Ingrid Koivukangas
Environmental
Artist
Site-Specific
Ephemeral & Permanent Sculpture
Interventions
Installation:
Permanent & Temporary

Responding to sites around
the world through works
created in site specific
installation, intervention, ephemeral sculpture,
video, sound,
web, permanent
site-specific sculpture,
photography, printmaking,
painting & drawing.
Working with architectural
teams as an environmental
land artist & designer
bringing together the
building, viewer &
site, while respecting the
history of the site,
- both human & natural -
through permanent
installation and sculpture,
based in the land, while integrating
& honouring the
architect's vision &
design of the building.
Welcoming
opportunities
to work in different
geographic regions
& locations
in the world, creating
site-specific works in
response to the land.
As well as creating
new works in response to
existing buildings & sites,
for grand openings &
special exhibitions.

Anne Koivukangas
Projects Co-ordinator
Email
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Bowker
Salmon Spiral
The Bowker Salmon Spiral was completed over five days, in Victoria, British
Columbia, during the International Conference on Ecological Restoration,
and was installed in the greenspace south of the University Centre at
the University of Victoria. The process of the work itself was a spiral
journey beginning with the image of spawning salmon, which during
the site research began spiraling outwards, to include Bowker Creek, Mystic
Vale, the Garry Oaks, Blue Camus flowers and the Songhees people
all inter-related and inter-woven within the history of the land.
When I first arrived Don Eastman helped to situate me in the area
giving me a brief idea of what natural areas could be found
on campus in this sharing he mentioned that there were creeks
Bowker and Hobbs - on campus that disappeared and reappeared on
their way to Cadboro Bay and Oak Bay and that these Bays were the sites
of traditional and ancient Songhees
villages. As we spoke, the images of spawning salmon began to come through.
Later that day when I began the site research I discovered that Bowker
Creek had been a salmon spawning stream up until the 1940s and that the
Songhees people had named the area at the mouth of the creek where
there are many fishes. I also found an article published in the
Oak
Bay News in November 2003, that a male spawning salmon had been found
in Bowker Creek the first one in seventy years on November
24, 2003. As I continued with site research I discovered that the headwaters
for Bowker Creek begin on the University of Victoria campus, near the
University Club.
The Salmon is important in many cultures, including the Northwest Coast
First Nations, where salmon have human characteristics and superhuman
abilities. After dying, the Salmon Peoples spirits return
home to be reborn as humans, so it is imperative that all salmon bones
are returned to the stream so that they can be reborn again as humans.
If any of the bones are missing the new human would be missing corresponding
body parts and the Salmon People may not return to the streams because
they had been offended. While in Ireland, a salmon is said to swim in
the Well of Segais, at the home of the Druids, and is said to be as old
as time itself and knows everything past and future. And in Finland where
sorcers were said to turn themselves into salmon to escape their enemies.
While I was continuing the quest for historical maps that might have shown
the original course of Bowker Creek, I was also aware of the Garry Oak
and Blue Camus meadows and the restoration projects taking place in Victoria,
as well as Mystic Vale, a second growth Douglas fir ecosystem ravine which
Hobbs Creek runs through on its way to Cadboro Bay. I could find no evidence
that Hobbs Creek had been a salmon bearing creek, but I did begin to question
the links between the creeks, the salmon, the Garry Oaks and Blue Camus.
I met with Cheryl Bryce, Land Officer with the Songhees, who confirmed
that there was a connection between them. The Songhees traditionally harvested
the Blue Camus bulbs and traded these along with salmon. The creeks and
waterways would have been used to access the Garry Oaks, which sheltered
the Camus these areas were managed, or tended, by the Songhees
people, through controlled burns and regular turning of the earth to facilitate
the Camus growth an inter-dependence that was honoured by the Songhees.
I made numerous trips, over four days, to sections of Bowker Creek, Cadboro
and Oak Bays, Mystic Vale, the Garry Oak meadows, trying to find a way
to connect my intuitive response to the area the salmon
and what the research had uncovered. My original idea had been to find
the places where Bowker Creek disappeared underground and to mark these
places, on land bringing an awareness to viewers of the mysterious
life taking place out of sight and under their feet
culminating with the marking of the mouth of the creek at Oak Bay.
In the end, I decided to journey to areas around, and outside of the campus,
collecting natural materials that would become part of a work that would
attempt to link the installation site to the salmon, the creeks, the meadows,
Garry Oaks, Camus, Mystic Vale and the ocean, while providing the viewer
with a work that could be viewed in multiple ways: visually and viscerally
as a response to the spiral form and natural materials that form it and/or
through a further investigation into the history of the site.
Special thanks to Cheryl Bryce, Don Eastman, Karoliina, Tom and John
Koivukangas.

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