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TRANSCRIPT
PRESS KIT
THÉRAPIELUMINO
quartierdesspectacles.com
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Montreal’s Quartier des Spectacles, a 1 km2 section of
the city’s downtown, boasts North America’s highest
concentration and greatest diversity of cultural
venues. The district has built a strong identity as a
place for creativity, performance and entertainment.
Thanks to a major overhaul of its public spaces begun
in the late 2000s, the neighbourhood has emerged as
a showcase for Montreal’s vitality. As a UNESCO City
of Design, the city has made creativity the driving
force behind its rising international profile.
The Quartier des Spectacles Partnership is mandated
to help maintain this strategic district’s liveliness year
round – even in the depths of winter – by hosting
activities in the Quartier’s public spaces. These
productions are intended to complement the cultural
offerings presented by the Partnership’s members
and the area’s performance venues. In addition to
hosting some 40 festivals and many other events in
the Quartier, the Partnership presents free outdoor
cultural activities by providing financial, logistical or
technical support to creators of innovative cultural
projects selected or produced via competitions, calls
for proposals, commissions and co-production.
LUMINOTHÉRAPIE: CREATIVITY IN LIGHTThe Luminothérapie event is a major component of the Quartier’s free outdoor programming. It is an extension of the thinking behind the Quartier’s Luminous Pathway. The Luminous Pathway is the Quartier’s visual signature, in the form of twin rows of red dots projected on the ground to identify performance venues, along with architectural lighting on select buildings and artistic video projections on several building façades. Presented in the heart of Quebec’s winter, Luminothérapie offers the public a varied menu of interactive and immersive experiences combining design, music and digital art.
SHINING A LIGHT ON CREATIVITY
Launched through an initiative of the Quartier des Spectacles Partnership in 2010, Luminothérapie has a two-fold vocation. Its goals are to give Montrealers and visitors an original winter experience in the Quartier des Spectacles, and to promote Montreal as a city of design, and to stimulate creativity in the disciplines of urban installations and digital art.
Each year, a competition is held by the Quartier des Spectacles Partnership , inviting competitors to form multidisciplinary teams and propose installations and video projections with a strong urban design component, with input from all artistic disciplines. Thanks to this process, the event encourages not only creativity but the emergence of new artistic practices.
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A COMPETITION WITH TWO CREATIVE STREAMS
Luminothérapie is refreshing itself for its seventh edition, in 2016-17! The Quartier des Spectacles is bringing some-thing new to the competition by providing a theme: partici-pants must work within the theme “tale”. Chosen for its narrative power, the tale – which can take many different forms (fantastical or urban, classic or newly created) – must provide a captivating experience. The winning designers will present an installation on the Place des Festivals that creates a sense of wonder both day and night, while encouraging the participation of a broad audience, including families. Architectural video projections for two adjacent building façades will complete a unified concept through integration with the narrative structure of the primary work.
THE INSTALLATION FOR THE PLACE DES FESTIVALSThe primary work to emerge from the competition is designed to showcase the main public space in the Quartier des Spectacles, the Place des Festivals, with a day-and-night participatory work. Inspired by the space’s identity and Quebec’s fierce winters, the work gives the public a novel immersive experience focused on sound and light. Before being presented exclusively in the Place des Festivals, the winter installations were set up in several other locations in the Quartier des Spectacles, including Place Émilie-Gamelin, the space outside Saint-Laurent metro station and the Place des Arts esplanade.
THE ARCHITECTURAL VIDEO PROJECTIONSAdded in 2013, the video projection component animates the Quartier des Spectacles’ permanent projection sites with a unified concept. In 2015-16, the sites are the Grande Bibliothèque (Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec), the UQAM bell tower, the Centre de design at UQAM, Cégep du Vieux Montréal, Théâtre Maisonneuve, the President–Kennedy building at UQAM, Hôtel Zéro 1 on the Place de la Paix, the wall outside the Saint-Laurent metro station, and the most recently created projection site, Place Dupuis adjacent to Place Émilie-Gamelin. Each site is dedicated to year round artistic video projections, making Montreal the global leader in the public exhibition of digital art.
The works shown at the sites invite viewers to learn more about each site. They are also designed to make connec-tions among the sites, transcending disparate components to assert a strong, unified identity for the Quartier des Spectacles. Starting in 2015-16, they will complement the work presented in the Place des Festivals and strengthen its narrative line. The video projections will be accompanied by an original soundtrack.
