CCCA Canadian Art Database

Companions

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83691

Description: Sculpture. For centuries, we have been breeding domestic animals to meet our desired specifications. We create purebred pets for aesthetic gratification, recreation and social status. Our genetic tinkering wreaks havoc with nature’s adaptive mechanisms. What are the limits of our desire for custom-made companions? The faux and real fur spheres in Companions suggest genetically engineered masses, caged to further emphasize controlled nature.


Measurements: H:3m D:1.5m W:1m

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Work by Warren Quigley

Changing the Landscape

Changing the Landscape

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83676

Description: Site-specific public art installation. Harbourfront Artists’ Gardens, Toronto. Commissioned by Harbourfront Corporation.

Named after the automobile sales slogan used in a short-lived television ad in which a bucolic landscape of rolling hills becomes ominously covered by cars, this installation reverses the original intent of commercial monopoly. In the introduced landscape of the outdoor installation, the automobile is consumed by nature. Reclamation occurs due to its abandonment; the organic growths eventually obliterate the original form of the foreign object.


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Date Made: 1991

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Changing the Landscape

Changing the Landscape

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83675

Description: Site-specific public art installation. Harbourfront Artists’ Gardens, Toronto. Commissioned by Harbourfront Corporation.

Named after the automobile sales slogan used in a short-lived television ad in which a bucolic landscape of rolling hills becomes ominously covered by cars, this installation reverses the original intent of commercial monopoly. In the introduced landscape of the outdoor installation, the automobile is consumed by nature. Reclamation occurs due to its abandonment; the organic growths eventually obliterate the original form of the foreign object.


Measurements: 38.28 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 1991

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When the forest moves

When the forest moves

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83680

Description: Site-specific public art installation. Toronto Sculpture Garden, Toronto. Commissioned by L.L.O. Sculpture Garden Foundation. Photos: William Greer

In When the forest moves, the garden is transformed into an allegorical scenario which parallels a literary classic with current environmental concerns. The ominous predictions made by the apparitions in Shakespeare’s Macbeth foreshadowed the demise of Macbeth through an advancing army camouflaged by moving trees; similarly, the movement of trees in an apocalyptic scenario of global warming warn us of the potentiality of habitat (in this case, the territory of sugar maple) destruction. The installation takes the form of three maple trees, with their burlap-wrapped root bags intact, situated at the end of a sculpted earth furrow which seems to have been dug out by the northbound scraping movement of the trees. Contained in the furrow is a residual trail of cast bronze text; this text, in hand-written script, consists of the story of the advancing trees in Macbeth.


Measurements: H:5m L:30m / W (rootballs):2m

Collection:

Date Made: 1995

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When the forest moves

When the forest moves

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83678

Description: Site-specific public art installation. Toronto Sculpture Garden, Toronto. Commissioned by L.L.O. Sculpture Garden Foundation. Photos: William Greer

In When the forest moves, the garden is transformed into an allegorical scenario which parallels a literary classic with current environmental concerns. The ominous predictions made by the apparitions in Shakespeare’s Macbeth foreshadowed the demise of Macbeth through an advancing army camouflaged by moving trees; similarly, the movement of trees in an apocalyptic scenario of global warming warn us of the potentiality of habitat (in this case, the territory of sugar maple) destruction. The installation takes the form of three maple trees, with their burlap-wrapped root bags intact, situated at the end of a sculpted earth furrow which seems to have been dug out by the northbound scraping movement of the trees. Contained in the furrow is a residual trail of cast bronze text; this text, in hand-written script, consists of the story of the advancing trees in Macbeth.

Measurements: H:5m L:30m / W (rootballs):2m

Collection:

Date Made: 1995

Materials:

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When the forest moves

When the forest moves

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83679

Description: Site-specific public art installation. Toronto Sculpture Garden, Toronto. Commissioned by L.L.O. Sculpture Garden Foundation. Photos: William Greer

In When the forest moves, the garden is transformed into an allegorical scenario which parallels a literary classic with current environmental concerns. The ominous predictions made by the apparitions in Shakespeare’s Macbeth foreshadowed the demise of Macbeth through an advancing army camouflaged by moving trees; similarly, the movement of trees in an apocalyptic scenario of global warming warn us of the potentiality of habitat (in this case, the territory of sugar maple) destruction. The installation takes the form of three maple trees, with their burlap-wrapped root bags intact, situated at the end of a sculpted earth furrow which seems to have been dug out by the northbound scraping movement of the trees. Contained in the furrow is a residual trail of cast bronze text; this text, in hand-written script, consists of the story of the advancing trees in Macbeth.


Measurements: H:5m L:30m / W (rootballs):2m

Collection:

Date Made: 1995

Materials:

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When the forest moves

When the forest moves

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83681

Description: Site-specific public art installation. Toronto Sculpture Garden, Toronto. Commissioned by L.L.O. Sculpture Garden Foundation. Photos: William Greer

In When the forest moves, the garden is transformed into an allegorical scenario which parallels a literary classic with current environmental concerns. The ominous predictions made by the apparitions in Shakespeare’s Macbeth foreshadowed the demise of Macbeth through an advancing army camouflaged by moving trees; similarly, the movement of trees in an apocalyptic scenario of global warming warn us of the potentiality of habitat (in this case, the territory of sugar maple) destruction. The installation takes the form of three maple trees, with their burlap-wrapped root bags intact, situated at the end of a sculpted earth furrow which seems to have been dug out by the northbound scraping movement of the trees. Contained in the furrow is a residual trail of cast bronze text; this text, in hand-written script, consists of the story of the advancing trees in Macbeth.


Measurements: H:5m L:30m / W (rootballs):2m

Collection:

Date Made: 1995

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Greenroom

Greenroom

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83690

Description: In collaboration with Millie Chen

Site-specific interactive public art installation: Toronto Sculpture Garden, Toronto. Commissioned by L.L.O. Sculpture Garden Foundation. Photos: William Greer

Designed for a small park set in the thick of a large urban centre’s downtown zone, this installation plays with notions of public and private space through the displacement of the most public room in a domestic setting – the living room. The varying hues of green (displayed in the second DVD image as a colour key) pigmenting the functional furnishings are sourced directly from nature and imitate vegetative outcroppings. The selection of these particular greens are based on their designation as distasteful/loud/dismal in certain interior design manuals. Within Greenroom, they ultimately serve as a subtle critique on the suspect ‘greening’ (i.e. pseudo ecological) trend of the cultivators of taste.


Measurements: 130 sq. m.

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

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Greenroom

Greenroom

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83689

Description: In collaboration with Millie Chen

Site-specific interactive public art installation: Toronto Sculpture Garden, Toronto. Commissioned by L.L.O. Sculpture Garden Foundation. Photos: William Greer

Designed for a small park set in the thick of a large urban centre’s downtown zone, this installation plays with notions of public and private space through the displacement of the most public room in a domestic setting – the living room. The varying hues of green (displayed in the second DVD image as a colour key) pigmenting the functional furnishings are sourced directly from nature and imitate vegetative outcroppings. The selection of these particular greens are based on their designation as distasteful/loud/dismal in certain interior design manuals. Within Greenroom, they ultimately serve as a subtle critique on the suspect ‘greening’ (i.e. pseudo ecological) trend of the cultivators of taste.


Measurements: 130 sq. m.

