Past
Exhibitions
Wildflowers of Manitoba (2007) & Light-On in Babyland (1970-1974)
September 8 - October 5, 2008

Left: Noam Gonick & Luis Jacob, Wildflowers of Manitoba, 2007. Photo: Bill Eakin, courtesy of Plug In ICA
Right: Morris/Trasov Archive, Colour Research, 1972-1974. Photo: Morris/Trasov Archive & Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery
The Justina M. Barnicke presents two distinct exhibitions on the subject of alternative communities and collective lifestyle. Both set in a pastoral environment, Wildflowers of Manitoba finds its counterpart in the collaborative experimentations at Babyland (Sunshine Coast, British Columbia) originally started by Michael Morris, Vincent Trasov and others in the early 1970s.
Flowers of Manitoba, a dream-like installation produced by Noam Gonick and Luis Jacob, explores pastoral visions, idyllic fantasies, and queer transgression. Housed in a geodesic dome where an anonymous flower child slumbers, the geometric frame swells with hallucinatory visions of a tribe of nude boy-folk exploring the splendors of the Canadian Prairies. Their wistful wanderings and homo-social activity animate a mythical vision of Utopia as a blissful, sensual – and sexual – return to the land. Staged for the camera, yet chasing spiritual transcendence, the set and subjects evoke the sprit of alternative collective lifestyles. The exhibition is organized and circulated by Plug In Institute of Contemporary Art.
Light-On in Babyland, presents a selection of works initiated by Michael Morris and Vincent Trasov in the early 1970s at Babyland, which quickly became a magnet for artists from all across Canada, the US and Europe. Located on the Sunshine Coast of British Columbia, Babyland was “a place to act out fantasies, to set up the props and pursue a culture/nature debate,” as Vancouver curator Keith Wallace described it. Drawn from the Morris/Trasov Archive and the collection of the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery at UBC, the works in this exhibition include original components of “Colour Research,” an infinite, collaborative painting involving hundreds of spectral colour bars that would be re-configured by the unpredictable interplay between the wind, waters, and artists in the nude and in costumes. Organized by the Justina M. Barnicke Gallery, the photographs, films and early video work in this exhibition evoke a “youthful paradise”, as Luis Jacob put it, “where the physics of light and ever-changing colour combinations merged in a utopian vision of interpersonal playfulness and refracted possibilities for bodies and selves."
The exhibitions will be on view throughout Sweet Dreams, an installation of works by Canadian and international artists organized by the Justina M. Barnicke Gallery and presented at Hart House during Scotiabank Nuit Blanche 2008 on the night of October 4th into the early morning of October 5th. Click the Nuit Blanche Logo below to find out more.

We
gratefully acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts.
