Archive for May, 2008

After sending shiny nuggets to illustrate their slogan “All that glitters is not gold“, the Museum of Civilization in Quebec City [Musée des civilisations] does it again with an original invitation. I received mine in the mail this week, to attend the inauguration of Garden of Visionaries [Potager des visionnaires]. Congratulations to the communications team who, once again, hits the target when it comes time to draw attention to their projects.

Judge for yourself: the invitation has arrived by mail in an envelope that resembles the bags of vegetable seeds found in commerce. Everything was there to create the illusion, even the hole to hang the bag on display.

Inside, the invitation uses the image of plants at the end of stems. This imagery is drawn from the Museum Web site, in the micro-site devoted to the project. I also invite you to visit this section which, in addition to its visual aspect extremely pleasant, is also full of practical information. It is this weekend - under the rain, unfortunately - that takes place La Grande Plantation.

The Garden of Visionnaries unfolds on the roof terrace of the museum throughout the summer and is directed by Franco Dragone, associated with Cirque du Soleil.

A final note: it would be nice to indicate on the Museum Web site that the event presented in association with the Quai Branly has begun and that it is no longer an « upcoming » event.

The Montreal Biennnal offers, for 2009, to open its programming to Internet users. Seeking to redefine itself, the event will unlock the doors of the event. According to the website:

” [...] the Biennale will use elements of [ the shift towards open models] in creative activity and cultural production to generate some of the content of the Biennale. ”

A reference to YouTube appears to have been made in the press conference [in French; English automatic translation].

I feel scepticism towards this approach. User-generated content is often of uneven quality. The spectacular and the unusual are represented in a disproportionate manner. Are we to expect such works?

” Celebrating projects which show ways in which individual creativity operates in the day-to-day experiences and interactions of people as they rework their surroundings and immediate environment [...] ”

Great! I look forward to seeing a video, shot on a 99-dollar digital camera, taking place in the kitchen, where the artist will create a culinary work. Hurray. Aren’t there already tons of those art pieces on YouTube, like the Heinz Kitchen Artist.

I hope the Montreal event goes beyond that, even though it is fun to watch.

The Quebec Triennal is presented for the first time at the Musée d’art contemporain de Montreal [Montreal Museum of Contemporary Art]. Entitled “Nothing is lost, nothing is created, everything is transformed”, it offers 135 works created by 38 artists. Using this event as an excuse, I wondered about the Web presence of each of the artists presented.

To classify artists according to their Internet reputation, I selected three criterias: the number of links found by Google, the management of domain names [like artist_name.com] and the presence or absence of a page in the online encyclopedia Wikipedia.


[Julie Doucet, Pantalitaire 2, 2007, 8 collages, 30 x 137.1 cm]

The title of Queen of notoriety on the Internet is bestowed upon Julie Doucet. With 63,000 links on her behalf, 4 articles in Wikipedia, a website owned by a publisher and an official site, we can say without embarrassment that the artist is known on the Web, mainly because of her comics.


[David Altmejd, Berger [Shepherd], 2008, wood, mirror, crystal, horsehair and painting, 365.7 x 152.4 cm x 121.9, with the kind permission of the Andrea Rosen Gallery; photography: Ellen Page Wilson ]

Accompanying Julie Doucet atop the notoriety list on the Internet, David Altmejd ranks second with 51,400 links, 3 articles in Wikipedia and a cybersquatted site.

Among other results of this unpretentious study, I noted that many artists have websites well done: Nicolas Baier, Gwenaël Bélanger, Patrick Bernatchez, Michel de Broin, Raphaëlle de Groot, Manon De Pau, Doyon-Rivest, Romeo Gongora, Adad Hannah, Isabelle Hayeur, Bettina Hoffmann, Lynne Marsh, Serge Murphy, Jocelyn Robert.

Surprisingly, some artists prefer .net or .org instead of .com even when the latter is available. This is the case of Michel de Broin, Raphaëlle de Groot and Bettina Hoffmann.

It should finally be noted that David Ross and Carlos Sanchez were excluded from the rankings. The fact of the matter is that their names are also those of personalities known in other areas, which greatly disturbs the data.