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

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Greenroom

Greenroom

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83688

Description: In collaboration with Millie Chen

Site-specific interactive public art installation: Toronto Sculpture Garden, Toronto. Commissioned by L.L.O. Sculpture Garden Foundation. Photos: William Greer

Designed for a small park set in the thick of a large urban centre’s downtown zone, this installation plays with notions of public and private space through the displacement of the most public room in a domestic setting – the living room. The varying hues of green (displayed in the second DVD image as a colour key) pigmenting the functional furnishings are sourced directly from nature and imitate vegetative outcroppings. The selection of these particular greens are based on their designation as distasteful/loud/dismal in certain interior design manuals. Within Greenroom, they ultimately serve as a subtle critique on the suspect ‘greening’ (i.e. pseudo ecological) trend of the cultivators of taste.


Measurements: 130 sq. m.

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection: ,

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Greenroom

Greenroom

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83687

Description: In collaboration with Millie Chen

Site-specific interactive public art installation: Toronto Sculpture Garden, Toronto. Commissioned by L.L.O. Sculpture Garden Foundation. Photos: William Greer

Designed for a small park set in the thick of a large urban centre’s downtown zone, this installation plays with notions of public and private space through the displacement of the most public room in a domestic setting – the living room. The varying hues of green (displayed in the second DVD image as a colour key) pigmenting the functional furnishings are sourced directly from nature and imitate vegetative outcroppings. The selection of these particular greens are based on their designation as distasteful/loud/dismal in certain interior design manuals. Within Greenroom, they ultimately serve as a subtle critique on the suspect ‘greening’ (i.e. pseudo ecological) trend of the cultivators of taste.


Measurements: 130 sq. m.

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

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Greenroom

Greenroom

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83683

Description: In collaboration with Millie Chen

Site-specific interactive public art installation: Toronto Sculpture Garden, Toronto. Commissioned by L.L.O. Sculpture Garden Foundation. Photos: William Greer

Designed for a small park set in the thick of a large urban centre’s downtown zone, this installation plays with notions of public and private space through the displacement of the most public room in a domestic setting – the living room. The varying hues of green (displayed in the second DVD image as a colour key) pigmenting the functional furnishings are sourced directly from nature and imitate vegetative outcroppings. The selection of these particular greens are based on their designation as distasteful/loud/dismal in certain interior design manuals. Within Greenroom, they ultimately serve as a subtle critique on the suspect ‘greening’ (i.e. pseudo ecological) trend of the cultivators of taste.


Measurements: 130 sq. m.

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Greenroom

Greenroom

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83684

Description: In collaboration with Millie Chen

Site-specific interactive public art installation: Toronto Sculpture Garden, Toronto. Commissioned by L.L.O. Sculpture Garden Foundation. Photos: William Greer

Designed for a small park set in the thick of a large urban centre’s downtown zone, this installation plays with notions of public and private space through the displacement of the most public room in a domestic setting – the living room. The varying hues of green (displayed in the second DVD image as a colour key) pigmenting the functional furnishings are sourced directly from nature and imitate vegetative outcroppings. The selection of these particular greens are based on their designation as distasteful/loud/dismal in certain interior design manuals. Within Greenroom, they ultimately serve as a subtle critique on the suspect ‘greening’ (i.e. pseudo ecological) trend of the cultivators of taste.


Measurements: 130 sq. m.

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Greenroom

Greenroom

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83686

Description: In collaboration with Millie Chen

Site-specific interactive public art installation: Toronto Sculpture Garden, Toronto. Commissioned by L.L.O. Sculpture Garden Foundation. Photos: William Greer

Designed for a small park set in the thick of a large urban centre’s downtown zone, this installation plays with notions of public and private space through the displacement of the most public room in a domestic setting – the living room. The varying hues of green (displayed in the second DVD image as a colour key) pigmenting the functional furnishings are sourced directly from nature and imitate vegetative outcroppings. The selection of these particular greens are based on their designation as distasteful/loud/dismal in certain interior design manuals. Within Greenroom, they ultimately serve as a subtle critique on the suspect ‘greening’ (i.e. pseudo ecological) trend of the cultivators of taste.


Measurements: 130 sq. m.

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Greenroom

Greenroom

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83685

Description: In collaboration with Millie Chen

Site-specific interactive public art installation: Toronto Sculpture Garden, Toronto. Commissioned by L.L.O. Sculpture Garden Foundation. Photos: William Greer

Designed for a small park set in the thick of a large urban centre’s downtown zone, this installation plays with notions of public and private space through the displacement of the most public room in a domestic setting – the living room. The varying hues of green (displayed in the second DVD image as a colour key) pigmenting the functional furnishings are sourced directly from nature and imitate vegetative outcroppings. The selection of these particular greens are based on their designation as distasteful/loud/dismal in certain interior design manuals. Within Greenroom, they ultimately serve as a subtle critique on the suspect ‘greening’ (i.e. pseudo ecological) trend of the cultivators of taste.


Measurements: 130 sq. m.

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Companions

Companions

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83691

Description: Sculpture. For centuries, we have been breeding domestic animals to meet our desired specifications. We create purebred pets for aesthetic gratification, recreation and social status. Our genetic tinkering wreaks havoc with nature’s adaptive mechanisms. What are the limits of our desire for custom-made companions? The faux and real fur spheres in Companions suggest genetically engineered masses, caged to further emphasize controlled nature.


Measurements: H:3m D:1.5m W:1m

Collection:

Date Made: 1999

Materials:

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Companions

Companions

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83692

Description: Sculpture. For centuries, we have been breeding domestic animals to meet our desired specifications. We create purebred pets for aesthetic gratification, recreation and social status. Our genetic tinkering wreaks havoc with nature’s adaptive mechanisms. What are the limits of our desire for custom-made companions? The faux and real fur spheres in Companions suggest genetically engineered masses, caged to further emphasize controlled nature.


Measurements: H:3m D:1.5m W:1m

Collection:

Date Made: 1999

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Love Motel

Love Motel

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83699

Description: As we motor down the highway towards our destination, do we seek a safe port, a cheap rent rendezvous, a hideout? We encounter a scenario, a vacated motel room, its temporary inhabitants gone. The bed awaits fresh sheets, the scene awaits new possibilities. Do we wonder about its previous occupants, about secret nocturnal occurrences?

This installation presents an environment of intrigue and suggestion through the arrangement of aspects of a motel room. Referencing bordellos from New Orleans from the turn of the previous century to love hotels of Asia in the 1960s and 70s to the North American roadside motels spawned by car culture, I present a scenario based on a studied ambiance and multiple potential narratives.




The stage is set, the room in disorder, unclean, the smell of Lysol and tobacco hanging in the air. Study the evidence. Pick up the phone and listen. What expectations do we - the new occupants, the next viewers – bring? What does this evoke in us? Are we voyeurs or participants?

Measurements: 1.044 x 0.522 m

Collection:

Date Made: 2005-7

Materials:

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Love Motel

Love Motel

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83693

Description: Installation at ARTsPLACE, Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia, 2005

As we motor down the highway towards our destination, do we seek a safe port, a cheap rent rendezvous, a hideout? We encounter a scenario, a vacated motel room, its temporary inhabitants gone. The bed awaits fresh sheets, the scene awaits new possibilities. Do we wonder about its previous occupants, about secret nocturnal occurrences?

This installation presents an environment of intrigue and suggestion through the arrangement of aspects of a motel room. Referencing bordellos from New Orleans from the turn of the previous century to love hotels of Asia in the 1960s and 70s to the North American roadside motels spawned by car culture, I present a scenario based on a studied ambiance and multiple potential narratives.

