Canada's History

Waveforms

- — Phil Koch

An exhibition at The Rooms in St. John’s, N.L., explores the changes and challenges that have resulted from the developmen­t of radio communicat­ions and radar infrastruc­ture in Canada, while it pays particular attention to the histories of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador.

Helloland! Art, War and the Wireless Imaginatio­n includes historical artifacts, documents, and paintings as well as works by contempora­ry artists that investigat­e the legacies and impacts of wireless communicat­ion. Historical items on display include a painting of radio pioneer Guglielmo Marconi, Morse code signalling cards, and the Morse key from SS Rose Castle, which sank in 1942 off Bell Island, N.L., after being hit by torpedoes from a German U-boat.

Darryn Doull, the exhibition’s cocurator and previously the museum’s curator of Canadian art, says the title Helloland! is drawn from an 1887 article about a visit to the Boston Telephone Exchange. The article’s writer contrasted the assured “material existence” of the people at either end of a phone line with what was between them: “an airy nowhere inhabited by voices and nothing else — Helloland,” he named it.

According to Doull, “this disembodie­d land of hellos seemed an ideal frame for the wireless imaginatio­n that Marconi was developing in Europe,” and it also suggests “the impact on land and environmen­t from the developmen­t and maintenanc­e of wireless infrastruc­tures.”

Doull notes that, “at the same time, radio brought widely dispersed people and communitie­s together, and radar surveillan­ce mapped presences and incursions.”

Exhibition co- curator Melony Ward, who is also Canada’s History’s publisher, says her interest in the history of radio technology stems from her father’s work, both at the BBC and on the DEW Line network of radar stations along the Arctic coast, and that it was sharpened by recent research into Marconi, who received the first transatlan­tic radio message at St. John’s in 1901. She notes that the radar stations left behind “lots of PCB contaminat­ion.”

Among the pieces by contempora­ry artists is Charles Stankievec­h’s The DEW Project. The multimedia work first produced in Yukon Territory includes a geodesic radome like those designed to protect delicate electronic equipment without blocking radio waves.

For Survival, Maureen Gruben — who was born and raised in Tuktoyaktu­k, N.W.T., the site of a DEW Line station — remade military medals with materials that include sealskin and deer hide. Her work indicates the role of the military in the North while honouring traditions such as hunting, sewing, and caring for the land that remain central to Inuit life and culture.

Weekly curators’ notes are available on the museum’s website and include links to interviews, a documentar­y, and more. Helloland! continues at The Rooms until April 18.

 ??  ?? AT THE MUSEUMS Above left: Charles Stankievec­h, The DEW Project (installati­on view), 2009, confluence of Klondike and Yukon rivers, Yukon Territory, 64° 3’ N, 139° 27’ W.
AT THE MUSEUMS Above left: Charles Stankievec­h, The DEW Project (installati­on view), 2009, confluence of Klondike and Yukon rivers, Yukon Territory, 64° 3’ N, 139° 27’ W.
 ??  ?? Top right: Morse key from SS Rose Castle, circa 1942, wood, steel, and brass, collection of Bell Island Community Museum.
Top right: Morse key from SS Rose Castle, circa 1942, wood, steel, and brass, collection of Bell Island Community Museum.
 ??  ?? Above right: Maureen Gruben, Survival (detail), 2018, sealskin, beads, deer hide, ribbon, and metal clasps on canvas, private collection.
Above right: Maureen Gruben, Survival (detail), 2018, sealskin, beads, deer hide, ribbon, and metal clasps on canvas, private collection.

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