A COMPETITION THAT HELPS OUR CREATORS MAKE A NAME FOR THEMSELVESIn recent years, several designers and artists have won awards after creating works for Luminothérapie, namely Lüz studio (Fascinoscope 2014-2015), Champagne Club Sandwich (Trouve Bob 2014-13), KANVA (Entre les rangs 2013-14) and Lucion Média (Sphères polaires 2010-11). Luminothérapie also generates considerable interest outside Quebec.
In addition to substantial media coverage, some works have been well-received abroad, including Trouve Bob in Moscow and Iceberg (2012-13) by ATOMIC3 and Appareil Architecture in Brussels.
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9th EDITION • December 11, 2018 to January 27, 2019
DOMINO EFFECTby Ingrid Ingrid
Place des Festivals
Ingrid Ingrid, a Montreal-based interactive experience design studio, presents a fun and user-friendly experience that encourages everyone to meet and cooperate.
Each domino makes a unique sound, and each of the 12 sets of dominos has its own world of light and sound: voice, percussion, marimba, balafon and flute. Alone or in a group, knock over the 120 giant dominos one by one to trigger harmonious music.
Be a conductor or a DJ by “scratching” a domino – move it left-to-right at varying speeds, or reverse the audio sequence by moving the dominos in the opposite direction.
Photo : Nicolas Gouin - l’Hibou
DOMINO EFFECT by Nouvelle Administration
Pavillon Président-Kennedy, UQAM
This architectural projection by Nouvelle Administration is a companion piece to the domino effect installation in Place des Festivals. It combines graphical codes and visual tricks referencing dominos. Space, sound and colour are central to this exploration in which sounds trigger chain reactions and novel dispersal patterns of the dominos.
The projection’s graphical world is a visual transposition of the music, inspired by the sounds of the domino stations. The vibrant hues and dynamic animations contrast with the whiteness of winter, while the black dot, a reference to classic dominos, attaches itself to the images.
Photo : Nicolas Gouin - l’Hibou
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9th EDITION • December 11, 2018 to January 27, 2019 8th EDITION • November 30 2017 to January 18 2018
Photo : Ulysse Lemerise / OSA
IMPULSESeesaw design by Lateral Office and CS Design,
in collaboration with EGP Group Sound design: Mitchell Akiyama
Mechanical design and production: Générique Design Electronic and interactive production: Robocut Studio
Place des Festivals
Place des Festivals becomes a vast playground thanks to a series of 30 interactive seesaws along the length of the plaza, transforming when in motion. The seesaws form units of light and sound that can be activated and played by the public to create a temporal, ever-changing composition. By playing on the seesaws, you can create a dynamic light and sound wave giving a warm pulse to the winter’s cold, short days and dark nights.
It is an ever-changing urban event and public instrument, in which city dwellers are the musicians and artists.
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7th EDITION • December 8, 2016 to January 9, 2017
LOOPby Olivier Girouard, Jonathan Villeneuve et Ottoblix, in
collaboration with Generique Design, Jérôme Roy and Thomas Ouellet Fredericks
Produced by Ekumen and the Quartier des Spectacles Partenariat.
Place des Festivals
This interactive installation is a cross between a music box, a zoetrope and a railway handcar. Loop is sure to warm the hearts of visitors of all ages, who are invited to activate the cylinders in order to make fairy tale-inspired images come to life. At the centre of each zoetrope is a music box to provide accompaniment for the giant animated images.
When the devices are activated, the 13 rings of coloured light each present a story lasting a few seconds: a frog becomes a prince, the wolf blows the three little pigs’s house down, scary eyes appear in the dark. These illustrations, as well as the video projection, are by Ottoblix and will spark the imagination and memories of kids and adults alike.
Photo : Ulysse Lemerise / OSA
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6th EDITION • December 10, 2015 to January 31, 2016
IMPULSESeesaw design by Lateral Office and CS Design,
in collaboration with EGP Group Sound design: Mitchell Akiyama
Mechanical design and production: Générique Design Electronic and interactive production: Robocut Studio
Place des Festivals
Place des Festivals becomes a vast playground thanks to a series of 30 interactive seesaws along the length of the plaza, transforming when in motion. The seesaws form units of light and sound that can be activated and played by the public to create a temporal, ever-changing composition. By playing on the seesaws, you can create a dynamic light and sound wave giving a warm pulse to the winter’s cold, short days and dark nights.
