Big Ideas in Arts & Culture Lecture Series
Reece Terris
Reece Terris is a practicing artist living and working in Vancouver, British Columbia. through his experience in the construction industry both in Canada and abroad, Terris has developed strong interests in the conceptual meanings of private and public space. Drawn to architecture and visual art, he pursued studies in fine arts at Simon Fraser University and maintained his construction business and established his exhibition practice, which allowed more experimental possibilities for three-dimensional work.
Terris’s work spans a variety of media, including sculpture, performance, installation, and photography – allowing him to examine the relationship between constructed architectural spaces and our common experiences and encounters within them. He is interested in exploring how repetitive patterns in planning and design become subconscious cues for social conduct. Through an amplification or shift in the primary function of an initial design, he reconsiders utility in both object and place and challenges perception and interaction within public space.
Recent works include Another False Front at Western Front Gallery in Vancouver (2009), an architectural intervention where an adaptation of the existing western false front (or commercial false front) has been added to in order to emphasize Vancouver's long running upswing in the real estate market and subsequent boom economy.
Ought Apartment, commissioned by and installed at the Vancouver Art Gallery (2009) was a six-storey installation featuring six fullscale apartments stacked one upon the other. Each apartment level was fully furnished exclusively with original items from the 1950s though to the present decade and included a kitchen, living room and bathroom. Each floor represented the look of a particular decade, becoming emblematic of that period's interior design and domestic living, and calling attention to the cyclical nature of fashion.
Bridge (Wooden Arch) (2006) was a functioning sculptural work reaching approximately four stories in height and spanning thirty-seven feet across, connecting two residential properties. The bridge arched across the property line from the upper balcony of one home up and over the roof of the neighbouring house, landing on its upper back veranda. Access to the bridge was offered twenty-four hours a day to visitors during the six-week period of the exhibition until the bridge was dismantled.
Reece Terris's work has been exhibited throughout Canada and the United States.
About Big Ideas in Art and Culture
The Big ideas in Art and Culture Lecture Series is a joint production of CAFKA and Musagetes. CAFKA is about making art happen in the public spaces of this community, introducing contemporary art to new audiences and engaging the public in new ways of seeing their city. The Musagetes Foundation has been active around the world gathering artists and public intellectuals to consider variations on the theme of social transformations through creative and artistic interventions. These open forums, or cafés, explore and apply new ideas in creative practices, social change and community development. Musagetes Cafés have taken place in London, England, 2007, Barcelona, Spain, 2008, and Rijeka, Croatia, 2010. Future cafés are being planned to take place in Sudbury, Ontario, 2011 and in Lecce, Italy, 2012. CAFKA gratefully acknowledges the support of the Ontario Trillium Foundation, the City of Kitchener, The Kitchener and Waterloo Community Foundation – Musagetes Fund, the Canada Council for the Arts, and the Ontario Arts Council in helping to make this lecture series possible.
