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Turcot Interchange inspires Montreal artist tienne Tremblay-Tardif

tienne Tremblay-Tardif explores the history of the Turcot Interchange in a new installation at the Montreal Museum of Contemporary Art at the 2014 edition of the Biennale de Montral.

Biennale de Montral installation questions Turcot Interchange's rebuilding plans

(Jeanette Kelly/CBC )

tienne Tremblay-Tardif grew up on le-aux-Coudres, an island in the St. Lawrence River near Baie-St-Paul.

Its an island with one main two-lane road winding20 kilometresaround the island and the only traffic jam is the wait for the ferry to the mainland.

But ever since he moved to Montreal,Tremblay-Tardif has been fascinated by traffic reports about congestion on the Turcot Interchange.

The now crumbling concrete transportation hub inspired his work Signage Matrix for the Refection of the Turcot Interchange.

(Jeanette Kelly/CBC )

Its the first work that visitors encounter when they go to see the main exhibition of the Biennale de Montral at the Museum of Contemporary Art which officially opened this week.

Tremblay-Tardif has hung 300 prints,referencing newspaper articles, road signage, architectural drawings and plans, activist posters and pamphletson a structure reminiscent of the clotheslines of the former neighbourhood that was torn down to build the Interchange in the 1960s.

His installation shows how the Turcot Interchange symbolized Montreals optimism and confidence in its future in the late '60s, and alsocontains examples of shortcuts in the construction industry which led to the deaths of sevenworkers.

"The history of the interchange is absolutely central to politics, the ideas of the future of the city, the Expo 67 culture of display, nationalism and the idea of progress at the time," he says.

No vision in new Turcot

Tremblay thinks the current plans to rebuild the Turcot lacks the vision of the first project, and he wants his art installation to provoke a conversation about how we build cities today.

Mark Lanctt is one of the curators for the Biennale de Montral.He says the work raises important questions about how we see the future of the city.

"The idea that the TurcotInterchange in the '60s was this thing right out of the Jetsons, [and now]it's become this crumbling,scary, potentially life-threatening structure which will bereplaced by something quite plainthere's not a lot of ambition. It has no vision, no space age. It's going to be a a road with another road going through it. It's gonna be a corner,"Lancttsays.

Tremblay-Tardif will continue to work on his piece through the destruction and rebuild of the Turcot Interchange, which is supposed to be completed by 2020.