REBECCA BAYER
  • projects
    • MERGE
    • Maple Ridge Community Mosaic
    • Calder Community Mosaic
    • The Whole is Greater Than the Sum of Its Parts
    • GIANT
    • Whereness
    • Motif One of Many
    • City Fabric
    • Give And Take
  • Paintings
  • About

MERGE: Lynnmour Xá7elcha Elementary workshop results

6/1/2022

 
Special thanks to teacher Mr. Paul Best for sharing images of Lynnmour Xá7elcha Elementary’s own version of ‘Merge’.

Each of the ~40 students from Monique Zander’s grades 3/4 and Mr. Best’s 4/5 classes contributed multiple 3″x9″ bands of beautifully rendered blends, textures, and combinations of colours based on parts of nature they had just observed on our short walk outside. These handmade bands and their overall arrangement – thanks to Mr. Best & helpers – results in a more organic-looking version of the original public art piece!

For more on the workshop from May 10: http://www.spacemakeplace.com/merge-workshop-day-at…/
 
For more about ‘Merge’ acoustic barrier wall and public art project: http://www.spacemakeplace.com/…/merge-lynnmour-sound-wall/

​
​Many thanks to all the students, teachers, and staff who made this happen 
Picture
Picture

MERGE: workshop day at Lynnmour Xá7elcha Elementary

5/11/2022

 
I had a wonderful day yesterday at Lynnmour Xá7elcha Elementary in the District of North Vancouver.  The school is right across the street from the ‘Merge’ artwork.

Last October I was contacted by teachers Paul Best and Leslie McGuire, who had heard my interview about the colourful acoustic barrier wall on CBC’s ‘On the Coast’ and invited me to visit the school and talk a bit about the project.

After a brief presentation to Monique Zander’s grades 3/4 and Mr. Best’s 4/5 classes on how the colours were chosen from references in nature, everyone went outside with pencils and notebooks in hand to notate the natural colours they could find in the ‘Merge’ neighbourhood.
​

Back in the auditorium, all 40 students made colourful, abstract stripes, using oil pastels to represent the found colours before arranging them into one large and fascinating conglomeration – their own version of ‘Merge’!
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
MERGE (2022) Rebecca Bayer, 356m x 4m, Powder-coated Aluminum Acoustic Panels

Trans-Canada Highway @ Keith Road⁠, Lynnmour, District of North Vancouver, territories of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations

MERGE (Lynnmour Sound Wall) – CBC ‘On The Coast’ interview

10/25/2021

 
On Thursday October 21, Rebecca spoke a bit about MERGE with Gloria Macarenko on CBC Radio ‘On The Coast’.  Check out the recording here!
​

https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radio/1-46-on-the-coast/clip/15873663-public-art-near-ironworkers-bridge
Picture

MERGE (Lynnmour Sound Wall) Update: North Shore News

10/17/2021

 
Picture
Many thanks to Brent Richter and Mike Wakefield from the North Shore News for this article about ‘MERGE’ #mergesoundwall.
​

***

“For too long, it’s been a traffic jam through a construction site. But the bottom of The Cut is taking on a whole new look.
Artist Rebecca Bayer is putting the final touches on Merge, a 366-metre-long shock of colour stretching along Highway 1 between Mountain Highway and Fern Street.


It is one of the final pieces of the $200-million Lower Lynn Improvement Project, intended to shield the Inter River neighbourhood from highway noise. But it’s also now likely the largest single piece of public art on the North Shore.
​

“An acoustic barrier wall could be very mundane and boring, but my hope with the bright colours is that it is more interesting and vibrant from both sides. It can be experienced at a slow pace, but also a fairly quick pace if you’re driving along the highway, and it sort of blurs together as you drive by,” she said. “I get pretty excited by public art that really blends with the infrastructure or architecture, and it just becomes part of something that was already going to be there anyway.”

Bayer chose the 20 different colours specifically because they are found in the flora, fauna and landmarks from the Lynn Valley area. Bayer consulted with the Lynn Canyon Ecology Centre to match colours with individual species like the red-backed salamander, Pacific chorus frog and licorice fern. She then tried out different permutations to come up with the pattern that exists there today. “There is quite an amazing pocket of nature right there,” she said. “It made sense to try to work with the natural palette in some way.”

On the Inter River side, the names of the species appear on some panels, which Bayer said she hopes will enable Merge to educate as well as beautify.

Lori Phillips, the District of North Vancouver’s public art officer who helped in the selection process of Bayer for the project, said it does both.  “Merge is a perfect example of the magic that can happen when artists are added to infrastructure projects. Suddenly a rather understated sound wall is transformed into a dynamic public artwork that is free and accessible for everyone to enjoy,” she said. “The District of North Vancouver’s public art program, was thrilled to partner with the [Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure] on this project and we know that the residents of Lynnmour, along with the thousands of daily commuters and travellers on Highway 1 will enjoy its masterful merge of colour and story, for years to come.”

