City Report – 20 Jul 2018
In Toronto’s Don Valley a Public Art Project Exploring Work, Shelter and Sanctuary
Every night they dissembled the shed; every morning they built it anew
Toronto’s Don Valley is a lush, hybrid ecosystem in the city’s east end. It cradles the Don River and now runs underneath the winding expanse of the Don Valley Parkway, its concrete, parallel artery. There is a path – an abandoned railway – many have followed to the Don from Toronto’s ultra-rich Rosedale neighbourhood: Milkman’s Lane, so named because of the delivery people who once traversed this path back and forth from the Valley, formerly a bustling industrial area with factories and farms. Currently, Milkman’s Lane leads to Evergreen Brick Works, a retrofitted brick factory and surrounding environs where curator Kari Cwynar has been programming innovative, temporary public art for the past year. This route and destination contain significant class, race and ecological tensions: histories of colonial displacement and resource extraction, pollution, neglect, so-called invasive species and squatters, including those with addiction and mental-health issues, whose alternative society has, for years, resisted Toronto’s WASPy frigidity and increasingly impossible expense.
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Gareth Long, Travels with Two Donkeys in the Valley, 2018, performance documentation. Courtesy: the artist; photograph: Don Long
In June, Cwynar programmed artist Gareth Long’s performance Travels with Two Donkeys in the Valley (2018). Not dissimilar to ‘Milkman’s Lane,’ the name and nature of Long’s project are deceptively twee, pastoral. For four consecutive weekends, Long took two adorable, Instagrammable, miniature donkeys named Marci and Gemini (the former sporting a dapper, shag haircut) on a short walk up and down the Lower Don River Trail, leaving them to rest in a provisional shed designed by Long with the assistance of architect Christian Kliegel. Kliegel and Long’s construction is based on a modular schoolhouse designed by French architect Jean Prouvé, who devised demountable structures as a low-cost response to his country’s housing shortage after World War II. Every night for the duration of the performance, Long and students from the University of Toronto dissembled the shed. Every morning, they built it anew.
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Gareth Long, Travels with Two Donkeys in the Valley, 2018, performance documentation. Courtesy: the artist; photograph: Frances Loeffler
Though in keeping with Long’s interest in the philosophies and absurdities of modernist industrial design (a previous work, Bouvard and Pécuchet’s Invented Desk for Copying (2007–ongoing), materializes a desk from Gustav Flaubert’s last, unfinished novel about two feckless, pretentious copy clerks), Long and Kliegel’s construction, and deconstruction, was born of necessity. No new structures can legally remain in the Don overnight. According to a March 2018 report by Global News, the City of Toronto eliminated 313 encampments from ravines and parks last year, its justification a bylaw against overnight camping in these areas. Long’s donkey shelter also rests underneath the Bloor Street Viaduct, a Toronto landmark as charged and fraught as the Don Valley. Constructed in 1918, the large bridge integrated the eastern part of the city, but was also the site for almost 500 deaths by suicide until 2003, when a barrier was built, remarkably called ‘The Luminous Veil’. (Before the Veil, the Viaduct was second only to the Golden Gate Bridge as a global site for suicides.) Michael Ondaatje’s 1987 novel In the Skin of a Lion acknowledges the bridge as a towering site of death, not only of those suffering from mental-health issues but also of those workers who initially lost their lives in its construction.
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Gareth Long, Travels with Two Donkeys in the Valley, 2018, performance documentation. Courtesy: the artist; photograph: Claire Harvie
As traditional symbols of labour, dispossession and mis-ascribed stupidity, the donkeys, on loan from the nearby Donkey Sanctuary of Canada, thus activate and represent the Don poignantly, and in a manner that is hardly cute. Indeed, standing near the donkeys’ shelter with a direct view of the Viaduct overhead, the site feels like a graveyard. Long received facilitating help from the Donkey Sanctuary, and so one could pick up donkey literature at the site of the performance, with information on ‘common donkey illnesses’ and donkey needs, among them: ‘Your donkey needs company! Try to keep at least two donkeys together’; or, ‘Each donkey needs half an acre of grazing space’. It is worth noting that, as ancient labourers, the prototypical animal-slave, donkeys have rarely been afforded either of these things.
