Pop go the silos in unique rural art attraction - Action News
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Pop go the silos in unique rural art attraction

If you happen to be driving through the picturesque farmland of Prescott-Russell this summer, be on the lookout for an unusual art exhibit.

8 artists have created giant works of art using towering farm silos as their canvas

Popsilos, a series of painted silos on farms east of Ottawa, is a Canada 150 project sponsored by the federal government. (Denis Babin/Radio-Canada)

If you happen to be driving through the picturesque farmland ofPrescott-Russellthis summer,be on the lookout for an unusual art exhibit.

FromEmbruntoVankleekHill, five roadside siloshave been transformed into towering murals.

It's called the Popsilos project, an art and agri-tourism initiative tied to this year's Canada 150 celebrations.

This mural by Montreal artist Roadsworth is on a silo east of Casselman, Ont. (Denis Babin/Radio-Canada)

The project's manager, Jennifer Larocque, came up with the idea while travelling through Scotland, where she was wowed byKelburn Castle.

"One of its faades was completely covered in graffiti. It became a tourist attraction for that rural area," she told Radio-Canadain French.

The farmers who are hosting the muralsdespite not necessarily being art aficionadoslikethe idea of celebrating the region in a novel way.

"Murals, for me, were always a city thing. But when we saw the creation and the work behind it, it's almost like agriculture. You start with nothing and you finish autumn with a harvest," said Michel Dignard, a participating farmer from Vankleek Hill.

"There is craft behind that, there's precision, there's attention to detail."

This mural at the farm of Michel Dignard and Jeanette Mongeon in Embrun was created by artists Lacey Jane and Layla Folkmann. (Denis Babin/Radio-Canada)

Omen, one of the eight artists behind the murals,said the large, curved surfaces were a challenge, and so were the weather conditions.

"It's difficult because, for starters, I was 98 feet high. And you see, how windy it is here? Up high, it's windy too. And I make some details that are, at the same time, pretty precise," he said.

A piece by Montreal artist Omen in Vankleek Hill, Ont. (Denis Babin/Radio-Canada)

Dignardcalls the project a win-win for the community.

"It's going to bring the world here. And once here we can share our knowledge, share the history of agriculture," he said.

Click on this link for a map of the Popsilos circuit, which will officially launch June 30.

This mural near Saint-Albert, Ont., was created by artists Benny Wilding and Carlos Oliva. (Denis Babin/Radio-Canada)