Even as sound barriers/art canvasses go, the panels are a “world-class sound attenuation product” designed to neutralize sound, not just bounce it away from residences, said Mark Hersey, managing partner of Solid Rock Fencing, the company contracted to install the 623 panels.

Today, there are just a few gaps in the wall, which will be filled when the final panels arrive from Europe, Hersey said.
The final components of the Lower Lynn Improvement Project, including combining the Main Street and Dollarton Highway on-ramps into one with signalized traffic control, are expected to come online later this fall.”


***

Special thanks on this project go out to:
Jay Porter, BC Transportation and Infrastructure
Erin Moxton, North Vancouver District
Lori Phillips, North Vancouver Recreation & Culture
Tamsin Guppy, Lynn Canyon Ecology Centre
Rainer Kraft, KCI Kraft Consulting Inc.
Mark Hersey and Jason Hardy, Solid Rock Fencing Ltd.


***

MERGE (2021) Rebecca Bayer, 356m x 4m, Powder-coated Aluminum Acoustic Panels,⁠
Trans-Canada Highway @ Keith Road⁠, Lynnmour, District of North Vancouver, territories of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations


***

More info:
https://www.nsnews.com/…/massive-art-piece-adorns…

MERGE (Lynnmour Sound Wall) Update: Colourful Transformation

9/17/2021

 
Picture
It’s been another productive week at MERGE. We want to offer a special thanks to Mark Hersey, Jason Hardy and the team from ​​Solid Rock Fencing for their special attention to detail and careful installation of the 623 colourful acoustic panels.

​This project is starting to transform the landscape and has already made a huge difference in reducing the traffic noise level in the neighbouring Lynnmour community.

It is all coming together very nicely and everyone is excited to see the wall complete in the next few weeks.  
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
MERGE (Lynnmour Sound Wall – 2021), will feature twenty naturalistic colours which represent a selection of local flora, fauna and landmarks specific to the Lynnmour community and area. Merge stands at 4m tall and spans 356m along the newly reconfigured section of the Trans-Canada Highway (Hwy 1) between Ironworkers Memorial Second Narrows Crossing and Lynn Creek.

​The acoustic dampening, sound wall sits between the highway and the residential neighbourhood along Keith Road and is clad in colourful powder-coated aluminum panels. The panels have been carefully configured to produce a giant, site-specific spectrum designed to be viewed by both passing traffic and residents in nearby communities.


@solidrockfencing

@KCIKraftConsultingInc 

@NVanDistrict

MERGE (Lynnmour Sound Wall) Update: Waidhofen, Austria

3/11/2021

 
Thanks to FORSTER and Rainer Kraft from Kraft Consulting for their recent photos of the colourful acoustic panels that have now been fabricated at Forster’s factory in Waidhofen, Austria.  Later this summer (2021) these panels will be installed along side 356m of Trans-Canada Highway (Hwy 1) between Ironworkers Memorial Second Narrows Crossing and Lynn Creek in the District of North Vancouver.
​

The public artwork, MERGE, will feature twenty naturalistic colours representing a selection of local flora, fauna and landmarks specific to the Lynnmour community and area.  The ~620 powder-coated aluminum panels have been carefully configured to produce a giant site-specific spectrum designed to be viewed by both passing traffic and residents in nearby communities.
Picture
MERGE (Lynnmour Sound Wall) Panels: FORSTER. Waidhofen, Austria
Picture
MERGE (Lynnmour Sound Wall) Panels: FORSTER. Waidhofen, Austria
Picture
MERGE (Lynnmour Sound Wall) Panels: FORSTER. Waidhofen, Austria
Picture
MERGE (Lynnmour Sound Wall) Panels: FORSTER. Waidhofen, Austria
Picture
MERGE (Lynnmour Sound Wall) Panels: FORSTER. Waidhofen, Austria

Maple Ridge Community Mosaic: Colours of Maple Ridge

9/27/2019

 
The colours used for the new Maple Ridge Community Mosaic are inspired by the colours of the local Maple Ridge landscape.

Using posters, Facebook promotions and the Instagram hashtag #mapleridgecommunitymosaic we invited community members to submit photographs of their favourite seasonal colours.

