Bik Van der Pol — Learning From Vancouver

Learning from Vancouver

Western Front Vancouver 2010

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Learning From Vancouver (in Dialogue) is a collaborative art and research project by Bik Van der Pol and Urban Subjects (Sabine Bitter, Jeff Derksen, Helmut Weber), developed during their residency at Western Front Western Front in Vancouver. The project critically examines the phenomenon known as the “ Vancouver model Vancouver model”—a globally recognized urbanism characterized by scenic beauty, sustainability rhetoric, and multicultural tolerance, simultaneously masking deep social and political tensions. This idealized image of Vancouver is amplified during the Olympic Games, where the city is presented as a utopian vision while struggles of marginalized communities—such as housing insecurity, displacement, and erosion of civil liberties—are systematically erased or ignored. Global media coverage reinforces this mythos by focusing on mountains, oceans, and sleek architecture, thereby obscuring the political and economic forces shaping urban life.
At the heart of the project is Confess I Care, to counteract the passive consumption of public space and imagery. It is a small, soundproofed box that accommodates up to three people at a time. Inside, participants can speak freely—individually or in dialogue—about pressing urban issues such as the impact of development, shrinking public spaces, and the loss of civic rights. Everything said is recorded, transforming private confession into public testimony. The recordings are transcribed and published after the exhibition ends, serving as both a “bid book” (documenting proposals or reflections) and a “jinder” (implying activation or provocation) of the specific moment and place. The work invites the public not merely to observe but to become active agents in shaping discourse around urban life. It challenges the assumption that public space must be spectacle-driven or commercially branded, proposing a space for unfiltered engagement.
box design, Bik Van der Pol
box design, Bik Van der Pol
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Momentarily-learning from mega-events

Urban Subjects explore the production and closure of public space in Vancouver by juxtaposing two historical moments with one speculative future. The first moment centers on a November 13, 1983, handshake between Premier Bill Bennett and labour leader Jack Munro. Although no photograph of this meeting exists, it remains a powerful symbol in social memory, marking the betrayal of Operation Solidarity Operation Solidarity—a coalition of unions and activists opposing neoliberalism in British Columbia. This political compromise effectively ended a planned general strike. The second historical image features philosopher Herbert Marcuse speaking to 1,300 students at Simon Fraser University on March 25, 1969. This event followed a student takeover of the administration building and RCMP intervention. Marcuse advocated democratization, and critiqued the concept of a “totally administered society,” highlighting themes of control and resistance.
The exhibition project questions whether we are living in a perpetual “state of exception,” where normal democratic processes are suspended in favor of emergency-style governance and aestheticized development. Ultimately, the project asks: What happens when the spectacle ends? Can the people reclaim public space as a site of authentic community building? Through intimate, recorded conversations, Learning From Vancouver (in Dialogue) seeks to disrupt the curated narrative of the city, and foster critical reflection on the forces that shape urban environments. In essence, the project uses art and dialogue to expose the contradictions beneath Vancouver’s polished facade, encouraging citizens to engage critically with their city’s future and to imagine alternative ways of inhabiting public space.
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