News   May 10, 2024
 1.2K     1 
News   May 10, 2024
 1.7K     0 
News   May 10, 2024
 1.1K     0 

Nuit Blanche

I found most, if not all of the art displays real disappointments. They were just too trite and simple for the most part.

It was a fun night though, the city was certainly alive and vibrant. Nuit Blanche is just a glorified midnight madness, but I loved it.
 
The Scream thingy at Union Station was good. City Hall was good. Zombie thing was awful. Last year's Nuit was much, much better. I live in hope for next year.
 
In Memory of Sam the Record Man ... 2008.10.04

IMG_2352.jpg


IMG_2353.jpg
 
My Nuit Blanche pics here. Choose slideshow, then sit back and relax!

42
 
What no NIMBY's bemoaning the noisy throngs of people walking about the city late at night early in the morning? No politicians suggesting we tax the organizers for taking up our streets and sidewalks for their displays? I guess these are only issues when people don't like the even that is going on. Had this been a night of anything other than 'art' would people have been as accomodating?

As it was I was disappointed by the event this year. To many indoor showcases leading to excessive lineups. Not enough out door showcases. Huge crowds, which indicate the event has already gone too mainstream for it's own good.
 
WH: mainstream? What are you talking about? It was strictly the cultural elites on the street on Saturday night.

42
 
Whoever did the maps were brutal. There were numerous mistakes on there making it difficult to find certain sites.
 
Mustapha, could you describe the scene at Lamport? Were the mascots interacting with the audience? I was most curious about this one and regret not getting to Zone C for it.

Brian69: the mascots hammed it up for the audience; there were balls thrown back and forth into the stands. Many of the mascots friends were there, and quite a bit of cheering/razzing going on. The stadium type music pumped everyone up; lots of dancing in the stands. You could sit too so that was nice. They also opened up the bathrooms, nice touch for this middle aged bladder.

Heres a 28 second vid of the Lamport stadium action:

http://smg.photobucket.com/albums/v176/JeffLow/?action=view&current=DSCF0836.flv

Here's a 7 second vid of the Sam's neon sign in aktion:

http://smg.photobucket.com/albums/v176/JeffLow/?action=view&current=DSCF0827.flv
 
WH: mainstream? What are you talking about? It was strictly the cultural elites on the street on Saturday night.

42

I'm honourd to be grouped among the culteral elite! But that's not what I saw there. I saw more hipsters, 'artsy' college/university kids (who were drunk and/or high), and loud mouths than I saw cultural elites on Saturday night. Not to say they weren't there but I didn't see them in any number. Do you actually think there are 1 million cutural types in and around this city? Then again maybe I was in the wrong areas (Zone A and B).

One of the best juxtopositions that I saw on that night was walking south along Yonge to College park (to see the zombies). Where I saw a group of hoity toity types in their suits and dresses clucking amongst themselves over the crowds "This is amazing" was what I overheard. Was an interesting comparison of material wealth and cultural wealth.
 
Brian69: the mascots hammed it up for the audience; there were balls thrown back and forth into the stands. Many of the mascots friends were there, and quite a bit of cheering/razzing going on. The stadium type music pumped everyone up; lots of dancing in the stands. You could sit too so that was nice. They also opened up the bathrooms, nice touch for this middle aged bladder.

Heres a 28 second vid of the Lamport stadium action:

http://smg.photobucket.com/albums/v176/JeffLow/?action=view&current=DSCF0836.flv

Here's a 7 second vid of the Sam's neon sign in aktion:

http://smg.photobucket.com/albums/v176/JeffLow/?action=view&current=DSCF0827.flv

Thanks for the video--looks like the Lamport mascots did a great job and I'm sorry I missed it. I'm sure things slowed down considerably for them by 3 a.m.
 
WH: My cultural elites line was meant to be taken as a commentary on Stephen Harper's idiotic pronouncement regarding the arts in the last several days. The whole notion that art is only enjoyed by the cultural elite and not by ordinary Canadians is so outlandishly asinine that I didn't think I had any need to add winking smilies to my statement. With supposedly a million people threading their way through Toronto's streets, the notion of 'the elite' is shown for the utter ignorance that it is. Whether they were hipsters or artsy types or not, there were around a million people on the streets, all voting with their feet.

B69: It was just after 4 AM when BuildTO, Darkstar 416 and Simply Dan and I walked into Lamport stadium, and the music and mascots were still pumping away. Some of the mascots did look pretty damn tired, but they made a pretty funny show of it, and the crowd at that time was still nuts. That was an insanely brilliant little show for pure, gleeful fun.

42
 
B69: It was just after 4 AM when BuildTO, Darkstar 416 and Simply Dan and I walked into Lamport stadium, and the music and mascots were still pumping away. Some of the mascots did look pretty damn tired, but they made a pretty funny show of it, and the crowd at that time was still nuts. That was an insanely brilliant little show for pure, gleeful fun.

42

Feeding off the energy of the crowd I imagine--adrenalin and lots of cigarettes can go a long way.

Serves me right for missing out on Zone C.
 
WH: My cultural elites line was meant to be taken as a commentary on Stephen Harper's idiotic pronouncement regarding the arts in the last several days. The whole notion that art is only enjoyed by the cultural elite and not by ordinary Canadians is so outlandishly asinine that I didn't think I had any need to add winking smilies to my statement. With supposedly a million people threading their way through Toronto's streets, the notion of 'the elite' is shown for the utter ignorance that it is. Whether they were hipsters or artsy types or not, there were around a million people on the streets, all voting with their feet.
42

The sarcasm flew right over my head! LOL pity I missed it.