The stage is set, the room in disorder, unclean, the smell of Lysol and tobacco hanging in the air. Study the evidence. Pick up the phone and listen. What expectations do we - the new occupants, the next viewers – bring? What does this evoke in us? Are we voyeurs or participants?


Measurements: 1.044 x 0.522 m

Collection:

Date Made: 2005-7

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Love Motel

Love Motel

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83694

Description: Installation at Tank Loft Gallery, Chongqing, China, 2006

As we motor down the highway towards our destination, do we seek a safe port, a cheap rent rendezvous, a hideout? We encounter a scenario, a vacated motel room, its temporary inhabitants gone. The bed awaits fresh sheets, the scene awaits new possibilities. Do we wonder about its previous occupants, about secret nocturnal occurrences?

This installation presents an environment of intrigue and suggestion through the arrangement of aspects of a motel room. Referencing bordellos from New Orleans from the turn of the previous century to love hotels of Asia in the 1960s and 70s to the North American roadside motels spawned by car culture, I present a scenario based on a studied ambiance and multiple potential narratives.

The stage is set, the room in disorder, unclean, the smell of Lysol and tobacco hanging in the air. Study the evidence. Pick up the phone and listen. What expectations do we - the new occupants, the next viewers – bring? What does this evoke in us? Are we voyeurs or participants?


Measurements: 1.044 x 0.522 m

Collection:

Date Made: 2005-7

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Love Motel

Love Motel

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83695

Description: Installation at Rodman Hall Arts Centre, St. Catharines, Ontario, 2007. Photo: Isaac Applebaum

As we motor down the highway towards our destination, do we seek a safe port, a cheap rent rendezvous, a hideout? We encounter a scenario, a vacated motel room, its temporary inhabitants gone. The bed awaits fresh sheets, the scene awaits new possibilities. Do we wonder about its previous occupants, about secret nocturnal occurrences?

This installation presents an environment of intrigue and suggestion through the arrangement of aspects of a motel room. Referencing bordellos from New Orleans from the turn of the previous century to love hotels of Asia in the 1960s and 70s to the North American roadside motels spawned by car culture, I present a scenario based on a studied ambiance and multiple potential narratives.

The stage is set, the room in disorder, unclean, the smell of Lysol and tobacco hanging in the air. Study the evidence. Pick up the phone and listen. What expectations do we - the new occupants, the next viewers – bring? What does this evoke in us? Are we voyeurs or participants?


Measurements: 1.044 x 0.522 m

Collection:

Date Made: 2005-7

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Love Motel

Love Motel

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83696

Description: Installation at Fly Gallery, Toronto, 2007

As we motor down the highway towards our destination, do we seek a safe port, a cheap rent rendezvous, a hideout? We encounter a scenario, a vacated motel room, its temporary inhabitants gone. The bed awaits fresh sheets, the scene awaits new possibilities. Do we wonder about its previous occupants, about secret nocturnal occurrences?

This installation presents an environment of intrigue and suggestion through the arrangement of aspects of a motel room. Referencing bordellos from New Orleans from the turn of the previous century to love hotels of Asia in the 1960s and 70s to the North American roadside motels spawned by car culture, I present a scenario based on a studied ambiance and multiple potential narratives.

The stage is set, the room in disorder, unclean, the smell of Lysol and tobacco hanging in the air. Study the evidence. Pick up the phone and listen. What expectations do we - the new occupants, the next viewers – bring? What does this evoke in us? Are we voyeurs or participants?


Measurements: 1.044 x 0.522 m

Collection:

Date Made: 2005-7

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Love Motel

Love Motel

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83697

Description: Photo: Isaac Applebaum

As we motor down the highway towards our destination, do we seek a safe port, a cheap rent rendezvous, a hideout? We encounter a scenario, a vacated motel room, its temporary inhabitants gone. The bed awaits fresh sheets, the scene awaits new possibilities. Do we wonder about its previous occupants, about secret nocturnal occurrences?

This installation presents an environment of intrigue and suggestion through the arrangement of aspects of a motel room. Referencing bordellos from New Orleans from the turn of the previous century to love hotels of Asia in the 1960s and 70s to the North American roadside motels spawned by car culture, I present a scenario based on a studied ambiance and multiple potential narratives.

The stage is set, the room in disorder, unclean, the smell of Lysol and tobacco hanging in the air. Study the evidence. Pick up the phone and listen. What expectations do we - the new occupants, the next viewers – bring? What does this evoke in us? Are we voyeurs or participants?


Measurements: 1.044 x 0.522 m

Collection:

Date Made: 2005-7

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Love Motel

Love Motel

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83698

Description: As we motor down the highway towards our destination, do we seek a safe port, a cheap rent rendezvous, a hideout? We encounter a scenario, a vacated motel room, its temporary inhabitants gone. The bed awaits fresh sheets, the scene awaits new possibilities. Do we wonder about its previous occupants, about secret nocturnal occurrences?

This installation presents an environment of intrigue and suggestion through the arrangement of aspects of a motel room. Referencing bordellos from New Orleans from the turn of the previous century to love hotels of Asia in the 1960s and 70s to the North American roadside motels spawned by car culture, I present a scenario based on a studied ambiance and multiple potential narratives.




The stage is set, the room in disorder, unclean, the smell of Lysol and tobacco hanging in the air. Study the evidence. Pick up the phone and listen. What expectations do we - the new occupants, the next viewers – bring? What does this evoke in us? Are we voyeurs or participants?

Measurements: 1.044 x 0.522 m

Collection:

Date Made: 2005-7

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Love Motel

Love Motel

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83700

Description: As we motor down the highway towards our destination, do we seek a safe port, a cheap rent rendezvous, a hideout? We encounter a scenario, a vacated motel room, its temporary inhabitants gone. The bed awaits fresh sheets, the scene awaits new possibilities. Do we wonder about its previous occupants, about secret nocturnal occurrences?

This installation presents an environment of intrigue and suggestion through the arrangement of aspects of a motel room. Referencing bordellos from New Orleans from the turn of the previous century to love hotels of Asia in the 1960s and 70s to the North American roadside motels spawned by car culture, I present a scenario based on a studied ambiance and multiple potential narratives.




The stage is set, the room in disorder, unclean, the smell of Lysol and tobacco hanging in the air. Study the evidence. Pick up the phone and listen. What expectations do we - the new occupants, the next viewers – bring? What does this evoke in us? Are we voyeurs or participants?

Measurements: 1.044 x 0.522 m

Collection:

Date Made: 2005-7

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Love Motel

Love Motel

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83701

Description: Photo: Isaac Applebaum

As we motor down the highway towards our destination, do we seek a safe port, a cheap rent rendezvous, a hideout? We encounter a scenario, a vacated motel room, its temporary inhabitants gone. The bed awaits fresh sheets, the scene awaits new possibilities. Do we wonder about its previous occupants, about secret nocturnal occurrences?

This installation presents an environment of intrigue and suggestion through the arrangement of aspects of a motel room. Referencing bordellos from New Orleans from the turn of the previous century to love hotels of Asia in the 1960s and 70s to the North American roadside motels spawned by car culture, I present a scenario based on a studied ambiance and multiple potential narratives.




The stage is set, the room in disorder, unclean, the smell of Lysol and tobacco hanging in the air. Study the evidence. Pick up the phone and listen. What expectations do we - the new occupants, the next viewers – bring? What does this evoke in us? Are we voyeurs or participants?

