Contact Us

We welcome inquiries from institutions, funders, advocacy groups, and community partners interested in bringing Transformation of Dangerous Spaces to their space or supporting its development.

Please reach out if you are:
A gallery, museum, or public institution interested in hosting the installation.
A government official, policymaker, or funder exploring ways to support gender-based violence prevention through immersive public engagement.
A corporate DEI or HR professional looking to integrate this project into workplace education initiatives.
A university, advocacy group, or research body interested in collaboration, discussion panels, or study opportunities on the impact of this work.
A media outlet, journalist, or writer looking to cover the project’s development, themes, or impact.

What to Expect After Reaching Out

  • I will respond within a few business days to discuss your specific interest in the project.

  • If you’re looking for more details, I can provide a full project proposal or arrange a call to discuss details

  • For potential partnerships or hosting, we can outline the logistics, space requirements, and funding opportunities to make the installation a reality in your community.

  • For funding and sponsorship opportunities, I can share detailed cost breakdowns and scalable implementation strategies to fit your budget and impact goals.

cq@alchemiaartworkshop.org
604-710-9126

Transformation of Dangerous Spaces isn’t just a conceptual artwork. It’s avant-garde in the truest sense , it doesn’t live on a canvas or inside a single image.

It lives in the human experience.

This work comes from the mind and memories of Christopher W. Quigley , from his lived experience, his emotions, and the need to transform what once caused harm into something that creates understanding. The reconstructed bathroom stalls and integrated immersive and interactive technologies are the physical form of that idea.

This isn’t commercial work. It’s not for sale , but it is for consumption.

It asks to be felt, questioned, and remembered.

AI, Canadian fabrication, and bleeding edge technologies are simply tools that help translate thought into form.

The art and the concept itself comes from a place no machine could ever reach.