Ranking of MACM Triennal artists according to their Internet presence

Julie Doucet: 11.30
David Altmejd: 9.14
Michel de Broin: 2.85
Isabelle Hayeur: 2.70
Jocelyn Robert: 2.42
Lynne Marsh: 2.15
Adad Hannah: 2.03
Bettina Hoffmann: 1.60
Nicolas Baier: 1.37
Michael Merrill: 1.26
Jason Sanchez: 1.23
Gwenaël Bélanger: 1.15
Patrick Bernatchez: 1.09
Doyon-Rivest: 1.08
Raphaëlle de Groot: 1.08
Serge Murphy: 1.06
Manon De Pauw: 1.06
Romeo Gongora: 1.01
Charles Guilbert: 0.70
Yannick Pouliot, WWKA, Louis-Philippe Eno, Chih-Chien Wang, Stephane Gilot, Etienne Zack, Cooke-Sasseville, Emanuel Licha, Manon Labrecque, Cynthia Girard, Karen Tam, Tricia Middleton, Jon Knowles, David Armstrong Six, Patrick Coutu, Valerie Blass, Anthony Burnham, Jonathan Plante, Adrian Norvid followed with less than 0.5.

Methodology

The name of the artist as well as the term art were entered in the search engine Google. I forced the search engine to include the term art in each of the pages found so that artists working with homonyms in other areas were not privileged.

The first five results are as follows:
David Ross: 163,000 links
Carlos Sanchez: 148,000 links
Julie Doucet: 63,000 links
David Altmejd: 51,400 links
Michel de Broin: 28,500 links

The last five results are as follows:
Valérie Blass: 360 liens
Anthony Burnham: 334 links
Romeo Gongora: 132 links
Jonathan Plante: 120 links
Adrian Norvid: 48 links

Each tens of thousands of links gave a point. Thus 163,000 links attributed 16.3 points.

The presence of articles in Wikipedia gave a point by page in each language.

Domain names purchased by a third person gave a point. David Altmejd and Lynne Marsh both “benefited” from this involuntary notoriety.

The presence of an official website gave a point.

It should be noted that this ranking has no scientific claim. It reflects the Internet buzz according to personal considerations from the author of this blog.

Each component of the scores can easily be criticized. Thus, Paris Hilton gets 3.3 million links, even when her name is bound to the word “art”. Moreover, the results vary from Google servers on which research is conducted. To be more effective, I would have had to use a search tool that searches the data centers of Google…

In the end, nothing beats a visit to the museum to let go of the buzz and feed one’s own thoughts!

Marc

Picasso’s Guernica in 3D

Picasso's Guernica in three dimensions
[source: Lena Gieseke]

A three-dimensional journey into the heart of the masterpiece by Picasso: Guernica. If the iconography of the work is done with loyalty, Picasso’ thoughts on formal aspects of painting are wiped out. Exit the use of drawing, the likeness to collage and flatness in drawing.

Nevertheless, it provides a few minutes of happiness.

[Thanks to Nicolas for the link]

China Guardian Auctions will conduct an auction on May 27th, 2008 in a hotel in the centre of Beijing. The profits will go to victims of the recent earthquake in Sichuan. The event will be broadcast live on Art Trade.

Marc

Roundup

* The Montréal Museum of Fine Arts offers tours of 30 minutes over lunch to discover an artist. A pleasant way to feed one’s soul. Upcoming events: 4th and 5th of June 2008 at 12.15. The artist: Jean-Paul Riopelle. [More]

* The Manif d’art 4 currently takes place in Quebec City. It takes a lot of courage and almost a survival guide to organize your activities on the website of the event. I’m still looking for a way to get a Manif card, necessary for the visit of Toi / You, la rencontre [You/You, The Encounter].

Despite these difficulties, it should be noted that the annual exhibition of visual arts students from Laval University, presented by Loto-Quebec, opens this Friday, May 30th.

* Television channel artv offers new episodes of the French series Palettes. Narrated by art historian Alain Jaubert, each episode explores the history behind a work of art that has marked Western art. If it isn’t found in the list of programs of the specialty channel, it still is worth a look, having been celebrated at the last FIFA Montreal. Being the happy owner of the 18-DVD box set, I recommend these films that are pleasantly instructive. This week: Burial at Ornans by Courbet [May 25 at 7:30, 28 / 5 3:28, 28 / 5 15:29].

Un enterrement à Ornans
[Gustave Courbet, Burial at Ornans, 1849-1850, oil on canvas, 314x663 cm, Musee d'Orsay, Paris; photographic source: Wikipedia]

* Quebec painter Claude Théberge died. The municipality of Notre-Dame-du-Lac has devoted a website to the artist.

