Toronto Star

Arts flourish in ‘Paris of the Prairies’

New chapter in Saskatoon’s rich history set to begin with opening of Remai Modern

- JENNIFER ALLFORD SPECIAL TO THE STAR

SASKATOON—“See the pink brain? Look past the strawberry and over . . .” My eagle-eyed companion points down at the pile of painted boulders along the banks of the South Saskatchew­an River. “Do you see the Cheshire cat?”

On summer days, people from all over this city scramble down the riverbank below the Broadway Bridge to create a masterpiec­e or two in the ever-changing spontaneou­s art installati­on.

Just up the road, along Broadway, where Joni Mitchell played her first paid gig in the 1960s, bright murals line the alleys behind little artisan shops that sell cool items like wooden wall maps of Saskatchew­an. Across the river, in Riversdale, there are more murals in the alleys, artist studios above a pawnshop and steady traffic into a trendy store that sells T-shirts emblazoned with “Made in SK.”

Bob Dylan once dubbed this pretty little city “Paris of the Prairies.” No one seems to know exactly why.

It definitely wasn’t because of the traffic — cars here stop for you before you even get to the crosswalk. But it’s a safe bet Dylan’s moniker had something to do with the creativity flowing through the streets.

“This is a really great art town,” says Jen Budney, a long-time curator and current PhD student at the University of Saskatchew­an. “I’ve lived in all kinds of cities across Canada, in New York and Milan, working in the arts, and I moved to Saskatoon because of the incredibly vibrant arts scene here.”

The scene has flourished, in part, because of favourable economics.

“It was a have-not province for so long, so real estate was cheap, artists could afford to live here,” Budney says over tea and under paintings hanging at the Undergroun­d Café.

Being “isolated and cold” helped build the warmth of the arts community. “It’s a very vibrant close-knit scene here,” she says.” People help each other.”

Anew chapter in the city’s art history is slated to begin Oct. 21 with the opening of the Remai Modern, a museum of modern and contempora­ry art with a large permanent collection

“I’ve lived in all kinds of cities across Canada, in New York and Milan . . . I moved to Saskatoon because of the incredibly vibrant arts scene.” JEN BUDNEY LONGTIME CURATOR

that includes Picasso linocuts and some of his ceramic works.

The sleek, four-storey building has 11 galleries — think lots of white, oak and polished concrete with prairie light spilling through floor-to-ceiling windows. There is no admission fee for the main floor, a gorgeous atrium that includes a five-metre-long fireplace with “Welcome” written above the flames in half a dozen Indigenous languages.

“The atrium is meant to be the living room of Saskatoon,” says Stefan Deprez, the Remai’s guest-experience manager, during a sneak peak. “People can be intimated by an art gallery.

“We want to make the building as universal as possible. It’s a multipurpo­se space, not just an art gallery.”

As well as room for a couple of hundred people to lounge around, the main floor includes a gallery that will feature local artists, an Oliver & Bonacini restaurant and a gift shop with plenty of Picassothe­med goodies.

On the fourth floor, standing in the space that juts out over the river, you can watch the sun bounce off the South Saskatchew­an and see the colourful painted boulders up the way.

The Remai “will enrich the whole cultural landscape of Saskatoon,” says Felicia Gay, the curator at Wanuskewin Galleries, the only gallery of contempora­ry Indigenous artists on the Prairies. Art fans coming to see Picassos can go home with an appreciati­on of this place and the people who have lived here for millennia.

The galleries are part of Wanuskewin Heritage Park, a former cattle ranch 15 minutes from downtown Saskatoon.

“It’s the longest continuous­ly run archeologi­cal project in Canada,” says the park’s forensic anthropolo­gist, Ernie Walker, as we walk past the spot where 6,400-year-old artifacts have been found. In the past 40 years, archeologi­cal teams have unearthed arrowheads, plenty of bison bones and a few ancient gaming pieces.

“There are 19 pre-contact sites,” Walker says. “We’re on number nine. We haven’t got to the biggest ones yet.”

Back inside, Wanuskewin’s restaurant has been lauded as one of the best Indige- nous restaurant­s in Canada. And downtown, Saskatoon’s culinary and cocktail scene is a tour de force all of its own.

Try the potato gnocchi and carrot top pesto at the Hollows, Diefenbake­r trout at Ayden Kitchen and Bar and bison tataki at Sticks and Stones. Order lentil cream ale or any number of inventive cocktails to wash down your meal.

And, while you have your glass in hand, toast Saskatoon’s modern art, ancient history and all the other good stuff in between. Jennifer Allford travelled as a guest of Tourism Saskatoon, which did not review or approve this story.

 ?? TOURISM SASKATOON ?? The Remai Modern, a four-storey museum of modern and contempora­ry art that houses more than 400 Picasso linocuts, opens Oct. 21 in Saskatoon.
TOURISM SASKATOON The Remai Modern, a four-storey museum of modern and contempora­ry art that houses more than 400 Picasso linocuts, opens Oct. 21 in Saskatoon.
 ?? JENNIFER ALLFORD ?? Locals like to paint a pile of rocks near the bank of the South Saskatchew­an River as a spontaneou­s and ever-changing art installati­on.
JENNIFER ALLFORD Locals like to paint a pile of rocks near the bank of the South Saskatchew­an River as a spontaneou­s and ever-changing art installati­on.
 ?? JENNIFER ALLFORD ?? Stefan Deprez, the Remai Modern’s guest-experience manager, says the museum is designed to be a multipurpo­se space.
JENNIFER ALLFORD Stefan Deprez, the Remai Modern’s guest-experience manager, says the museum is designed to be a multipurpo­se space.
 ??  ??
 ?? JENNIFER ALLFORD ?? Felicia Gay, curator of the Wanuskewin Galleries, expects the Remai Modern will enrich Saskatoon’s already vibrant cultural landscape.
JENNIFER ALLFORD Felicia Gay, curator of the Wanuskewin Galleries, expects the Remai Modern will enrich Saskatoon’s already vibrant cultural landscape.

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