Measurements: 1.044 x 0.522 m

Collection:

Date Made: 2005-7

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Moveable Garden

Moveable Garden

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83714

Description: Public art installation: Harbourfront Centre, Toronto. Supported by Sheridan Nurseries and Toromont CAT. Canalside, Buffalo. Commissioned by Fluid Culture, University at Buffalo.

Ten thousand years ago, great sheets of ice came from the north, scraping clean everything in their path. As they receded, rock, gravel and soil were left in their wake. Today, giant earth moving machines scrape and excavate the earth, replacing it with rock, gravel, soil, tract housing and golf courses. Maybe through our interventions the glaciers will return, or maybe they will return anyway, or maybe we shouldn’t worry, just wait. Ten thousand years is a long time.

Moveable Garden is a landscape on the move, planted as a bermed plot covered with winter vegetation that is visually being pushed along by an earth-moving construction vehicle. Moveable Garden follows in the trail left by my previous garden-based installations, in particular Changing the Landscape (1991, Harbourfront Artists’ Gardens) and When the forest moves (1995, Toronto Sculpture Garden), contemplating the effects of human impact on nature through a cautionary but playful juxtaposition of plant material and constructed forms.


Measurements: 17.4 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2007

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Extreme Centre

Extreme Centre

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83710

Description: In collaboration with Millie Chen

Audio installation. “Extreme Centre,” Centre culturel canadien, Paris, France. Curated by Gilles Forest, Catherine Bédard. Commissioned by Centre culturel canadien and Centre d’art contemporain de Basse-Normandie. Photos: Didier Morel

Extreme Centre, made in collaboration with Millie Chen, is an audio installation in the form of a maze. As visitors negotiate the twisting passages, they hear a cacophony of whispering, issued from speakers set into the passage walls. The sound of whispering ushers visitors along the passages but also engenders a range of reactions from unease, insecurity and paranoia to intimacy and the conspiratorial. Concentrating on individual speakers, the listener can then decipher text, sourced from a range of authors across vast geographies, epochs and political positions. The common denominator of all the text is the arguable categorization of “extreme.”

“Extreme” is a term that is defined as being unreasonable, abnormal or unacceptable, far out from the centre of a civil society. However, the term is almost always applied by others rather than by a group labeling itself. Authors whose words are labeled “extreme” position themselves in a self-defined centre.

The use of the oxymoron “extreme centre” is intended to focus on this contradiction. The words of individuals as disparate as Idi Amin Dada, Steven Biko, Catherine the Great, Dayglo Abortions, Marquis de Sade, David Duke, Louis Farrakhan, Herman Hesse, Mahatma Gandhi, Heinrich Himmler, Abbie Hoffman, Ho Chi Minh, Marin Luther King Jr., Genghis Khan, Nikita Khrushchev, Charles Manson, Mao Zedong, F.T. Marinetti, Golda Meir, Augusto Pinochet, Plato, Pol Pot, Jean-Paul Sartre, Sex Pistols, Bob Dylan, Gloira Steinem, Valerie Solanas, Leon Trotsky, François Truffaut, Oscar Wilde and Emiliano Zapata are juxtaposed with one another in the shifting, morphing, clashing and merging of political and philosophical convictions. The only stability of the centre is its constant state of flux.


Measurements: Installation. 77 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2007

Materials:

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Moveable Garden

Moveable Garden

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83712

Description: Public art installation: Harbourfront Centre, Toronto. Supported by Sheridan Nurseries and Toromont CAT. Canalside, Buffalo. Commissioned by Fluid Culture, University at Buffalo.

Ten thousand years ago, great sheets of ice came from the north, scraping clean everything in their path. As they receded, rock, gravel and soil were left in their wake. Today, giant earth moving machines scrape and excavate the earth, replacing it with rock, gravel, soil, tract housing and golf courses. Maybe through our interventions the glaciers will return, or maybe they will return anyway, or maybe we shouldn’t worry, just wait. Ten thousand years is a long time.

Moveable Garden is a landscape on the move, planted as a bermed plot covered with winter vegetation that is visually being pushed along by an earth-moving construction vehicle. Moveable Garden follows in the trail left by my previous garden-based installations, in particular Changing the Landscape (1991, Harbourfront Artists’ Gardens) and When the forest moves (1995, Toronto Sculpture Garden), contemplating the effects of human impact on nature through a cautionary but playful juxtaposition of plant material and constructed forms.


Measurements: 17.4 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2007

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Extreme Centre

Extreme Centre

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83709

Description: In collaboration with Millie Chen

Audio installation. “Extreme Centre,” Centre culturel canadien, Paris, France. Curated by Gilles Forest, Catherine Bédard. Commissioned by Centre culturel canadien and Centre d’art contemporain de Basse-Normandie. Photos: Didier Morel

Extreme Centre, made in collaboration with Millie Chen, is an audio installation in the form of a maze. As visitors negotiate the twisting passages, they hear a cacophony of whispering, issued from speakers set into the passage walls. The sound of whispering ushers visitors along the passages but also engenders a range of reactions from unease, insecurity and paranoia to intimacy and the conspiratorial. Concentrating on individual speakers, the listener can then decipher text, sourced from a range of authors across vast geographies, epochs and political positions. The common denominator of all the text is the arguable categorization of “extreme.”

“Extreme” is a term that is defined as being unreasonable, abnormal or unacceptable, far out from the centre of a civil society. However, the term is almost always applied by others rather than by a group labeling itself. Authors whose words are labeled “extreme” position themselves in a self-defined centre.

The use of the oxymoron “extreme centre” is intended to focus on this contradiction. The words of individuals as disparate as Idi Amin Dada, Steven Biko, Catherine the Great, Dayglo Abortions, Marquis de Sade, David Duke, Louis Farrakhan, Herman Hesse, Mahatma Gandhi, Heinrich Himmler, Abbie Hoffman, Ho Chi Minh, Marin Luther King Jr., Genghis Khan, Nikita Khrushchev, Charles Manson, Mao Zedong, F.T. Marinetti, Golda Meir, Augusto Pinochet, Plato, Pol Pot, Jean-Paul Sartre, Sex Pistols, Bob Dylan, Gloira Steinem, Valerie Solanas, Leon Trotsky, François Truffaut, Oscar Wilde and Emiliano Zapata are juxtaposed with one another in the shifting, morphing, clashing and merging of political and philosophical convictions. The only stability of the centre is its constant state of flux.


Measurements: Installation. 77 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2007

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Extreme Centre

Extreme Centre

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83711

Description: In collaboration with Millie Chen

Audio installation. “Extreme Centre,” Centre culturel canadien, Paris, France. Curated by Gilles Forest, Catherine Bédard. Commissioned by Centre culturel canadien and Centre d’art contemporain de Basse-Normandie. Photos: Didier Morel

Extreme Centre, made in collaboration with Millie Chen, is an audio installation in the form of a maze. As visitors negotiate the twisting passages, they hear a cacophony of whispering, issued from speakers set into the passage walls. The sound of whispering ushers visitors along the passages but also engenders a range of reactions from unease, insecurity and paranoia to intimacy and the conspiratorial. Concentrating on individual speakers, the listener can then decipher text, sourced from a range of authors across vast geographies, epochs and political positions. The common denominator of all the text is the arguable categorization of “extreme.”

“Extreme” is a term that is defined as being unreasonable, abnormal or unacceptable, far out from the centre of a civil society. However, the term is almost always applied by others rather than by a group labeling itself. Authors whose words are labeled “extreme” position themselves in a self-defined centre.

