View of Octoganal Gallery

Total Environment: Montréal, 1965-1975, currently on at the CCA in Montréal, is a remarkable exhibition curated by Alessandra Ponte from the University of Montréal with a group of her students. It recalls the optimistic moment in the history of mankind’s engagement with its surroundings when architecture stepped outside the modernist box in its pursuit of the age-old dream of a totally designed environment. The Expo 67 in Montreal had shown how art, architecture, and technology could be merged; contemporary critics like Reyner Banham and Sybil Moholy-Nagy pointed out that it was a built environment dominated by multi-media spaces, rather than conventional buildings, intermeshed with futuristic transportation systems. Thus environmental art had found one of its first large-scale realisations and, subsequently, it flourished at least in Montreal when the concept of the total environment began to invade the city in the form of art works, night clubs, underground publications, and even planned social housing projects.

FuturibilliaFuturibilia, Credit –  Maurice Demers