* Record books will have to be revisited: skyscraper Burj Dubai is now the highest structure in the world. Peaking currently at 650 meters, it is expected to reach 819 meters by the end of its construction. By way of comparison, the CN Tower stretches over 553 meters [it is time to update the Web site describing it as the highest structure in the world, a title lost a few years ago ...], the 1250 René-Levesque of Montreal [IBM-Marathon] measures 230 metres and the Complex G Quebec stands at 176 meters, with the antenna.

Burj Dubai
[Burj Dubai; photographic source: Wikipedia]

* The sequel to A Night at the Museum, starring Ben Stiller, began its shooting. The action takes place at the Smithsonian Institute in Washington. It is the first time in 162 years that the institution allows the use of its name in a film.

* Sir Anthony Caro, British sculptor, has be answered ‘No thank you!’ by the City of London. He offered them his most ambitious sculpture to date. Result: the work Millibank Steps is now on sale for nearly $ 5 million.

* The only complete copy of the Manuscrit du surréalisme by André Breton was sold this week for $ 5.5 million at Sotheby’s Paris. The lot included eight other manuscripts that many feared would be dispersed.

Two major provincially owned corporations, the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal and Télé-Québec, have pooled their expertise to produce, broadcast and exhibit 10 video spot artworks by some of Québec’s most promising artists. The two institutions have developed an ideal scenario for showcasing the works of Québec artists who were each commissioned to create a one-minute video spot artwork. The very nature of the video medium means that these works can be shown in both exhibition and televised format and on the Internet. From today, May 14, 2008, through to September 7, they will be broadcast over the airwaves of Télé-Québec and on its website at www.telequebec.tv. In addition, from May 24 to September 7, they will be presented as part of the first Québec Triennial at the Musée d’art contemporain.

Ten video spot artworks

 The participants are all visual artists who have incorporated media-based work into their practices. They were given carte blanche as to the content and scenarios of their video spots. The results are striking, mysterious, disconcerting… and extremely diverse. Broadcasting these works during commercial breaks will introduce an element of surprise into the regular television programming and the way it is perceived by audiences. You will see:

Gwenaël Bélanger, L’Hameçon
Patrick Bernatchez, Pluton
Louis-Philippe Eno, Sans titre
Charles Guilbert and Serge Murphy, Une flamme dans l’univers
Bettina Hoffmann, Effleurer
Manon Labrecque, Contagion
Lynne Marsh, One-Minute Camera Opera
Tricia Middleton, Déclins
Yannick Pouliot, Je te veux
Chih-Chien Wang, Broth 01

…all 2008 works created especially for the project.

In L’Hameçon, Gwenaël Bélanger hooks us with a swirling fan that throws off our perception; with Pluton, Patrick Bernatchez draws us into an apocalyptic duel between a cosmonaut and a force from another dimension; in Louis-Philippe Eno’s Sans titre, the film of a life scrolls by, revealed by a simple flare; Une flamme dans l’univers, by Charles Guilbert and Serge Murphy, takes us on an existential quest hinging on a monologue and a plastic shopping bag; Bettina Hoffmann’s Effleurer revolves around a group frozen in time, re-creating the immobility of photography but with the density of a high-relief sculpture; Manon Labrecque hopes, with Contagion, to induce the spectatorsto yawn; Lynne Marsh uses the television space as a framing device for her One-Minute Camera Opera; with engaging dissolves, Tricia Middleton’s Déclins links together images ranging from the most commonplace and everyday to the sublime; Je te veux by Yannick Pouliot is a series of to-ings and fro-ings, an enfilade of suspended time, in a labyrinth that is furnished yet devoid of human presence; Chih-Chien Wang’s Broth 01 completes the cycle, with its examination of pauses, of disruption in time and space.
A project dedicated to art here and now

Marc Mayer, Director of the Musée d’art contemporain, and Michèle Fortin, President and Chief Executive Officer of Télé-Québec, are delighted to see this innovative joint project, dedicated entirely to the creative endeavour, come to fruition. According to Marc Mayer, “this terrific project allows us to move beyond the places usually associated with contemporary art and promote the visual arts in the media.” For her part, Michèle Fortin is proud of this groundbreaking partnership and the fact that Télé-Québec airwaves will offer an additional cultural showcase for art being created here and now. After the Triennial, the works will join the Musée Collection and become part of our collective Québec heritage. These art videos will also be added to the catalogue of Télé-Québec, which may rebroadcast them at a later date.

