Shadows
By Kayla Freeman.
As I first entered Pointe Saint Charles on the 57 bus, I was struck by two things: #1: The amount of fostered beauty in this neighborhood is unparalleled in Montreal – and #2: There are no people on these streets.
By Katherine Chou
I created a prototype video essay of my first impressions of Point Saint Charles, exploring the juxtaposition of past and present in a neighborhood in constant flux.
By Clarisse Bériault
Within these walls, the warmth is shared. It pulses, wants to reach and transform. A change for better.
By Anne-Marie St. Louis
The Living Scrapbook is an innovative, artistic form I’ve been developing, a multimedia project that would hopefully involve, represent and serve the community. The idea came as I explored Pointe-St-Charles, recorded my impressions of the neighborhood and gathered as many photographs, sounds, quotes, painting and maps as I could find.
By Madeleine Gendreau
Film as a medium explores the passage of time. I wished to achieve the feeling of an ever-fluctuating environment.
By Maren Loveseth
Arte Carte: Autumn 2014 came from a desire to engage with the artistic interventions that already exist in the community, as they exist within the cartographic area, from a specifically observational standpoint as opposed to an interpretive one.
By Emilie Cassini
My Individual Impressions project has two parts. The first past is a small compilation of impressions of Pointe St-Charles from inside and out; a collection of quotes about the neighbourhood from people who live within the neighbourhood and from people in my own class who are studying the neighbourhood from without.
By Morgan Nerenberg
Photo Haikus are an ancient poetic form, while Twitter is a cutting edge social network. Both however are linked by having extreme limitations on the length of any single “post”. I chose to combine this two forms while also adding in photography. By “searching out Haikus” I was able to take photographs that then were to subject of a short poem, and then posted to them Twitter. Original Concept and Realization by Morgan Nerenberg.
This video shows what the Atwater Library sees daily, and then ask the Library to speak, as though it were in interview about its life. Original Concept and Realization by Peter Shaw.
By Christopher Carignano Vignetta
What if one night a place, like every other, changes? What if you can be part of something you’ve never thought it was possible before? What if you have the chance to visit your library at night?