C Magazine

Benchin

he original bench, on Main Street in Vancouver’s Mount Pleasant neighbourhood, was made from driftwood and tree stumps. Someone from the neighbourhood had planted a little garden there and the bench was right next to it. Starting in 2008, artists Charlene Vickers and Neil Eustache would go hang out on the bench every week. They would spend a long time sitting around and looking at people going by. Special guests were invited to join them or sometimes people would just drop in. Maybe there would be coffee or snacks or someone would bring music or a radio. They would watch for people who looked interesting, or look to see if there were other First

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from C Magazine

C Magazine10 min read
Dowsing For Remediation, With Alana Bartol
I learned then that dowsing, also known as water witching or radiesthesia, is an embodied practice of divination long used to detect entities underfoot: water sources, mineral ores, oil, and even lost objects. Using an instrument—such as a forked bra
C Magazine4 min read
João Onofre Daniel Faria Gallery, Toronto, 20 November 2021 to 22 January 2022
In just over two decades of art-making, Portuguese artist João Onofre has taken great stock of grand themes such as failure, irony, endurance, performance, connection, and love. The artist’s first solo exhibition in Canada, at Daniel Faria Gallery in
C Magazine4 min read
If From Every Tongue it Drips — Sharlene Bamboat 2021
“Should I translate?” asks the figure on the bed, lying at the feet of the camera operator, in reference to the Hindi song playing on her phone. In this opening scene from Sharlene Bamboat’s If From Every Tongue it Drips, this innocuous question serv

Related