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Gareth Long, Travels with Two Donkeys in the Valley, 2018, performance documentation. Courtesy: the artist; photograph: Julia Lum
Importantly, the donkey has tended to function as a cultural symbol in relation to its owner. The compassionate donkey owner – a rarity, even a subject of ridicule – possesses a gentleness typically ascribed to the feminine, something of which Long, a straight white man, seems smartly aware. Christ rode into Jerusalem on a donkey to convey that he was not in fact bellicose, but the Prince of Peace. The anomalous intimacy between donkey and human is the source of legendary, feminine-inflected metamorphosis. In Apuleius’s The Golden Ass, the only complete, extant novel from ancient Rome, the protagonist Lucius is transformed into a donkey, and only rescued from this fate when sufficiently humbled by the goddess Isis, into whose cult he is inducted. In A Midsummer Night’s Dream, after a spell cast by her jealous lover Oberon, Titania falls in obsessive and, depending on the production, compellingly erotic thrall to the working-class Bottom, whose head has transformed into that of an ass. Like Titania, Marie (Anne Wiazemsky) in director Robert Bresson’s film Au Hasard Balthazar (1966) puts flowers in her donkey’s hair, her attachment to this beast of burden a tonic to the leering teenage boys who stand in contrast to his abiding, gentle strength. ‘Au Hasard Balthazar is about our anxieties and desires when faced with a living creature who’s completely humble, completely holy and happens to be a donkey’, said Bresson of his film. The same can be said of Long’s intriguing, and fundamentally moral, project.
Main image: Gareth Long, Travels with Two Donkeys in the Valley, 2018, performance documentation. Courtesy: the artist; photograph: Gareth Long
David Balzer is a writer, editor and teacher based in Toronto. He is the author of Curationism: How Curating Took Over the Art World and Everything Else (Coach House/Pluto Press, 2014). Find him @davidkbalzer
Gareth Long,与两匹驴在山谷中旅行,2018,性能文档。礼貌:艺术家;照片:Julia Lum,重要的是,驴子倾向于充当与主人相关的文化符号。富有同情心的驴子主人——一个稀有的人,甚至是一个被嘲笑的对象——拥有一种典型地被赋予女性气质的温柔,其中一个长得笔直的白人,看上去很聪明。基督骑着驴骑着马来到耶路撒冷,说他其实不是好战的,而是和平之君。驴与人之间的异常亲密关系是传说中女性变形的根源。Apuleius的《金驴》是罗马古代唯一完整的现存小说,主人公卢修斯变成了驴子,只有在被女神伊西斯充分羞辱的时候,才被救出。在一个仲夏夜之梦中,在她嫉妒的情人奥伯龙施展了一番魔咒之后,泰坦尼克迷迷糊糊地爱上了工人阶级的底层,他的头颅已经变成了一个屁股。Titania,玛丽(Anne Wiazemsky)在导演罗伯特。布列松的电影《Au Hasard Balthazar》(1966)把鲜花放在驴子的头发上,她对这只驮畜的依恋是对那些与他持久、温柔的力量形成鲜明对比的少年男孩的补品。他的电影《布列松》说:“当我们面对一个完全谦卑、完全神圣、恰巧是驴子的生物时,Au Hasard Balthazar就是我们的焦虑和欲望。”同样的道理也可以说是罗恩有趣的,从根本上说是道德的。主要形象:Gareth Long,游历两匹驴子在山谷中,2018,性能文档。礼貌:艺术家;照片:加里斯龙戴维巴尔泽戴维巴尔泽是一个作家,编辑和教师在多伦多。他是策展主义的作者:策展是如何接管艺术世界和其他一切的(Coach Houth/Puto to Press,2014)。找到他“达维克巴泽尔市报告”多伦多公共艺术加里斯长克里斯格尔戴维巴尔泽卡里CWYARFRIZE特稿 ARThing编译