The West Tower of McLean Park by  Stan Douglas

The West Tower of McLean Park 1998

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Dimensions: image: 447 x 559 mm

Copyright: © Stan Douglas, courtesy David Zwirner, New York | CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 DEED, Photo: Tate

Editor: So, this is "The West Tower of McLean Park" by Stan Douglas. It depicts an urban landscape, almost like a grid with buildings and streets. What strikes me is the rigid composition. What do you see here? Curator: Indeed. Note how the geometric forms dominate, offset by the organic forms of the trees. The interplay of verticals and horizontals creates a structured visual field. Observe how the artist employs colour—the contrast between the white tower and the surrounding greenery. Editor: I hadn't noticed the relationship between the colours and how they create balance! Curator: Colour and form contribute to the artwork’s overall unity and coherence. Do you see how the photograph presents a study of urban space as an aesthetic arrangement? Editor: Yes, I think I have a better appreciation for the formal elements at play now. Thanks! Curator: My pleasure.

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tate 2 days ago

http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/douglas-the-west-tower-of-mclean-park-p78417

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tate 2 days ago

This series of photographs was produced by Douglas to accompany the video installation Win, Place or Show (Tate T07700) and the triptych Untitled (Set for Win Place or Show: East View, West View, Overview) (Tate P78413). The series of photographs show the area of Vancouver known as Strathcona, where the video is set, although as it exists today rather than in 1968 when the action in the video purports to take place. This district forms the context for Douglas's video installation and is visible in the video installation as a rain-soaked cityscape that the characters view from their window in the apartment block. Paradoxically, at this moment the view is hardly distinguishable from any number of cityscapes. Stan Douglas was born in Vancouver in 1960 and this series of views of the city indicate his awareness of local contexts on which the impact of official histories and political programmes are evident. The redevelopment scheme for this district, first proposed in 1950, was partially completed during the following two decades. In 1968, however, further stages of the project were halted by the intervention of local residents and urban activists. The photographs reveal the completed parts of the redevelopment project, including the apartment buildings Stamps Place and McLean Park, as well as elements of the preserved old district such as the Russian Orthodox Church. Further Reading Lynne Cooke, Sianne Ngai, Nancy Shaw and Neville Wakefield, Double Vision: Stan Douglas and Douglas Gordon, exhibition catalogue, Dia Center for Art, New York 2000Diana Augaitis, George Wagner and William Wood, Stan Douglas, exhibition catalogue, Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver and Foundation for Contemporary Art, Tilburg 1999, reproduced pp. 95-97, 99-101 in colourCarol J Glover, Diana Thater and Scott Watson, Stan Douglas, London 1998 Tanya BarsonFebruary 2001