The use of the oxymoron “extreme centre” is intended to focus on this contradiction. The words of individuals as disparate as Idi Amin Dada, Steven Biko, Catherine the Great, Dayglo Abortions, Marquis de Sade, David Duke, Louis Farrakhan, Herman Hesse, Mahatma Gandhi, Heinrich Himmler, Abbie Hoffman, Ho Chi Minh, Marin Luther King Jr., Genghis Khan, Nikita Khrushchev, Charles Manson, Mao Zedong, F.T. Marinetti, Golda Meir, Augusto Pinochet, Plato, Pol Pot, Jean-Paul Sartre, Sex Pistols, Bob Dylan, Gloira Steinem, Valerie Solanas, Leon Trotsky, François Truffaut, Oscar Wilde and Emiliano Zapata are juxtaposed with one another in the shifting, morphing, clashing and merging of political and philosophical convictions. The only stability of the centre is its constant state of flux.


Measurements: Installation. 77 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2007

Materials:

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Call Centre

Call Centre

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83703

Description: Interactive audio installation: York Quay Gallery, Harbourfront Centre, Toronto. Curated by Patrick Macaulay.

Call Centre sets up an opportunity for interactive exchange based on telemarketing strategies and telephone solicitation. It takes the form of a telephone call centre consisting of two different stations, each furnished with a desk, chair and telephone. At one station at random moments, regular incoming calls cause the telephone to ring, prompting visitors and passersby to pick up the receiver and participate in a scripted survey with a live Call Centre agent. At the second station, participants who pick up the handset are automatically connected to a voice mailbox where they are prompted to respond to a differing pre-recorded survey. Both surveys subtly prod the visitor to participate in an interaction that is simultaneously familiar and uncomfortable, while the intended goals of the surveys remain in the murky boundaries outside of commercial enterprise and statistics collection.


Measurements: 10.44 sq.ft.

Collection:

Date Made: 2007

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Moveable Garden

Moveable Garden

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83715

Description: Public art installation: Harbourfront Centre, Toronto. Supported by Sheridan Nurseries and Toromont CAT. Canalside, Buffalo. Commissioned by Fluid Culture, University at Buffalo.

Ten thousand years ago, great sheets of ice came from the north, scraping clean everything in their path. As they receded, rock, gravel and soil were left in their wake. Today, giant earth moving machines scrape and excavate the earth, replacing it with rock, gravel, soil, tract housing and golf courses. Maybe through our interventions the glaciers will return, or maybe they will return anyway, or maybe we shouldn’t worry, just wait. Ten thousand years is a long time.

Moveable Garden is a landscape on the move, planted as a bermed plot covered with winter vegetation that is visually being pushed along by an earth-moving construction vehicle. Moveable Garden follows in the trail left by my previous garden-based installations, in particular Changing the Landscape (1991, Harbourfront Artists’ Gardens) and When the forest moves (1995, Toronto Sculpture Garden), contemplating the effects of human impact on nature through a cautionary but playful juxtaposition of plant material and constructed forms.


Measurements: 17.4 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2007

Materials:

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Call Centre

Call Centre

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83702

Description: Interactive audio installation: York Quay Gallery, Harbourfront Centre, Toronto. Curated by Patrick Macaulay.

Call Centre sets up an opportunity for interactive exchange based on telemarketing strategies and telephone solicitation. It takes the form of a telephone call centre consisting of two different stations, each furnished with a desk, chair and telephone. At one station at random moments, regular incoming calls cause the telephone to ring, prompting visitors and passersby to pick up the receiver and participate in a scripted survey with a live Call Centre agent. At the second station, participants who pick up the handset are automatically connected to a voice mailbox where they are prompted to respond to a differing pre-recorded survey. Both surveys subtly prod the visitor to participate in an interaction that is simultaneously familiar and uncomfortable, while the intended goals of the surveys remain in the murky boundaries outside of commercial enterprise and statistics collection.


Measurements: 10.44 sq.ft.

Collection:

Date Made: 2007

Materials:

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Moveable Garden

Moveable Garden

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83713

Description: Public art installation: Harbourfront Centre, Toronto. Supported by Sheridan Nurseries and Toromont CAT. Canalside, Buffalo. Commissioned by Fluid Culture, University at Buffalo.

Ten thousand years ago, great sheets of ice came from the north, scraping clean everything in their path. As they receded, rock, gravel and soil were left in their wake. Today, giant earth moving machines scrape and excavate the earth, replacing it with rock, gravel, soil, tract housing and golf courses. Maybe through our interventions the glaciers will return, or maybe they will return anyway, or maybe we shouldn’t worry, just wait. Ten thousand years is a long time.

Moveable Garden is a landscape on the move, planted as a bermed plot covered with winter vegetation that is visually being pushed along by an earth-moving construction vehicle. Moveable Garden follows in the trail left by my previous garden-based installations, in particular Changing the Landscape (1991, Harbourfront Artists’ Gardens) and When the forest moves (1995, Toronto Sculpture Garden), contemplating the effects of human impact on nature through a cautionary but playful juxtaposition of plant material and constructed forms.


Measurements: 17.4 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2007

Materials:

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Extreme Centre

Extreme Centre

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83707

Description: In collaboration with Millie Chen

Audio installation. “Extreme Centre,” Centre culturel canadien, Paris, France. Curated by Gilles Forest, Catherine Bédard. Commissioned by Centre culturel canadien and Centre d’art contemporain de Basse-Normandie. Photos: Didier Morel

Extreme Centre, made in collaboration with Millie Chen, is an audio installation in the form of a maze. As visitors negotiate the twisting passages, they hear a cacophony of whispering, issued from speakers set into the passage walls. The sound of whispering ushers visitors along the passages but also engenders a range of reactions from unease, insecurity and paranoia to intimacy and the conspiratorial. Concentrating on individual speakers, the listener can then decipher text, sourced from a range of authors across vast geographies, epochs and political positions. The common denominator of all the text is the arguable categorization of “extreme.”

“Extreme” is a term that is defined as being unreasonable, abnormal or unacceptable, far out from the centre of a civil society. However, the term is almost always applied by others rather than by a group labeling itself. Authors whose words are labeled “extreme” position themselves in a self-defined centre.

The use of the oxymoron “extreme centre” is intended to focus on this contradiction. The words of individuals as disparate as Idi Amin Dada, Steven Biko, Catherine the Great, Dayglo Abortions, Marquis de Sade, David Duke, Louis Farrakhan, Herman Hesse, Mahatma Gandhi, Heinrich Himmler, Abbie Hoffman, Ho Chi Minh, Marin Luther King Jr., Genghis Khan, Nikita Khrushchev, Charles Manson, Mao Zedong, F.T. Marinetti, Golda Meir, Augusto Pinochet, Plato, Pol Pot, Jean-Paul Sartre, Sex Pistols, Bob Dylan, Gloira Steinem, Valerie Solanas, Leon Trotsky, François Truffaut, Oscar Wilde and Emiliano Zapata are juxtaposed with one another in the shifting, morphing, clashing and merging of political and philosophical convictions. The only stability of the centre is its constant state of flux.


Measurements: Installation. 77 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2007

Materials:

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Call Centre

Call Centre

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83705

Description: Interactive audio installation: York Quay Gallery, Harbourfront Centre, Toronto. Curated by Patrick Macaulay.

