Vancouver Sun

LIVING IN HARMONY

West Van arts festival reaches the quarter-century mark.

- SHAWN CONNER

Harmony Arts Festival Friday to Aug. 9 | West Vancouver

Info: harmonyart­s.ca

When Marie Khouri installed her first public art piece for the 2010 Winter Olympics, she wasn’t sure what to expect.

But she worried that the piece — a pristine white bench called Banc (the French word for “bench”) — would be a target for graffiti artists.

Instead, it became a favourite spot for high- flying skateboard­ers.

“At the beginning, I was upset,” the Vancouver-based artist said. “It was my first time doing a public art installati­on. But I came to understand that, when you do a public art piece, it’s not yours — you’re giving it to the people who are going to walk by, to the city. It’s important that they appropriat­e.”

Khouri’s latest public art piece is titled You and I, and it, too, is interactiv­e. Like Banc, it invites people to sit, if not use as a launching pad for their skateboard­s.

Situated on the waterfront in West Vancouver, You and I is the second commission­ed piece by the West Vancouver Museum, in conjunctio­n with host and sponsor, the Harmony Arts Festival.

The first was last year’s Vermilion Sands, a modernist, geometric but lush green canopy that was created by architect Matthew Soules. The canopy, suspended over the walkway between the Park Royal Beachside Patio and the Waterfront Lounge, greeted visitors to the festival.

Art has become an increasing­ly important component to the annual 10-day event. Now in its 25th year, the Harmony Arts Festival regularly draws more than 100,000 people to West Vancouver for its mix of music, food, culture and local art and artisans.

“It has a festival environmen­t, which I think is a great place to provide the unexpected to people,” West Vancouver Museum curator Darrin Morrison said. “We try to introduce new artists and new ideas to the festival. We were introduced to Marie Khouri about two months, and started talking about doing a project.”

Khouri’s piece for the festival is a sequel of sorts to an earlier work, Let’s Just Sit and Talk. For both projects, Khouri began with a phrase in Arabic and translated the words into a 10-inch model. She and her team then sculpted larger, almost human-size versions of the letters.

The results are abstract, but practical, since people can sit in the shapes.

“What I’ve tried to do is express within my forms and my sculpture an alphabet that can only be read from a bird’s-eye view,” Khouri said. “When you walk through the pieces, you only see form, they look more like bone structures.”

The titular phrase, You and I, was Khouri’s idea. “We were going to use some text from Let’s Sit and Talk, but I felt it was important that this installati­on have its own identity.”

Khouri was born in Egypt and raised in Lebanon until civil war forced her to relocate to Europe. After moving to Paris, where she lived for more than 25 years, she came to Vancouver nine years ago.

“I find Vancouver is a very cosmopolit­an city,” she said. “You have an Asian population, an Iranian population, an Arab population, lots of Europeans. For the purpose of the Harmony Festival, to say something like ‘You and I’ is about including everyone.”

Khouri works out of a studio in Burnaby with a team that includes artists Ken Clarke, Tamas Eichert and John Mallory. The base material for the sculptures is EPS, or expanded polystyren­e.

Sculpting the forms for You and I took six months. They were then sprayed four times with resin and Fiberglas, and then sanded, which took Khouri and her team another three months to complete. Finished, the pieces are about five to seven feet long, and weigh approximat­ely 150 to 200 pounds each.

The pieces will blend in with the waterfront landscape for the duration of the festival.

“They’re beautiful forms,” said West Vancouver Museum’s Morrison. He added that the piece “proposes that you can have a conversati­on and engage with other people and cultures and introduce new ideas, and create a dialogue.”

And perhaps visitors to You and I will find some uses for the installati­on that its creator never envisioned.

“The things I thought would happen, never happened,” she said of her first installati­on, Banc. “And what I never thought about, happened. That’s how life is.”

When you walk through the pieces, you only see form, they look more like bone structures.

MARIE KHOURI VANCOUVER-BASED ARTIST, CREATOR OF YOU AND I

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 ?? GERRY KAHRMANN/PNG ?? Vancouver-based artist Marie Khouri with her sculpture, You and I. The pieces of the interactiv­e public art installati­on will blend in with West Vancouver’s waterfront landscape.
GERRY KAHRMANN/PNG Vancouver-based artist Marie Khouri with her sculpture, You and I. The pieces of the interactiv­e public art installati­on will blend in with West Vancouver’s waterfront landscape.

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