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Montreal

Artist Linda Covit on her MUHC-commissioned work, Havre

The Glen campus of the MUHC now houses one of the largest collections of public art in Quebec and it is anchored by a giant globe-like sculpture by Montreal artist Linda Covit.

Sculpture positioned at the gateway to the new superhospital

The artist inside Havre

9 years ago
Duration 0:58
Montreal artist Linda Covit explains how the public can interact with her work, positioned at the gateway to the new MUHC superhospital.

The Glen campus of theMUHCnow houses one of the largest collections of public art in Quebec.

The MUHC's collection includes 11 pieces and shows therange of work done by Quebec artists working on public commissions.

The centre piece of the collection isHavreby LindaCovit. It'sa 13-metre-high, 16-metre-wide grey, aluminum tube structure that looks like a flower open to the sky.

Covit was asked to create the largest sculpture on the new Glen site. It's meant to be a welcoming, hopeful work of art. She talks to Jeanette Kelly about what she made and how.

Havreis set at the main entrance to the hospital and visitors and patients can walk through it on their way to appointments.

Around $4.3 million wasspent on art at the new MUHCas part of the requirement for public buildingsto devote one per centof the budget ofto artwork.

Other works outside the building include a giant teddy bear balancing on a ball and an enormous stethoscope listening to the surrounding city.

Inside the hospital, other works reference molecular structures and even haemoglobin.

The hospital collection willinclude art that is being moved from former locationslike theold Royal Victoria and a collection of historic medical equipment.

It also includes items like thedishes and flatware that nurses used in their quarters when they were required to live at the hospital during their training.

These works of art and artifacts will be displayed throughout the hospital as a reminder of the tradition and history of medical care in the city.

The bear on the ball, officially named ' Je suis l!', stands in between the Montreal Children's Hospital indoor play space and outdoor playground. (Jeanette Kelly/CBC)