Alouette, 2018
Brandon Vickerd (Hamilton, Ontario)
An aerospace device seems to have fallen from the sky and crashed in the middle of the city. A replica of the 1962 Canadian satellite now abandoned in its perpetual earthly orbit, Alouette recalls the failed promise of a brighter future foretold by modern times. It could equally represent the ever-growing obsession with connectivity and the resulting accumulation of space waste. Will the day come when the sky finally does fall down on our heads?
*Temporary removed because of vandalism.
Brandon Vickerd is an artist and Professor of Sculpture and Chair of the Department of Visual Arts and Art History at York University. His whose work straddles the line between high and low culture, acting as a catalyst for critical thought and addressing the failed promise of a modernist future predicated on boundless scientific advancement. His public installation work is designed not to come across as obvious sculpture, but rather as an anomaly inserted into the daily experience of the spectator. Brandon Vickerd is the recipient of multiple awards and grants from the Social Science and Humanities Research Council, the Canada Council for the Arts, and the Ontario Arts Council, and has shown his work at exhibitions including Sputnik Returned 2 at the OpenART Biennale (Orebro, Sweden) and aceartinc. (Winnipeg, MB); Dance of the Cranes at Capital Fringe (Washington, D.C.); and Falling Skies in Third Space (Saint John, NB).
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