Talking Boulders

A Conversation with Maura Doyle

Authors

  • Heather Hermant

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/2292-4736/40408

Abstract

There’s a New Boulder in Town is Toronto artist Maura Doyle’s latest installation. With the assistance of University of Toronto geologist James Brenan, Doyle mapped a walking tour of some of Toronto’s ‘erratic boulders,’ and narrates their social-geological biographies through a guidebook.

References

Agrell, Siri (2004). “Gneiss boulders.” National Post. Oct. 2: TO12.

Andre, Carl (1977). Stone Field Sculpture. Hartford, Connecticut.

Doyle, Maura (2004). There’s a New Boulder in Town, or a Guidebook to Toronto’s Erratic Boulders for Locals and Visitors.

Doyle, Maura (2002-2004b). www.themoneycollection.ca

Doyle, Maura (2004c). “Flow Chart for Chips,” Artist Project. C-magazine. 83: 84-85.

Heath-Rawlings, Jordon (2004). “A boulder approach.” Toronto Star. Nov. 14: B2.

Morell, Amish (2004). “There’s no Such Thing as a New Boulder.” Brochure. Toronto Sculpture Garden.

Osborne, Catherine (2003). “A Sly Comment on Hype”. National Post. Nov 1: TO7

Reinhart, Anthony (2004). “The Boulder and the Beautiful.” Globe and Mail. Oct 9: M5.

Velikovsky, Immanuel (1965). Earth in Upheaval. New York: Dell.

Downloads

Published

2005-01-01

How to Cite

Hermant, H. (2005). Talking Boulders: A Conversation with Maura Doyle. UnderCurrents: Journal of Critical Environmental Studies, 14, 19–21. https://doi.org/10.25071/2292-4736/40408

Issue

Section

Academic