Skip to main content
Opening times this week:
Monday
Closed today
Except holiday Mondays
Tuesday
10 am - 5:30 pm
Wednesday
10 am - 8 pm
BMO Free Wednesdays 4 – 8 pm
Thursday
10 am - 5:30 pm
Friday
10 am - 5:30 pm
Saturday
10 am - 5:30 pm
Sunday
10 am - 5:30 pm
Search

Site Navigation

Rust Garden

What does it mean to be Canadian in the 21st century?

September 2, 2021 - February 7, 2022

Rasheed Dhuka and Nooruddin Khawja Family Gallery (formerly the Lower-Level Gallery)

This event has passed

Page Navigation

This event has passed

Rust Garden is a contemporary art installation by Matt Donovan and Hallie Siegel. It consists of more than 700,000 decaying low-carbon steel letters in a 5-by-7-metre sandbox. The assortment of letters isn’t random. Rather, they are a jumble of every letter that appears in Canadian writer Hugh Maclennan’s classic 1945 novel Two Solitudes.

Visit Rust Garden in 3-D

Contemplate, create, communicate

Haven’t read Two Solitudes? Not a problem. Anyone, young or old, can participate in Rust Garden. In fact, audiences are invited to pick up letters and re-arrange them into a word or phrase representing your idea of what it means to be Canadian. Share a picture of your creation online or discuss it with other Museum-goers while sitting on one of the three park benches surrounding the sandbox.

Seeing the present through the past

Two Solitudes is a coming-of-age story about a young man, Paul Tallard, with a French-Canadian father and an English-Canadian mother, who struggles to reconcile his mixed cultural identity. Tallard’s plight is something that many present-day Canadians can relate to, regardless of the cultures and communities they straddle.

Eight decades after its publication, however, Maclennan’s most famous novel doesn’t mirror back Canadian identity as it exists today. Like many old stories we tell about ourselves, the idea of Canada it portrays is a rusting relic of the past: discarded and decaying but still part of our shared cultural landscape.

Rust Garden encourages audience members to pick up the pieces and use them to craft new, more representative stories about what it means to be Canadian. In keeping with the poem Maclennan inscribed in the opening pages of his novel — “Love consists in this: that two solitudes protect and touch and greet each other” —  the work asks us to hold space for each other’s stories, honour each other’s differences, and celebrate the ties that bind us together.

Curator: Marianne Fenton

BIO

Matt Donovan and Hallie Siegel are a Toronto-based arts collaborative who take the long view to explore the hopes and anxieties brought about by major technological disruptions. In blending 2D and 3D, text and sculpture, narrative and gesture, they create seamless hybrids that deconstruct material expectations and defy simple classification.

They make “slow art” that has materialized out of over 20 years of conversation at the interface of art and communication. Their approach is not one of juxtaposition, but rather of synthesis; they know that a work is complete when they can no longer distinguish where one discipline leaves off and another begins.

Supported by: