The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Carnival of oddities

Visiting outdoor art exhibit features weird and wonderful aspects of humanity

- SUMMERSIDE Colin.MacLean@JournalPio­neer.com Twitter.com/JournalPMa­cLean BY COLIN MACLEAN

Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls – step right up.

See a voluntary freak show. Examine sculptures that stare right back at you.

Ride a merry-go-round in which the consumer is the merchandis­e.

Walk through a museum of human death.

All these and more await at Humanorium, which runs until July 25, from 1 p.m. to 10 p.m., beside Spinnakers Landing in Summerside.

The event is completely free, but donations are welcomed.

Humanorium is presented by public art company Exmuro and was founded in Quebec three years ago. It is being hosted in Summerside by Spinnakers Landing and Culture Summerside.

Vincent Roy, co-curator of Humanorium, said the idea of the art show was conceived as the antithesis of modern carnivals, which tend to be driven more towards rides and maximum profits, rather than their roots as travelling purveyors of experience­s and showers of oddities.

“It’s adrenaline – but it’s lost a bit of its spirit,” said Roy . . . . . . .

The Humanorium goes back to those roots by featuring humanity in all its wonder and weirdness, mostly using interactiv­e or experienti­al art pieces.

For example, the carnival is built around an art piece called “Le Carrousel,” by Jasmin Bilodeau, Sébastien Giguére and Nicolas Laverdiére. It’s a functional merrygo-round that visitors can ride and which is built of shopping carts, chains and medal traffic dividers.

Humanorium is purposeful­ly unusual, so visitors often have strong reactions to the experience, said Eve Cadieux, co-curator. “It’s emotive,” she chuckled.

The idea is to start a conversati­on about the what it is to be human. If something in the experience forces the audience to consider that lofty question, then Humanorium will have done its job.

Find out more about Humanorium on its website: humanorium.com/.

“It’s adrenaline – but it’s lost a bit of its spirit.” Vincent Roy

 ?? COLIN MACLEAN/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Eve Cadieux and Vincent Roy, co-curators of Humanorium stand in one of the contempora­ry art exhibit’s pieces, “La Chambre des Curiosités 2,” by Louis Fortier. Humanorium is at Spinnakers Landing until July 25.
COLIN MACLEAN/JOURNAL PIONEER Eve Cadieux and Vincent Roy, co-curators of Humanorium stand in one of the contempora­ry art exhibit’s pieces, “La Chambre des Curiosités 2,” by Louis Fortier. Humanorium is at Spinnakers Landing until July 25.
 ?? COLIN MACLEAN/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Eve Cadieux sits in the art piece “Le Carrousel,” part of the Humanorium, visiting Summerside until July 25.
COLIN MACLEAN/JOURNAL PIONEER Eve Cadieux sits in the art piece “Le Carrousel,” part of the Humanorium, visiting Summerside until July 25.

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