Over the Fall of 2018 we received ~150 beautiful images.
From these landscape photos we created a new colour palette for the custom mosaic tile glazes.
​

More to come…
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture

TTC Sherbourne: All Aboard! “The Whole is Greater than the Sum of its Parts”

11/8/2018

 
Picture
After two long weeks at the end of October 2018, working through day and night, we are very happy to announce that “The Whole is Greater Than The Sum Of Its Parts“, formerly referred to as the Sherbourne Station Community Mosaic, is complete and open to the public at TTC Sherbourne in Toronto, ON.
​

We are very proud of the finished artwork. “The Whole is Greater Than The Sum Of Its Parts” is a series of 39 ceramic tile mosaic panels located throughout TTC Sherbourne station at the main entrance, Bloor Street concourse, both East and West bound platforms, and the Glen Road Concourse.
Picture
Sherbourne Street Concourse.
​

Each panel is a blend of geometric patterns that we collected from over 450 people from the local neighbourhood at a series of 24 community workshops held in March and April 2018. Kindergarten children to senior citizens who contributed over 700 unique triangle patterns to this public art project and this project is dedicated to them and the vibrant communities that merge together every day at Sherbourne station.
Picture
Pattern-making workshop at the Toronto Public Library St James Town Branch, March 2018.

We owe a huge debt of gratitude to Csaba Bereczki, proprietor of The Tile Setter Company, and his assistant, Marthonee ‘Kim’ Padua, for their tireless effort and professional dedication to making sure that we completed the installation on schedule. It was a near-super human feat and we couldn’t have done it without you!
Picture
Csaba Bereczki, proprietor of The Tile Setter Company (right), and his assistant, Marthonee ‘Kim’ Padua (left)
Picture
Rebecca priming the columns on the Sherbourne Street Concourse.
Picture
After priming the subway tile walls and skimming with thinset, the first sections of the 39 panels are adhered to the Westbound platform.
Picture
After every stage of the installation each panel was covered for protection until complete.
Picture
Rebecca reviewing the plans.
Picture
All work around the main Sherbourne Street entrance had to be completed between 2am and 5am while the station was closed.
Picture
Csaba laying the last tile section in thinset.
Picture
With a six-car train passing every 4-5mins, working in an active subway station was a challenging environment.
Picture
Midnight snack in the storage room.
Picture
David removing the face tape from a mosaic on the Sherbourne Street Concourse level.
Picture
Rebecca striping the masking tape bordering a mosaic on the Westbound platform.
Picture
Csaba and Kim grouting the mosaics at the Sherbourne Street entrance.
Picture
Picture
Csaba and Kim giving the mosaics a careful wipe down before the final completion.
Picture
David and Rebecca with Csaba Bereczki, proudly presenting the completed artwork to representatives from TTC on the final day of installation.
​

The Sherbourne Station Community Mosaic public artwork was commissioned by the Toronto Transit Commission as part of the Easier Access and Second Exit Program.

Newly Planted: GIANT

6/20/2018

 
Picture
We are very pleased to announce the recent installation of ‘Giant’, a 71’ tall artwork commissioned by PC Urban for the newly rebuilt Lightworks Building, located at 22 East 5th Avenue in Vancouver’s Mt. Pleasant neighbourhood.
​

At 71′ tall, ‘Giant’ represents a juvenile Douglas Fir tree, standing at the approximate height a real Douglas Fir might be in 2018, had it started from seed when the original Lightworks building was first built in 1942.  
Picture
Our special thanks to Gerald Nimchuk and his great team at East Van Vinyl for their expert printing and precision installation.

East Van Vinyl are located on 6th Avenue, only one block away from GIANT!  Thank you also to Wade Girgulis, Project Manager at PC Urban and Jan Ballard and her team at Ballard Fine Art for this opportunity.
Picture
GIANT installation half way.  The installation took place in two phases and took four days to complete.
Picture
On the doors at the main entrance to the Lightworks Building the GIANT image is fritted inside the glass panes for added protection.

TTC Sherbourne: Tom Thomson Colour Palette

6/13/2018

 
The Sherbourne Station Community Mosaic will use a set of 12 colours that are inspired by the palette of iconic Canadian painter, Tom Thomson.
Picture
Picture
Colour testing by Interstyle Ceramic & Glass of the twelve colours chosen for the TTC Sherbourne Community MosaicThomas John Thomson, painter (born 5 August 1877 in Claremont, ON; died 8 July 1917 in Algonquin Provincial Park, ON). An early inspiration for what became The Group of Seven, Tom Thomson was one of the most influential and enduringly popular Canadian artists of the early part of the twentieth century. His paintings The West Wind (1917) and Jack Pine (1916-1917) are familiar Canadian icons.  Thomson was a master colourist.
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
<<Previous

    Archives

    June 2022
    May 2022
    December 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    May 2021
    March 2021
    July 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    October 2019
    September 2019
    May 2019
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    March 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    August 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    February 2017
    October 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015

    Categories

    All
    Infrastructure
    Inspiration
    Make
    News
    Place
    Project
    Proposal
    Research
    Space
    Workshop

    Subscribe to Newsletter
  • projects
    • MERGE
    • Maple Ridge Community Mosaic
    • Calder Community Mosaic
    • The Whole is Greater Than the Sum of Its Parts
    • GIANT
    • Whereness
    • Motif One of Many
    • City Fabric
    • Give And Take
  • Paintings
  • About