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Erica Stocking public artwork welcomed to City of Surrey in grand opening ceremony

Blankets by Erica Stocking for Web
Courtesy City of Surrey
Three sculptural works by Erica Stocking (BFA, 2004) sit atop the boiler stacks of the City of Surrey's West Village Energy Centre
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By Perrin Grauer

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Multimedia artist Erica Stocking (BFA, 2004) explores the meaning of the hearth in an age of industrial fire.

A public artwork by Vancouver multimedia artist Erica Stocking (BFA, 2004) premiered last week in its permanent home atop the City of Surrey鈥檚 new West Village district energy centre.

The trio of sculptures, collectively entitled Blankets, were installed on the energy centre鈥檚 boiler stacks in 2018, and were officially welcomed by the city on June 20, 2019, during a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the newly-opened energy centre and surrounding park.

Stocking鈥檚 installation consists of three fiberglass 鈥渂lankets鈥 which hang, wrap, or perch folded upon the energy centre鈥檚 towering boiler stacks. The works were installed previous to the commissioning of the energy plant, as they had to be put in place before the boilers were functional.

The blankets represent three states of energy; stored, waiting and in use. Meanwhile, the blue, white and black colours of the sculpted forms 鈥渃orrespond to the heat production and distribution systems inside the energy centre,鈥 according to the City of Surrey.

Stocking says the sculptures were inspired by the question: what is a contemporary hearth in an age of industrial fire?

鈥淧erhaps a contemporary hearth does not involve fire at all but is the sharing of space,鈥 said Stocking in a statement.

In a follow-up interview, Stocking said when she first read the city's call for submissions for artwork at the energy centre, she thought, "Oh, (the centre) is a fireplace for the neighbourhood."

"I really liked thinking about that, and the fact that there was no fire but there was heat for the neighborhood," she told Emily Carr from her home in Toronto.

According to the city, the 鈥渢heme of fire, and therefore heat, reminds visitors of humanity鈥檚 historical reliance on fire, and the energy centre鈥檚 function as a modern hearth.

鈥淓rica Stocking conveys the building鈥檚 function as a carrier of warmth through her Blankets artwork,鈥 the city鈥檚 statement continues. 鈥淪itting atop the boiler stacks on the roof, these fiberglass sculptures connect the warmth the centre generates for residents with the warmth a person creates when wrapping a loved one in a blanket.鈥

The West Village Energy Centre is Surrey鈥檚 first permanent district energy centre 鈥 a solution for providing sustainable heat and hot water at the local level for residents in the West Village neighborhood of one of Metro Vancouver鈥檚 fastest-growing municipalities.

Stocking said this more localized model of energy production likewise informed her thinking about the contemporary hearth. Fire has become less visible as it has become increasingly domesticated, she noted, and the flame which heats the energy centre's boilers (a "ring of intense blue fire") is barely visible at all, she said.

This particular point enlivened Stocking's reflections on the district energy model as "a kind of evolution of how we manage our cities and our relationships to one another," she said.

In developing the works, Stocking engaged with locals including students at Kwantlen Park Secondary, residents in nearby condo towers and other neighbours in the West Village area. Along with the sculptures themselves, 50 woven blankets resembling the fiberglass works were distributed to members of the public as a companion piece.

The dynamic that emerges when a performative element 鈥 such as the giveaway of 50 blankets 鈥 is coupled with an object, such as a sculpture, is one Stocking said she is exploring more consistently these days, in projects spanning her entire practice.

She called this dynamic "a doubling, (where) you have two different things happening (or) you鈥檙e making two things in order to produce a third." This elusive third element is "not really in my control, it鈥檚 in the work somehow," she said, adding it is generated as a result of works like sculptures and performance being encountered "in different times and spaces."

Stocking鈥檚 sculptures 鈥 a part of Surrey鈥檚 Public Art Program, first established in 1998 鈥 join the ranks of more than 100 artworks in the City of Surrey鈥檚 public collection.

Since graduating from 色库TV in 2004 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts, Stocking has shown both nationally and internationally, as far afield as .

Stocking鈥檚 other works for cities in BC include: (a permanent public artwork made for the City of Vancouver in collaboration with Vanessa Kwan, facility staff, the park board, and various engineers, and completed in 2012); (a permanent installation at the Vancouver Public Library鈥檚 n訖虂c虛a蕯mat ct Strathcona Branch, commissioned by the library and the city); and (a permanent work created for the HUB Building at UniverCity, in Burnaby).

Folded blanket for Web
Courtesy the City of Surrey
The "folded blanket" element of Erica Stocking's public artwork Blankets, at the City of Surrey's West Village Energy Centre.
Draped blanket for Web
Courtesy City of Surrey
The "draped blanket" element of Erica Stocking's public artwork Blankets, at the City of Surrey's West Village Energy Centre.
Wrapped blanked for Web
Courtesy City of Surrey
The "wrapped blanket" element of Erica Stocking's public artwork Blankets, at the City of Surrey's West Village Energy Centre.