Description
In the exhibition Où vont les mots, at La Galerie d’art d’Outremont, three interventions were made in the windows. To make these poems, paper pulp was attached directly onto the windows during the ‘couching’ process (transferring a wet sheet of paper pulp from the paper-making mold to a surface for drying). In some of the interventions, through a special technique, the letters were removed or prevented from forming on the mold during the paper making process before couching the paper to the window. In this way, it is the negative space or the absent space in the page that becomes the letter; sunlight shines through and the word can be read on the floor. The opposite is also used and only the word made of paper is couched on the window and hence, its shadow is cast on the floor or the window shade.
In one window we see a seemingly randomly placed cut out letters, which become legible on the floor of the gallery, when the sun shines through the handmade paper sheets, and we can read Où vont les mots. Under this work are sheets with upside-down and backwards cut-out letters; they spell out the same text with the light of the sun. Couched on another window are three letters made with paper pulp spelling the word “Ici” (here).
Statement
On two separate occasions, Window Poems were interventions included in the exhibition Where the Words Go. They are ephemeral and do not have titles of their own. They are often improvised on site for an exhibition. These works reference the ephemeral nature of language. The works of Where the words Go were a re-valuing of paper and its importance in supporting text.