Keith Langergraber, The Dusk Meridian, 2021, site-specific installation at Vancouver Art Gallery Offsite, Photo: Ian Lefebvre, Vancouver Art Gallery
Vancouver Art Gallery Offsite, November 20, 2021 – May 23, 2022
The Dusk Meridian is a multimedia installation by Keith Langergraber. Its principal features are scaled-down representations of two fire towers that are physically close but imaginatively separated: the real-life versions sit on either side of the border that divides Canada and the US at the southern boundary of E.C. Manning Provincial Park. The title refers to the moment in time between the setting of the sun and the onset of darkness and to the geographical location of this phenomenon, which endlessly traverses the rotating surface of the planet. It is also a nod to Cormac McCarthy’s The Blood Meridian, an apocalyptic neo-biblical novel set in the border between the US and Mexico. These references are reiterated in the phantasmagoric light projected onto the fire towers, the pool of water on which they sit and the wall behind them, evoking a transitional condition somewhere between the setting of the sun and the approach of a catastrophic wildfire. But while the warmth of this light might contrast with the overcast gloom of a Vancouver winter, it offers little in the way of easy comfort.
Langergraber’s work serves as an allegory for crossing a point of no return: passing from light into darkness. Here, the devastation wrought by widespread wildfires—a force of nature unconstrained by abstractions like national borders—becomes the norm. The fire towers of The Dusk Meridian can be seen as silent witnesses to this transition, much like barometers measuring climactic change that has already arrived.
Keith Langergraber studied at the University of Victoria and the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, and currently teaches at the Emily Carr University of Art + Design, Vancouver. His research-based practice draws upon disparate references that run from utopian and dystopian literature, art history and outsider subcultures to the narratives embedded in a particular site. His work has been exhibited widely in Canada and abroad over the past twenty years.
The Dusk Meridian features a theatrical lighting component nightly from dusk until dawn.
Organized by the Vancouver Art Gallery on behalf of the City of Vancouver Public Art Program and curated by Grant Arnold, Audain Curator of British Columbia Art
Stir Q&A: Keith Langergraber on climate change, isolation, and the creepiness of borders, Janet Smith, Stir, January 21, 2022.
Keith Langergraber: Fire towers in downtown Vancouver a commentary on climate, Mark Mushet, Galleries West, February 21, 2022.
Co-presented by Vancouver New Music and Vancouver Art Gallery
Thursday, April 28, 2022
Vancouver Art Gallery Offsite (1100 W Georgia Street)
Vancouver Art Gallery Offsite in collaboration with Vancouver New Music co-presents Auditory Borderlands – sounding The Dusk Meridian.
Taking the sculptural and lighting elements of Keith Langergraber’s installation, The Dusk Meridian, as a polydimensional score, an ensemble of Vancouver-based musicians created an ambient musical reading of the piece. The musicians were arranged within the plaza to create an immersive spatial experience, and audience members were encouraged to move through the space to create their own uniquely shifting aural and visual perspectives.
Performed by Adrian Avandaño, Matthew Ariaratnam, Ross Birdwise, Soressa Gardner and prOphecy sun.
Video by Derek Brunnen/Vancouver Art Gallery
Audio recording by Lee Hutzulak.