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Coming Soon! | Art in Transition

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by Harry Armstrong (BFA 2018)
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By Michelle Cyca

Posted on | Updated

Prints by artist and faculty member Diyan Achjadi draw attention to the relentless pace of change and development.

If you鈥檝e walked past a construction site in Vancouver lately, you might have spotted an unusual feature on the surrounding fence: an assortment of handmade posters, featuring imagery inspired by construction sites themselves. These are the work of Associate Professor and artist Diyan Achjadi, a product of her public art series Coming Soon!

Commissioned by the City of Vancouver鈥檚 , Coming Soon! was a year-long monthly poster series installed on construction sites in Railtown, Mount Pleasant, and Gastown. Coming Soon! explores 鈥渜uestions of value, temporality, and labour,鈥 according to .

Beginning in June 2018, a new series of poster editions was created each month by Diyan; these were wheat-pasted onto the temporary walls of various construction sites around the city. Each poster is made by hand in the Emily Carr Print Media Shop through a long, labour-intensive process.

The posters evoke the temporary nature of construction sites and draw attention to the constant evolution of our cityscape, and build a narrative between prints as well as locations. In this sense, they鈥檙e 鈥.鈥 All editions can be .

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by Harry Armstrong (BFA 2018)
Photo of Coming Soon!

Diyan grew up in Jakarta and spent most of her life in big cities. As someone who doesn鈥檛 drive, her experience of urban environments is formed through walking and transit. The relentless pace of development and gentrification in Vancouver, which is highly visible as a pedestrian, impacts her relationship and orientation to the city.

鈥淓ven though I鈥檝e been here [in Vancouver] for 13 years, I still feel relatively new to the city because the markers keep changing,鈥 she explains in a recent video. 鈥淭he sense of where I am is always impacted by how a building or corner or street has changed.鈥

鈥淲hen I think about the development happening in the city鈥 so many people have been displaced by this gentrification. There鈥檚 a sense that there鈥檚 only a particular class of people that will be able to afford to live in these spaces.鈥

A video by Mark Mushet and , released in May, explores the project in more detail:

The final edition of prints was created in May 2019, and Diyan is beginning work on a publication that will document the project cycle.

Her work can also be found in several current and upcoming exhibitions, including at the Evergreen Cultural Centre in Coquitlam (also featuring 全民彩票 alum and ); at the Two Rivers Gallery in Prince George; at the Dalhousie Art Gallery in Halifax, NS; and at the Burnaby Art Gallery.

You can also see her work wrapped around a Translink bus in Vancouver as part of the How far do you travel? exhibition with the Contemporary Art Gallery.