’ll get there fast and then we’ll take it slow adopts its name from a lyric in The Beach Boys 1988 hit Kokomo , describing an exotic but fictitious island off the coast of the Florida Keys. This glorification of a place, has a likeness to that of Banff, with the dichotomy of idealization and reality. However, in Banff it’s at the very moment the ground squirrel bites the tourist, that these illusions are shattered and unmasked .

-Katarina Veljovic

 

Biographies

Katarina Veljovic is an arts worker and occasional curator based in Toronto. She is a candidate for the MA Art History and Curatorial Studies degree at York University.

Kotama Bouabane has an MFA in Studio Arts, Photography from Concordia University, Montreal and an AOCAD from OCAD. His work has been exhibited in many galleries including Centre A (Vancouver), VU Photo (Quebec City) & Gallery 44 Centre For Contemporary Photography (Toronto). He has received many awards and grants from the Toronto Arts Council, Ontario Arts Council & the Canada Council for the Arts. He currently holds positions in the Photography Department at OCADU and York University.

Venue & Address: 
The New Gallery 208 Centre St SE T2G 2B6 Calgary, AB Open Tuesday to Saturday, 12:00 to 6:00 PM
Website: 
http://www.thenewgallery.org/well-get-there-fast-and-then-well-take-it-slow/
Email: 
info@thenewgallery.org
Phone: 
+1 403 233 2399
Cost: 
Admission is free and all are welcome
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