It is an ever-changing urban event and public instrument, in which city dwellers are the musicians and artists.
IMPULSEBy Maotik and Iregular Sound design: Mitchell Akiyama
Nine video projection sites
Through the use of architectural lines and playful percep-tions of depth, the nine architectural video projections echo the seesaws in Place des Festivals. Playing with the concepts of balance and unbalance, symmetry and asym-metry, tension and harmony, each projection represents an experiment in sound visualization and is accompanied by an original soundtrack.Impulse embodies ideas of serialism, repetition, and variation to produce zones of intensity and calm.
Photo : Ulysse Lemerise / OSA
Photo : Martine Doyon
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5th EDITION • December 10, 2014 to February 1, 2015
PRISMATICABy RAW Design (Toronto), in collaboration with ATOMIC3
and Jean-François Piché for lighting design, Dix au carré for sound design, and ATOMIC3 and
Louis Héon for production and technical direction.
Place des Festivals
With this participatory installation, comprising 50 colourful pivoting prisms more than two metres tall, the Place des Festivals became a giant kaleidoscope. Each prism was made of panels laminated with a dichronic film that transmitted and reflected every colour in the visible spectrum, varying with the position of the light source and the observer. The prisms were mounted on bases containing projectors. As people wandered among and manipulated the prisms, they enjoyed an infinite interplay of lights and colourful reflec-tions. As the prisms rotated, a variable-intensity soundtrack of bell sounds played.
INSTALLATION
FASCINOSCOPEBy Lüz Studio (Montreal), in collaboration with XS, la petite boîte à musique for sound design.
Eight video projection sites
With Fascinoscope, the Quartier took on the captivating atmosphere of an early 20th-century carnival. Each projec-tion was accompanied by an original soundtrack of organ, bass and drum music. Outside the Saint-Laurent metro station, the work’s focal point, the public was invited to play four interactive games inspired by carnival classics. Players controlled the games with four pear balls fitted with sensors to measure rotation and speed. By hitting the balls, players interacted with the projection and scored points to win the game.
VIDEO PROJECTIONS
Photo : James Brittain
Photo : Cindy Boyce
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VIDEO PROJECTIONS
ENTRE LES RANGSby KANVA, in collaboration with Udo Design, Côté Jardin,
Patrick Watson, Boris Dempsey and Pierre Fournier
Place des Festivals
Thousands of flexible stems topped with white reflectors make up this large-scale urban metaphor for a wheat field in rural Quebec. In the winter wind, bathed in reflected light from the projectors in Place des Festivals, the stylized stalks wave, creating sparking effects like those of wheat in a country field, swaying in the wind. Their arrangement opens paths punctuated by music sources that invite visitors to take a bucolic multisensory walk in the heart of Montreal.
TROUVE BOB by Champagne Club Sandwich
Seven video projection sites
Trouve Bob is a massive animated game that uses the city as a screen. It will give Montreal’s winter the same live-liness and colour as its summer festival season by reima-gining the popular game Where’s Waldo? The Quartier des Spectacles projection façades will light up with the fantastical world of a nutty character accompanied by an odd assort-ment of adorable companions. The public will be asked to find Bob, lurking somewhere in the outlandish background of the seven dynamic scenes. This city-scale game makes connections between the buildings in Quartier des Spectacles used as projection surfaces by presenting a series of anima-tions with an exciting mix of formats, graphic compositions, colours and levels of difficulty.
4th EDITION • December 11, 2013 to February 2, 2014
INSTALLATION
VIDEO PROJECTIONS
Photo : Cindy Boyce
Photo : Martine Doyon
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ICEBERGdesigned by Atomic3 (Félix Dagenais and Louis-Xavier
Gagnon-Lebrun) and Appareil Architecture (Kim Pariseau), in collaboration with Jean-Sébastien Côté and Philippe Jean
Place des Festivals and Place des Arts Esplanade
Comprising a series of off-axis metal archways that formed a series of tunnels, this interactive installation represented the life cycle of an iceberg, from its beginning in polar waters to its final melting off a temperate shore. Visitors were invited to enter and experience varying intensities of light, colour and sound generated by their presence.
Iceberg was presented in Brussels (Belgium) on the Place de la Monnaie from November 29, 2013, to March 3, 2014.