Call Centre sets up an opportunity for interactive exchange based on telemarketing strategies and telephone solicitation. It takes the form of a telephone call centre consisting of two different stations, each furnished with a desk, chair and telephone. At one station at random moments, regular incoming calls cause the telephone to ring, prompting visitors and passersby to pick up the receiver and participate in a scripted survey with a live Call Centre agent. At the second station, participants who pick up the handset are automatically connected to a voice mailbox where they are prompted to respond to a differing pre-recorded survey. Both surveys subtly prod the visitor to participate in an interaction that is simultaneously familiar and uncomfortable, while the intended goals of the surveys remain in the murky boundaries outside of commercial enterprise and statistics collection.


Measurements: 10.44 sq.ft.

Collection:

Date Made: 2007

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Call Centre

Call Centre

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83704

Description: Interactive audio installation: York Quay Gallery, Harbourfront Centre, Toronto. Curated by Patrick Macaulay.

Call Centre sets up an opportunity for interactive exchange based on telemarketing strategies and telephone solicitation. It takes the form of a telephone call centre consisting of two different stations, each furnished with a desk, chair and telephone. At one station at random moments, regular incoming calls cause the telephone to ring, prompting visitors and passersby to pick up the receiver and participate in a scripted survey with a live Call Centre agent. At the second station, participants who pick up the handset are automatically connected to a voice mailbox where they are prompted to respond to a differing pre-recorded survey. Both surveys subtly prod the visitor to participate in an interaction that is simultaneously familiar and uncomfortable, while the intended goals of the surveys remain in the murky boundaries outside of commercial enterprise and statistics collection.


Measurements: 10.44 sq.ft.

Collection:

Date Made: 2007

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Extreme Centre

Extreme Centre

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83708

Description: In collaboration with Millie Chen

Audio installation. “Extreme Centre,” Centre culturel canadien, Paris, France. Curated by Gilles Forest, Catherine Bédard. Commissioned by Centre culturel canadien and Centre d’art contemporain de Basse-Normandie. Photos: Didier Morel

Extreme Centre, made in collaboration with Millie Chen, is an audio installation in the form of a maze. As visitors negotiate the twisting passages, they hear a cacophony of whispering, issued from speakers set into the passage walls. The sound of whispering ushers visitors along the passages but also engenders a range of reactions from unease, insecurity and paranoia to intimacy and the conspiratorial. Concentrating on individual speakers, the listener can then decipher text, sourced from a range of authors across vast geographies, epochs and political positions. The common denominator of all the text is the arguable categorization of “extreme.”

“Extreme” is a term that is defined as being unreasonable, abnormal or unacceptable, far out from the centre of a civil society. However, the term is almost always applied by others rather than by a group labeling itself. Authors whose words are labeled “extreme” position themselves in a self-defined centre.

The use of the oxymoron “extreme centre” is intended to focus on this contradiction. The words of individuals as disparate as Idi Amin Dada, Steven Biko, Catherine the Great, Dayglo Abortions, Marquis de Sade, David Duke, Louis Farrakhan, Herman Hesse, Mahatma Gandhi, Heinrich Himmler, Abbie Hoffman, Ho Chi Minh, Marin Luther King Jr., Genghis Khan, Nikita Khrushchev, Charles Manson, Mao Zedong, F.T. Marinetti, Golda Meir, Augusto Pinochet, Plato, Pol Pot, Jean-Paul Sartre, Sex Pistols, Bob Dylan, Gloira Steinem, Valerie Solanas, Leon Trotsky, François Truffaut, Oscar Wilde and Emiliano Zapata are juxtaposed with one another in the shifting, morphing, clashing and merging of political and philosophical convictions. The only stability of the centre is its constant state of flux.


Measurements: Installation. 77 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2007

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Call Centre

Call Centre

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83706

Description: Interactive audio installation: York Quay Gallery, Harbourfront Centre, Toronto. Curated by Patrick Macaulay.

Call Centre sets up an opportunity for interactive exchange based on telemarketing strategies and telephone solicitation. It takes the form of a telephone call centre consisting of two different stations, each furnished with a desk, chair and telephone. At one station at random moments, regular incoming calls cause the telephone to ring, prompting visitors and passersby to pick up the receiver and participate in a scripted survey with a live Call Centre agent. At the second station, participants who pick up the handset are automatically connected to a voice mailbox where they are prompted to respond to a differing pre-recorded survey. Both surveys subtly prod the visitor to participate in an interaction that is simultaneously familiar and uncomfortable, while the intended goals of the surveys remain in the murky boundaries outside of commercial enterprise and statistics collection.


Measurements: 10.44 sq.ft.

Collection:

Date Made: 2007

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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erratic

erratic

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83719

Description: Sculpture. York Quay Gallery, Harbourfront, Toronto.

erratic is an installation comprised of 37 wooden spheres, ranging in size, egalitarian and random. These spherical shapes are universal and architectonic. Nature favours this shape due to its efficiency, forming the earth, the sun, blueberries, raindrops, and beetle dung, to name but a few examples. Humans are constantly drawn to this shape, forming ball bearings, cannon balls, ping pong balls, and bubble tea, to name but a few examples.


Measurements: 10m x 15m x 1.3m

Collection:

Date Made: 2010

Materials:

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erratic

erratic

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83717

Description: Sculpture. York Quay Gallery, Harbourfront, Toronto.

erratic is an installation comprised of 37 wooden spheres, ranging in size, egalitarian and random. These spherical shapes are universal and architectonic. Nature favours this shape due to its efficiency, forming the earth, the sun, blueberries, raindrops, and beetle dung, to name but a few examples. Humans are constantly drawn to this shape, forming ball bearings, cannon balls, ping pong balls, and bubble tea, to name but a few examples.


Measurements: 10m x 15m x 1.3m

Collection:

Date Made: 2010

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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erratic

erratic

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83718

Description: Sculpture. York Quay Gallery, Harbourfront, Toronto.

erratic is an installation comprised of 37 wooden spheres, ranging in size, egalitarian and random. These spherical shapes are universal and architectonic. Nature favours this shape due to its efficiency, forming the earth, the sun, blueberries, raindrops, and beetle dung, to name but a few examples. Humans are constantly drawn to this shape, forming ball bearings, cannon balls, ping pong balls, and bubble tea, to name but a few examples.


Measurements: 10m x 15m x 1.3m

Collection:

Date Made: 2010

Materials:

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Survival Guide & Kit

Survival Guide & Kit

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83722

Description: Installation. Convenience Gallery, Toronto.

Fictitious retail outlet providing tools for surviving a range of catastrophes. Tools include first aid kit, gas mask, anti-nuclear pills, water purification tablets, maps, compass, binoculars, woodcraft knife, trenching tool and pick, portable chainsaw-in-a-can, flint tool, self-powered weatherband portable radio, waterproof shoulder bag, hermetically sealed non-hybrid seed bank, etc. This installation constitutes one site-specific installment of a series of installations, including at the Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit, curated by Nick Tobier, at the Western New York Bookarts Cooperative, curated by John Massier as part of Beyond/In Western New York biennial 2010, and Wharf, Centre d’art contemporain de Basse-Normandie, curated by Gilles Forest.


Measurements: 3m x 1.5m x 3m

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-11

Materials:

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Survival Guide & Kit

Survival Guide & Kit

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83721

Description: Installation. Convenience Gallery, Toronto.

