I want to be a seashell / I want to be a mould / I want to be a spirit, 2021
Lou Sheppard and William Robinson
Curated by Wes Johnston and Rebecca Semple
This exhibition is informed by the Japanese concept of Metabolism, first coined by architectural critic Noboru Kawazoe in his essay the Metabolist Manifesto. Metabolism was referenced in 1971 when the Dalhousie Arts Centre was built by Fowler, Bauld & Mitchell (now FBM Architecture) with the support of consulting architect Junji Mikawa.
Metabolism is a theory grounded in a fusion between post-war megastructures and organic biological growth. What resulted are structures which are both imposing in size and severity, with more natural elements of beauty within their design, perhaps best seen in the undulating forms of the Rebecca Cohn Auditorium.
Lou Sheppard and William Robinson have created a series of works which exemplify the principles of metabolism within the Arts Centre and the ways that this has influenced and shaped the art that is made in it. Reading the building and its history as an extended score, they will consider the idea of culture—as a cultivated artistic experience and as a cultivated microbial organism—as it shapes and is shaped by the building. A collaboration with mushrooms, a choir of breath, the traces of sunlight that move through the building over a year, are notated and performed, echoing fifty years of performance within the building itself. Sitting somewhere between music, dance, and theatre, the performances, and the exhibition draw from the opening lines of Kawazoe’s poetic manifesto – “i want to be a seashell/i want to be a mold/i want to be a spirit.” The performances and the exhibition read the transitional desire of Kawazoe’s poem as an invitation into a liminal, reflexive space where the building itself becomes the performer, and the performer plays the building as a score.
All works shown in documentation by Lou Sheppard. All photos on this page by Steve Farmer.