WASTE LAND
6 JULY 2024 - 28 SEPTEMBER 2024
Southern Alberta Art Gallery, Lethbridge Alberta
A poem, like a city, communicates in concrete and empty space. Mexican conceptual artist and writer Ulises Carrión in his 1975 essay “The New Art of Making Books” writes that books are sequences of spaces and moments, not just containers of words. Artist Alex Turgeon extends this thinking to the spaces of the city, locating a queer subjectivity between the poetic realms of architecture and the built space of language. In Turgeon’s first solo exhibition at a public gallery in Canada, he employs concrete poetry, drawing, sculpture, and assemblage in examining the gentrification, division, and promised utopic unity of urban revitalization.
A focal point of Waste Land is Turgeon’s extended concrete poem presented as a mural across the walls of the gallery. The poem appears as a lattice fence, typical of those in suburban neighborhoods that divide property and act as a screen that partially obscures vision. The lattice is composed of a repeating text that reads, "a ugly condo for ugly peeps", a graffiti tag encountered by the artist written across a sign for a new proposed condo development in Toronto. Similar fencing around urban construction sites disrupts access to public spaces and obscures vision into the construction site beyond. Turgeon’s lattice fence motif also separates viewers from an unknown, infinite space beyond the gallery walls. The tension between the solid wall and the trompe l'oeil fence nods towards the divisionary architecture that is physically and ideologically built into our institutions.