LE JOUR DES 8 SOLEILSby Pascal Grandmaison, in collaboration with Antoine Bédard, Marie-Claire Blais, Serge Murphy, Simon Guilbault and Pierre Lapointe
Eight video projection sites
This video projection concept used the eight sets of projec-tion façades in Quartier des Spectacles for eight stages in a poetic quest for a character in the background who was trying to capture sunlight in all its forms. In addition to its dreamy character, the work created narrative connections among the Quartier’s different sites. A soundtrack, acces-sible via smartphone, completed the visual experience by accompanying the quest for the eight suns.
3rd EDITION • December 6, 2012 to February 3, 2013
INSTALLATION
VIDEO PROJECTIONS
Photo : Martine Doyon
Photo : Martine Doyon
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VIDEO PROJECTIONS
ÉCLATS DE VERREdesigned by Atomic3 (Félix Dagenais, Louis-Xavier Gagnon-Lebrun
and Éric Gautron), produced by Michel Granger
Place Émilie-Gamelin
A maze of glass panels of various colours created paths of shadow and light generated by the sun in daytime and a series of projectors at the centre of the site at night. Two backlit cubes allowed visitors to interact with the installation and adjust its lighting and ambient sound, including anima-tions projected on a surrounding building.
FORÊT FORÊTdesigned by Amandine Guillard, Anik Poirier, Albane Guy and TagTeam Studio, produced by Impact Production
Outside Saint-Laurent metro station
This forest of stylized trees, made from galvanized steel and transparent acrylic, beckoned visitors to explore, accompanied by sound and light echoes generated by passers by. Visitors’ messages, captured by microphones embedded in some of the symbolic trees, were recorded by a computer that played them back through trees with speakers or trees with lights, in the form of audio echoes or variations in light intensity.
NUAGE DE GIVREdesigned by Jean Beaudoin and Erick Villeneuve,
produced by Multimédia Novalux
Place des Festivals, Until February 2, 2012
7,700 small bags of antifreeze gel were suspended above place des Festivals, forming a metaphorical “cloud” evocative of cold and its effect on the aurora borealis. By day, the wind made the metaphorical sky move; by night, surveillance cameras recorded pedestrians’ movements and used the information to vary the intensity and colour of lights and video projec-tors. The light projected on the hanging installation shifted from blue to red, simulating interactive auroras whose effects could be viewed live on a smartphone.
2nd EDITION • December 15, 2011 to February 26, 2012
INSTALLATION
Photo : Martine Doyon
Photo : Martine Doyon
Photo : Martine Doyon
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Contact médias : Marie Lamoureux | [email protected] | 514-923-6772
CHAMP DE PIXELSdesigned by Jean Beaudoin, Intégral + Érick Villeneuve, produced by Multimédia Novalux
Place Émilie-Gamelin, Until February 9, 2011
Comprising 400 light sources equipped with motion sensors, the installation created a huge pixelated surface totalling 40,000 sq. ft. By moving through it, visitors triggered the giant pixels to switch from white to red, creating improvised choreographies. BIXI bikes were connected to the installa-tion to allow participants to generate power for the system by pedalling.
SPHÈRES POLAIRESby Bernard Duguay + Pierre Gagnon, Lucion Media
Place des Festivals and the Place des Arts esplanade
This installation’s 25 vinyl spheres, from 3 to 10 metres in diameter, invited the public to explore three facets of a Quebec winter: sports, light and city life. Each sphere was a universe unto itself, built on lighting, audio and video sequences that interacted with visitors’ movements.
1st EDITION • December 15, 2010 to February 27, 2011
INSTALLATION
Photo : Martine Doyon
Photo : Martine Doyon
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VIDEOPROJECTION SITES
Pavillon Président-Kennedy de l’UQAM
Théâtre Maisonneuve, Place des Arts
Outside the Saint-Laurent Metro Station
Place de la Paix (Hotel Zero1)
Cégep du Vieux Montréal
Centre de design de l’UQAM
UQAM Bell Tower
Grande Bibliothèque
(Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec)
Place Émilie-Gamelin (Place Dupuis)
LIVELY PUBLIC SPACES
1 Place des Festivals
2 Promenade des Artistes
3 Le Parterre
4 Esplanade Clark
5 Esplanade de la Place des Arts
6 Place de la Paix
7 Place Pasteur
8 Place Émilie-Gamelin
VIDEO PROJECTIONS MAP