Wednesday, November 17, 2021

National Gay Monument

From the CBC:

“Here are the 5 candidates for the LGBTQ2+ National Monument in Ottawa”


(A new national monument follows a federal settlement for its LGBT purge. The goal is to have it finished in 2025.)

The federal government wants to know what Canadians think about five potential designs for a new monument in Ottawa to honour victims of its LGBTQ2+ purge. The LGBTQ2+ National Monument is a partnership between the federal government and the LGBT Purge Fund created from the settlement of a class-action lawsuit against the government. The monument will be placed in a grassy area on the Ottawa end of the Portage Bridge, just west of Parliament Hill. The goal, according to a federal news release sent Monday, is to choose a winning design early in 2022 and have the monument completed by 2025. The selection team will weigh several considerations, including public feedback, which is open until Nov. 28, and not limited to only LGBTQ2+ people or Ottawa residents. Below are the five designs, in alphabetical order. More information about the proposals can be found in the individual hyperlinks.

Team Durling



This design is apearl ring that "bonds us together, to share experiences, celebrate, and commemorate, holding space for all who enter." It would be surrounded by seven landscaped zones inspired by the seven grandparent teachings of First Nations people including the Anishinaabe and Mi'kmaq.

Team MASS


Its pitch has two main parts: a bowl holding a sunken garden with a waterfall off one lip, and a plaza. "Our vision combines the intimacy of a singular portal, as a place of transition — where we move from who we were, who we are, and who we can become."

Team OnCommon Ground


It sees a monument with an outer concrete wall representing government oppression, with a small passage "with visceral reminders of the pain of LGBTQ2+ discrimination." Inside, there would be a central sculpture, garden and event space, with the government's apology for the purge etched on its inner walls.

Team SOM


This space would have a meadow and lawn surrounding hundreds of stainless steel wands and, in the middle, a heated communal table. A sound installation would play recordings from "fruit machine" tests, which tried to determine if someone was gay so they could be fired from their government jobs.

Team Wreford


This team's idea has a mirrored thunderhead in a large column at its centre, with space for larger events outside and smaller gatherings inside. "It rises up as our community has risen up to say, 'We demand change.'"

^ It’s good that Canada is acknowledging the open and official discrimination it carried out (many places don’t.) I like the During or the Maas ones. I really don't like the SOM one. That looks dangerous. I an curious to see which monument is picked. ^

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/lgbtq2-monument-ottawa-design-1.6250533

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.