Fictitious retail outlet providing tools for surviving a range of catastrophes. Tools include first aid kit, gas mask, anti-nuclear pills, water purification tablets, maps, compass, binoculars, woodcraft knife, trenching tool and pick, portable chainsaw-in-a-can, flint tool, self-powered weatherband portable radio, waterproof shoulder bag, hermetically sealed non-hybrid seed bank, etc. This installation constitutes one site-specific installment of a series of installations, including at the Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit, curated by Nick Tobier, at the Western New York Bookarts Cooperative, curated by John Massier as part of Beyond/In Western New York biennial 2010, and Wharf, Centre d’art contemporain de Basse-Normandie, curated by Gilles Forest.


Measurements: 3m x 1.5m x 3m

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-11

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Survival Guide detail

Survival Guide detail

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83724

Description:

Measurements: 130cm x 180cm x 12cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-11

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Survival Guide detail

Survival Guide detail

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83725

Description:

Measurements: 130cm x 180cm x 12cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-11

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Survival Guide & Kit

Survival Guide & Kit

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83720

Description: Installation. Convenience Gallery, Toronto.

Fictitious retail outlet providing tools for surviving a range of catastrophes. Tools include first aid kit, gas mask, anti-nuclear pills, water purification tablets, maps, compass, binoculars, woodcraft knife, trenching tool and pick, portable chainsaw-in-a-can, flint tool, self-powered weatherband portable radio, waterproof shoulder bag, hermetically sealed non-hybrid seed bank, etc. This installation constitutes one site-specific installment of a series of installations, including at the Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit, curated by Nick Tobier, at the Western New York Bookarts Cooperative, curated by John Massier as part of Beyond/In Western New York biennial 2010, and Wharf, Centre d’art contemporain de Basse-Normandie, curated by Gilles Forest.


Measurements: 3m x 1.5m x 3m

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-11

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Survival Guide detail

Survival Guide detail

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83727

Description:

Measurements: 130cm x 180cm x 12cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-11

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Survival Guide & Kit

Survival Guide & Kit

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83723

Description: Installation. Convenience Gallery, Toronto.

Fictitious retail outlet providing tools for surviving a range of catastrophes. Tools include first aid kit, gas mask, anti-nuclear pills, water purification tablets, maps, compass, binoculars, woodcraft knife, trenching tool and pick, portable chainsaw-in-a-can, flint tool, self-powered weatherband portable radio, waterproof shoulder bag, hermetically sealed non-hybrid seed bank, etc. This installation constitutes one site-specific installment of a series of installations, including at the Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit, curated by Nick Tobier, at the Western New York Bookarts Cooperative, curated by John Massier as part of Beyond/In Western New York biennial 2010, and Wharf, Centre d’art contemporain de Basse-Normandie, curated by Gilles Forest.


Measurements: 3m x 1.5m x 3m

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-11

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Survival Guide detail

Survival Guide detail

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83726

Description:

Measurements: 130cm x 180cm x 12cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-11

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Survival Guide detail

Survival Guide detail

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83728

Description:

Measurements: 130cm x 180cm x 12cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-11

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Survival Guide & Kit

Survival Guide & Kit

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83729

Description: Installation. Convenience Gallery, Toronto.

Fictitious retail outlet providing tools for surviving a range of catastrophes. Tools include first aid kit, gas mask, anti-nuclear pills, water purification tablets, maps, compass, binoculars, woodcraft knife, trenching tool and pick, portable chainsaw-in-a-can, flint tool, self-powered weatherband portable radio, waterproof shoulder bag, hermetically sealed non-hybrid seed bank, etc. This installation constitutes one site-specific installment of a series of installations, including at the Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit, curated by Nick Tobier, at the Western New York Bookarts Cooperative, curated by John Massier as part of Beyond/In Western New York biennial 2010, and Wharf, Centre d’art contemporain de Basse-Normandie, curated by Gilles Forest.


Measurements: 3m x 1.5m x 3m

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-11

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Moveable Garden

Moveable Garden

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83716

Description: Public art installation: Canalside, Buffalo. Commissioned by Fluid Culture, University at Buffalo.


Measurements: 17.4 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2011

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Wanna be my survival buddy?

Wanna be my survival buddy?

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83733

Description: Site-specific public art installation. The Tree Museum, Muskoka, Ontario. Commissioned by The Tree Museum.

By creating a text-based work, and mounting small laser etched panels on dead trees, I treated the Tree Museum as an “open book.” Content for this “book” was sourced from collected quotes, remembered conversations, and journal notes. Humans have only roamed the planet for one hundred thousand years, and given our perceived precarious existence presently, and the knowledge that ninety percent of all life forms that have inhabited the earth are currently extinct, it would seem ill conceived that we are immune from this fate. I present musings, and fact-based thoughts on strategies to best contemplate my fear of the future.


Measurements: 8 ½” x 11” each (10 panels)

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Ministry for Future Modification: Beijing Office

Ministry for Future Modification: Beijing Office

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83739

Description: This installation transforms the gallery into an officially appointed technological control center that can theoretically chart both the physical and psychological shifts of unsanctioned actions. Be it undesirable weather or unsavory behavior, the Ministry for Future Modification is mandated to monitor destabilizing change. Is such an enterprise predestined for failure? The obvious pitfalls of such an enterprise are suggested through the inundation of a chaotic exterior landscape into the controlled interior of an office setting. The juxtaposition of the official “memo” with the scenario suggested by the installation is intended to accentuate this incongruity.


Measurements: 6.96 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Wanna be my survival buddy?

Wanna be my survival buddy?

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83732

Description: Site-specific public art installation. The Tree Museum, Muskoka, Ontario. Commissioned by The Tree Museum.

By creating a text-based work, and mounting small laser etched panels on dead trees, I treated the Tree Museum as an “open book.” Content for this “book” was sourced from collected quotes, remembered conversations, and journal notes. Humans have only roamed the planet for one hundred thousand years, and given our perceived precarious existence presently, and the knowledge that ninety percent of all life forms that have inhabited the earth are currently extinct, it would seem ill conceived that we are immune from this fate. I present musings, and fact-based thoughts on strategies to best contemplate my fear of the future.


Measurements: 8 ½” x 11” each (10 panels)

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Ministry for Future Modification: Beijing Office

Ministry for Future Modification: Beijing Office

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83737

Description: This installation transforms the gallery into an officially appointed technological control center that can theoretically chart both the physical and psychological shifts of unsanctioned actions. Be it undesirable weather or unsavory behavior, the Ministry for Future Modification is mandated to monitor destabilizing change. Is such an enterprise predestined for failure? The obvious pitfalls of such an enterprise are suggested through the inundation of a chaotic exterior landscape into the controlled interior of an office setting. The juxtaposition of the official “memo” with the scenario suggested by the installation is intended to accentuate this incongruity.


Measurements: 6.96 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Wanna be my survival buddy?

Wanna be my survival buddy?

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83730

Description: Site-specific public art installation. The Tree Museum, Muskoka, Ontario. Commissioned by The Tree Museum.

By creating a text-based work, and mounting small laser etched panels on dead trees, I treated the Tree Museum as an “open book.” Content for this “book” was sourced from collected quotes, remembered conversations, and journal notes. Humans have only roamed the planet for one hundred thousand years, and given our perceived precarious existence presently, and the knowledge that ninety percent of all life forms that have inhabited the earth are currently extinct, it would seem ill conceived that we are immune from this fate. I present musings, and fact-based thoughts on strategies to best contemplate my fear of the future.


