Catch Basin

Nancy Holt
1982
Steel, terra-cotta, concrete
Overall: width 80 ft (24.4 m), length 90 ft (27.4 m), height 15 ft (4.6 m); central basin: diameter 10 ft (3 m)

In 1982, Nancy Holt created Catch Basin for St. James Park in Toronto as part of the Citysite Sculpture Project, a short-lived initiative by Visual Arts Ontario dedicated to introducing the city’s residents to new concepts in contemporary art. Developing from her System Works, Holt described the sculpture as “a land drainage system, evolved out of my recent concern with exposing and utilizing functional systems, which are usually hidden beneath the surfaces of our existence. These structural, functional networks—electricity, drainage, heating, plumbing—are basic technologies which support our everyday lives, but are usually only considered when breakdowns occur.”

The sculpture collects rainwater from the park’s slopes, channeling it into the central basin. Holt developed several realized and unrealized sculptures addressing water systems, including Hydra’s Head (1974) and Sole Source (1983). Catch Basin was dismantled in 2018, and the city plans to reinstall the work once an appropriate site is identified.

Writing

Writings by Nancy Holt

Catch Basin

Nancy Holt

Catch Basin, an artwork that is also a land drainage system in St. James Park, Toronto, Canada, evolved out of my recent concern with exposing and utilizing functional systems, which are usually hidden beneath the surfaces of our existence. These structural, functional networks—electricity, drainage, heating, plumbing—are basic technologies which support our everyday lives, but are usually only considered when breakdowns occur.

With Catch Basin a branching network of clay channels on the land surface directs rainwater draining off the park slopes to a circular concrete basin with a sunken radial grate, and beneath that, to a round black drain. Catch Basin thus catches, contains, and channels the rain.

Writings by Nancy Holt

Ecological Aspects of My Work

Nancy Holt

For the last twenty-four years I have made large-scale, outdoor, site-specific sculptures. Each work evolves out of its site, with consideration given to the topography, the built environment and to local materials, along with the psychology, sociology, and history of each place. Many of these works have astronomical aspects, being aligned with the sunrises and sunsets on the equinoxes and solstices, the North Star and/or the moon. Others of my works are System Sculptures1 which variously channel water, air, electricity (a form of fire), and methane gas from decomposing organic matter.

Related Info

See Also

Sky Mound
Nancy Holt
1984—
I-A Landfill, Hackensack Meadowlands, New Jersey, USA