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Old Posted Nov 10, 2007, 4:04 AM
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mr.x mr.x is offline
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The Portrait Gallery of Canada...in Vancouver?

Portrait gallery looks nationwide for new home

Last Updated: Friday, November 9, 2007 | 3:49 PM ET
CBC News

The federal government wants nine cities across Canada to compete for the right to host the national portrait gallery originally slated to open in Ottawa.

"Our government has set forth the notion that national cultural institutions do not necessarily have to be located in the national capital," said Heritage Minister Josée Verner at a news conference Friday announcing what she called "a bold and innovative step."

The competition will seek a qualified developer in "the best possible location in Canada" for the Portrait Gallery of Canada, Verner said.

The Conservative government has launched a request for proposals from Halifax, Quebec City, Montreal, Ottawa-Gatineau, Toronto, Winnipeg, Edmonton, Calgary and Vancouver.

Verner said those cities are being considered because they have large populations, strong tourism and would make the gallery accessible.

Information about the contest will be posted next week on the Public Works and Government Services Canada website, and the winner will be announced before summer 2008.

Original Ottawa site not in running: Fortier

Public Works Minister Michael Fortier said the government wants to ensure maximum tax-dollar benefits by including the private sector in developing the new gallery.

He estimated it would open in 2011 or 2012, and he said the historic Ottawa building originally chosen to house it will not be considered as a possible site.

When asked about the $8 million spent on the portrait gallery already, Fortier said about half of that would have been spent on the project even if work hadn't begun on the site in Ottawa.

The gallery was announced by the Liberal government in 2001, and was to open in 2005 in the historic former American embassy building across from Parliament Hill in Ottawa at an estimated cost of $22 million.

However, the project's cost grew to $45 million and its opening was delayed until at least 2007.

After Stephen Harper's Conservative Government launched a review of the project in 2006, rumours began circulating that the gallery might move to Calgary.

The gallery's collection of portraits is currently housed out of public view in an Ottawa area building operated by the national archives.





It could possibly in Vancouver, the provincial government and the city are spending $10 million on a cultural precinct for the downtown core, which would involve a new home for the Vancouver Art Gallery, space for new museums, art schools, and a performing arts centre. This could well be Vancouver's own Guggenheim or Federation Place (Melbourne), and will cost hundreds of millions of dollars.

Either that or it could be located at the old courthouse in downtown, where the Vancouver Art Gallery is today, when the Art Gallery moves out to its new home.

or maybe here:
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Old Posted Nov 10, 2007, 4:47 AM
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Best Idea Ever.
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Old Posted Nov 21, 2007, 2:53 PM
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it appears that the art gallery is moving forward with plans to relocate.
if this happens, could the current VAG be turned into the national portrait gallery? would seem like a great fit! i'd hate for that site to sit empty for years -

Vancouver Art Gallery taking steps to relocate
MARSHA LEDERMAN

From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
November 21, 2007 at 4:00 AM EST

Vancouver — The Vancouver Art Gallery is preparing to pursue a move from its current building to a former bus-depot site a few blocks away.

The VAG has been interested in the site at West Georgia and Cambie Streets, next to the Queen Elizabeth Theatre, for some time and has now decided to pursue the parcel of city-owned land as its sole property of interest.

The spot currently houses a parking lot and will be the location of one of two "Live Sites" during the 2010 Olympics.

Gallery officials will hold consultation meetings with members, beginning next month.

The VAG has long outgrown its current home on Robson Street, a former provincial courthouse that was built in 1906 and reconfigured in the early 1980s by Vancouver architect Arthur Erickson to house the gallery.
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Old Posted Nov 21, 2007, 11:17 PM
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Is the VAG actually a municipal building? If so, how LOOOOONG would the design, procurement and development process take for a new gallery on that site? Are we talking 5 years? So this project would be done in 2017 or so?

If that's the case, what are the odds of the National Portrait Gallery waiting that long to move? I think the NPG relocation is basically a political tool to show fairness by the feds, so they are likely to want to make a firm announcement in a very timely manner - i.e, before an election call. Although I'd love to see the NPG in the VAG space, I just think with the speed of municipal action it'll not get sorted in time.
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Old Posted Nov 22, 2007, 2:41 AM
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It's already been at least 3.5 years since they started the process...
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Old Posted Nov 23, 2007, 8:33 PM
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Personally, I think they should do the following shuffle:

VAG to Larwill Park/Bus Depot site
Vancouver Museum to existing VAG/Old Courthouse site
Aboriginal Museum to old Vancouver Museum site (with the native hat on top)

Quote:
Former Greyhound depot
Christina Montgomery, The Province
Published: Friday, November 23, 2007

Operators of the Vancouver Art Gallery are expected to approach city council shortly for formal handover of the city-owned site at Georgia and Cambie streets, former home of a bus depot and one of two venues planned for public activities during the 2010 Olympic Games.

Once ownership is secured, the gallery hopes to secure provincial, federal and private funding, launch an international search for an architect, finalize the design by 2010 and break ground on the site by May of that year.

The target is an opening date of fall 2013.

© The Vancouver Province 2007

Gallery sets sights on new site
More space so more art can be displayed

Christina Montgomery, The Province
Published: Friday, November 23, 2007

The Vancouver Art Gallery is about to unveil a portrait of its future, sketched in bold, optimistic strokes.

The 75-year-old gallery, now overflowing the heritage building between Georgia and Robson it has occupied for 25 years, has launched a public campaign to seal the deal for a new city-owned site at Georgia and Cambie streets and to raise the hundreds of millions of dollars it will need for a gallery rivalling the world's most memorable and iconic art centres.

The move, in the quiet planning stages since March 2005, would see the gallery relocate into a 30,000-square-metre building that would: n Offer space for some of the permanent collection now in storage.

Enlarge gallery space for high- profile travelling exhibits where crowds are now forced to line up outside for long periods.

- Improve the highly controlled storage and display environment that the artworks require.

- And expand children's and community programming and facilities for group bookings.

Touring the gallery's cramped basement storage room yesterday -- where beneath the Georgia Street lawn a large proportion of the centre's 10,000 artworks are stored -- director Kathleen Bartels and relocation committee chairman Michael Audain lamented the gallery's inability to display more than three per cent of the collection at any given time.

Bartels said the goal would be to create a leading gallery for the Pacific Rim that would focus not only on Pacific art and international works but the many artists born in B.C. who have risen to international fame.

They include photographer Jeff Wall, who this year became the first Canadian artist to be offered a solo exhibit at New York's Museum of Modern Art.

For more on the gallery's plans, see our story at www.theprovince.com.

cmontgomery@png.canwest.com

© The Vancouver Province 2007
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