Measurements: 8 ½” x 11” each (10 panels)

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Ministry for Future Modification: Beijing Office

Ministry for Future Modification: Beijing Office

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83734

Description: This installation transforms the gallery into an officially appointed technological control center that can theoretically chart both the physical and psychological shifts of unsanctioned actions. Be it undesirable weather or unsavory behavior, the Ministry for Future Modification is mandated to monitor destabilizing change. Is such an enterprise predestined for failure? The obvious pitfalls of such an enterprise are suggested through the inundation of a chaotic exterior landscape into the controlled interior of an office setting. The juxtaposition of the official “memo” with the scenario suggested by the installation is intended to accentuate this incongruity.


Measurements: 6.96 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Ministry for Future Modification: Beijing Office

Ministry for Future Modification: Beijing Office

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83736

Description: This installation transforms the gallery into an officially appointed technological control center that can theoretically chart both the physical and psychological shifts of unsanctioned actions. Be it undesirable weather or unsavory behavior, the Ministry for Future Modification is mandated to monitor destabilizing change. Is such an enterprise predestined for failure? The obvious pitfalls of such an enterprise are suggested through the inundation of a chaotic exterior landscape into the controlled interior of an office setting. The juxtaposition of the official “memo” with the scenario suggested by the installation is intended to accentuate this incongruity.


Measurements: 6.96 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

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Ministry for Future Modification: Beijing Office

Ministry for Future Modification: Beijing Office

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83738

Description: This installation transforms the gallery into an officially appointed technological control center that can theoretically chart both the physical and psychological shifts of unsanctioned actions. Be it undesirable weather or unsavory behavior, the Ministry for Future Modification is mandated to monitor destabilizing change. Is such an enterprise predestined for failure? The obvious pitfalls of such an enterprise are suggested through the inundation of a chaotic exterior landscape into the controlled interior of an office setting. The juxtaposition of the official “memo” with the scenario suggested by the installation is intended to accentuate this incongruity.


Measurements: 6.96 sq. m

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection: ,

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Ministry for Future Modification: Beijing Office

Ministry for Future Modification: Beijing Office

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83735

Description: This installation transforms the gallery into an officially appointed technological control center that can theoretically chart both the physical and psychological shifts of unsanctioned actions. Be it undesirable weather or unsavory behavior, the Ministry for Future Modification is mandated to monitor destabilizing change. Is such an enterprise predestined for failure? The obvious pitfalls of such an enterprise are suggested through the inundation of a chaotic exterior landscape into the controlled interior of an office setting. The juxtaposition of the official “memo” with the scenario suggested by the installation is intended to accentuate this incongruity.


Measurements: 6.96 sq. m

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Date Made: 2012

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Wanna be my survival buddy?

Wanna be my survival buddy?

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83731

Description: Site-specific public art installation. The Tree Museum, Muskoka, Ontario. Commissioned by The Tree Museum.

By creating a text-based work, and mounting small laser etched panels on dead trees, I treated the Tree Museum as an “open book.” Content for this “book” was sourced from collected quotes, remembered conversations, and journal notes. Humans have only roamed the planet for one hundred thousand years, and given our perceived precarious existence presently, and the knowledge that ninety percent of all life forms that have inhabited the earth are currently extinct, it would seem ill conceived that we are immune from this fate. I present musings, and fact-based thoughts on strategies to best contemplate my fear of the future.


Measurements: 8 ½” x 11” each (10 panels)

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Date Made: 2012

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Human Sweat Generator

Human Sweat Generator

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83740

Description: Imagine a time when the source of cheap energy is exhausted, an end of the great machine age. On the bed of a (tractor) trailer this float contains machines of the future, fundamental and modest in their construction and scope. These machines are dependent on human muscle to produce electricity. The human-generated electricity powered a multitude of devices, lighting systems, sound systems and projection systems. The content of the audio was comprised of 5 soundtracks of emergency warning alerts broadcast as prerecorded onomatopoeic vocalizations. Borrowing from the Theatre of the Absurd, a sensible/nonsensical, but mainly truthful, narrative to disrupt the flow of spectacle will be presented.


Measurements: W:8’16” L:48’ H: 13’4”

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Date Made: 2013

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Human Sweat Generator

Human Sweat Generator

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83743

Description: Imagine a time when the source of cheap energy is exhausted, an end of the great machine age. On the bed of a (tractor) trailer this float contains machines of the future, fundamental and modest in their construction and scope. These machines are dependent on human muscle to produce electricity. The human-generated electricity powered a multitude of devices, lighting systems, sound systems and projection systems. The content of the audio was comprised of 5 soundtracks of emergency warning alerts broadcast as prerecorded onomatopoeic vocalizations. Borrowing from the Theatre of the Absurd, a sensible/nonsensical, but mainly truthful, narrative to disrupt the flow of spectacle will be presented.


Measurements: W:8’16” L:48’ H: 13’4”

Collection:

Date Made: 2013

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Human Sweat Generator

Human Sweat Generator

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83741

Description: Imagine a time when the source of cheap energy is exhausted, an end of the great machine age. On the bed of a (tractor) trailer this float contains machines of the future, fundamental and modest in their construction and scope. These machines are dependent on human muscle to produce electricity. The human-generated electricity powered a multitude of devices, lighting systems, sound systems and projection systems. The content of the audio was comprised of 5 soundtracks of emergency warning alerts broadcast as prerecorded onomatopoeic vocalizations. Borrowing from the Theatre of the Absurd, a sensible/nonsensical, but mainly truthful, narrative to disrupt the flow of spectacle will be presented.


Measurements: W:8’16” L:48’ H: 13’4”

Collection:

Date Made: 2013

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Human Sweat Generator

Human Sweat Generator

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83742

Description: Imagine a time when the source of cheap energy is exhausted, an end of the great machine age. On the bed of a (tractor) trailer this float contains machines of the future, fundamental and modest in their construction and scope. These machines are dependent on human muscle to produce electricity. The human-generated electricity powered a multitude of devices, lighting systems, sound systems and projection systems. The content of the audio was comprised of 5 soundtracks of emergency warning alerts broadcast as prerecorded onomatopoeic vocalizations. Borrowing from the Theatre of the Absurd, a sensible/nonsensical, but mainly truthful, narrative to disrupt the flow of spectacle will be presented.


Measurements: W:8’16” L:48’ H: 13’4”

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Date Made: 2013

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Wreck of the Theoretical Dyson Sphere KIC 8462852, Artist Conception

Wreck of the Theoretical Dyson Sphere KIC 8462852, Artist Conception

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83745

Description: A Dyson sphere is a hypothetical mega-structure that completely encompasses a star. This is thought to be a solution to escalating energy needs, all things built will eventually fail including theoretical ones.


Measurements: diameter 50 cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2017

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3-D Rasterized Artist Conception of Asteroid 2013 TV 13

3-D Rasterized Artist Conception of Asteroid 2013 TV 13

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83744

Description: A 3-D reconstruction of a 2D photographic image of Asteroid 2013 TV 13, recreating the rasterized quality of deep space photography.


Measurements: diameter 85 cm

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Date Made: 2017

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Warren Quigley

Warren Quigley

Artist: Warren Quigley

Work ID: 83677

Description: Site-specific public art installation. Harbourfront Artists’ Gardens, Toronto. Commissioned by Harbourfront Corporation.

Named after the automobile sales slogan used in a short-lived television ad in which a bucolic landscape of rolling hills becomes ominously covered by cars, this installation reverses the original intent of commercial monopoly. In the introduced landscape of the outdoor installation, the automobile is consumed by nature. Reclamation occurs due to its abandonment; the organic growths eventually obliterate the original form of the foreign object.


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