In many ways, we the observer became the art on that night. So many people mobilized together experiencing not just art but also their city. It was very empowering to see the crowds litterally stop traffic (silly city didn't close the roads) as they spilled out onto the streets from the packed sidewalks. Despite spending a few years in this city I had never walked along Gerrard West of Yonge and was stunned by this part of the city.
 
Yeah, they have got to do some street closings next year, and I don't mean Church Street, which, after 2 years of lame installations, should have its privileges revoked for a year.

I'd close Yonge from Gerrard to Richmond, and Queen from Victoria to Spadina, othen than for streetcars, which would have to ding-ding-ding their way through the crowds.

42
 
http://www.thestar.com/GTA/Columnist/article/512263

Minds are open to Nuit Blanche but streets aren't

Oct 06, 2008 04:30 AM

Christopher Hume

If anything, Nuit Blanche may have become too successful.

In three short years, the all-night "contemporary art thing" has grown to the point where hundreds of thousands of people participate. According to CBC Radio, no fewer than one million attended between Saturday evening and Sunday morning.

It's not hard to understand why; unlike any other cultural event, Nuit Blanche is based on the transformative power of art. This may not be something the Stephen Harpers of the world grasp, but to most of us, it's obvious.

And what makes Nuit Blanche especially compelling is that the object transformed was nothing less than the city itself, Toronto.

Freed from the confines of the gallery, the museum, the woolly thinking of the curatorial elite, artists are able to perform magic on buildings, places and whole neighbourhoods. These form the very world we Torontonians inhabit.

That tired old question – Is it art? – no longer matters.

At the same time, however, it's become painfully clear that official Toronto doesn't have a clue what's going on. Mayor David Miller talks predictably and patronizingly about "how powerful and beneficial our partnerships with the artistic and corporate communities can be," as if what's important is that there's a bank willing to sponsor Nuit Blanche.

That's hardly the point. The truth is that business has much more to gain from Nuit Blanche than Nuit Blanche does from business.

And what about the city's role in Nuit Blanche? His Worship claims that last year the event attracted "a groundbreaking audience of 800,000." By any measure that's a lot of people. How strange, then, that although the streets of Toronto thronged with huge crowds throughout the night, it was business as usual as far as city hall was concerned.

In other words, with the odd exception, roads were still open to traffic and pedestrians were expected to make ways for cars. Not even for one night, 12 hours, could civic leaders give the streets to the people. To be honest, it's amazing no one was hurt.

As far as civic officials are concerned, nothing must be allowed to slow the flow of traffic. All that blather about pedestrian charters, more bicycle lanes and enhanced public transit adds up to precisely nothing. What counts here is the car.

And what about the TTC? True the commission managed grudgingly to extend selected routes into the night, but the service should have been free and there should have been more of it. Who knows, perhaps the TTC would have attracted new riders by using the occasion to show how convenient and efficient it is. (On the other hand, it's more likely those one-time passengers left the subway happier than ever to get back into their cars.)

Above all, Nuit Blanche revealed the growing gap between the people who live in this city and those who run it. Torontonians are light years ahead of their leaders in understanding what it means to inhabit an urban centre. And unlike the nabobs, residents are well aware that the 1950s are over.

Ultimately, the most compelling aspect of Nuit Blanche was not the artworks, but the glimpse they offered of the city that Toronto might be. That was the exciting part. For a few spectacular hours, Toronto wasn't simply transformed; it was transcendent. Places so familiar they were invisible suddenly seemed fresh and fascinating. Even that meanest of heaps, Maple Leaf Gardens, acquired new vitality.

Then there was City Hall itself, remade by a German art collective into an interactive light show. Never has the seat of civic democracy seemed more alive, responsive or engaging.

*****

Here's my take...

I attended Nuit Blanche for the first time this year, and I was very pleased with the experience. I think the amazing thing about Nuit Blanche has nothing to do with the art, but rather the transformation of public spaces in Toronto that we have always been familiar with into something strange and other-worldly. In that way, Nuit Blanche was a success.

However, throughout the night I've heard discussions from just about everybody about the definition of art. While everybody enjoyed seeing Toronto's public spaces in a different light, I found that most people didn't seem to "understand" the art (most were saying "That was it?" or "What was that all about?" after looking at an installation), or were poking fun at the art (saying "That's art!?" or "I can do better than that!"), myself included. For many, maybe Nuit Blanche is not really a night to enjoy art, but more a night to "see and be seen".

With that reaction from the crowd, perhaps it's time for the artists to start educating the average Torontonian about how to appreciate art. Or, maybe it's time for Nuit Blanche to redefine itself, not only as an arts festival, but also a festival celebrating Toronto's public spaces.

I'd also like to see Nuit Blanche contribute permanently to Toronto, seeing how people are wowed by the transformation of public spaces. I think the organizers (or the city) should set a goal, say a percentage, of Nuit Blanche installations that can remain after the festival as permanent public artwork, either at the location it was installed for Nuit Blanche, or another location.

Like Hume and interchange42, there should definitely be better planning of transportation on Nuit Blanche. One idea I have is to shut down Adelaide and Richmond streets during Nuit Blanche to divert pedestrians traffic from Queen, since I saw that both streets were pretty empty that night. Perhaps the crowds could be attracted to both streets with some big art installations.
 

Back
Top