You might have missed:

* My appreciation of Yannick Pouliot’s exhibit at MACM
Poursuivre le hors-champ [Continuing off-field] from Gwenaël Bélanger at UQAM’s Visual Arts Gallery

I’ve recently taken a trip to Paris. this explains the infrequent updates on the blog.

I first stopped at the Museum of Modern Art at Centre Georges Pompidou. In the large space, an oversized payer mill greets visitors. Usually, a Buddhist monk turns such an object - a smaller version — reciting a prayer. Here, the projection of the object to another level highlights the dangers of religion and politics, linking them together.

[Ehi Ehi Sina Sina, Huang Yong Ping, 2006; Photo: Marc Gauthier]

Among the exhibitions presented is the first retrospective devoted to Louise Bourgeois. It was a discovery for me. The artist offers a very personal vision over two hundred works on display. Born in 1911, living in New York since 1938, we feel a certain unease about the relationship between this artist and France. Having left the country for 70 years, is she still a French artist? As the program says by making a comparison with Marcel Duchamp, she is declared an American artist born in France. In addition to these geographical considerations, the exhibition gave me the impression of entering the head of Louise Bourgeois. In fact, when I think about it, we get no so much in her head but rather in this intimate space populated by impulses and secret desires fueled by the frustrations of childhood and repressed desires. Proposed in multi-faceted aspects (People, Places of Remembrance, …), sculptures, paintings, drawings and prints are not always accessible at first glance. I wonder what art history will make of this production.

In the permanent collection, I would like to propose “Dynamism of a car” (1912-1913) by Luigi Russolo. This work is very representative of Futurism, the Italian movement based in Milan - among other places - advocating speed to oppose the archaic past of Italy. In this sense, machines producing speed such as cars, airplanes and trains are valued. In this painting, Russolo expressed with color and lines of forces the philosophy of flow developed by Henri Bergson.

[Dynamism of a car, Luigi Russolo, 1912-1913; Photo: Marc Gauthier]

Throughout the days, other places of interest for the art historian in me have been visited. The department store Le Bon Marché was part of the tour, and not only to buy an umbrella on these rainy days in the capital. Rather, I enjoyed a visit to one of the first private places where works of art have been exposed. Thus, in the 19th century, some painters could exhibit their paintings on the top floor of the department store. The brightness was really good, which surprised me. I wonder what this place looked like 150 years ago… Today, the top floor is occupied by furniture.

[Le Bon Marché, Paris Photo: Marc Gauthier]

At the Musée d’Orsay, great paintings are always a pleasure for the eyes. I noticed details that I had never seen before. Thus, the upper left corner of the painting “The Church of Auvers”, Van Gogh swirls black and blue and makes the brush stroke very visible. For the anecdote, I will recall that this painting was acquired with the assistance of Paul Gachet and a Canadian anonymous donation in 1951.

[The Church of Auvers, Vincent Van Gogh, beginning June 1890; Photo: Marc Gauthier]

[The Church of Auvers (detail), Vincent Van Gogh, beginning June 1890; Photo: Marc Gauthier]

Orsay proposes two dialogues between works in the museum and contemporary artists. The first of those matches that I viewed was between “Showcase - Rue de Sevigne” by Bertrand Lavier and “Reading” by Manet. The touch proposed by Lavier explores the painting of Monet in a very surprising way. You feel the kinship between the two works without a sense of imitation. Coup de coeur.

[Showcase - Rue de Sevigne, Bertrand Lavier, 2005; Photo by Marc Gauthier]

[Reading, Edouard Manet, circa 1865-1867; Photo: Marc Gauthier]

[Reading (detail), Edouard Manet, circa 1865-1867; Photo: Marc Gauthier]

The other dialogue comes in a multimedia showcase. On the walls are projected words and symbols, displayed in a continuous movement and changing colors. This plays on movement, time and color reminiscent of the work on colour and light made by Impressionnists. It is the dialogue between Monet and Charles Sandison. Another coup de coeur.

[Blue Water Lilies, Charles Sandison, 2007-2008; Photo: Marc Gauthier]

[Blue Water Lilies, Claude Monet, circa 1915-1920; Photo: Marc Gauthier]

Among other news worthy of mention is my disappointment not to find “The Angelus” and “Les Glaneuses” by Jean-Francois Millet. The two best-known works of the painter were on loan. This choice seems unwise. It’s as if I bought a bag containing 100 candies and I realize that it lacks two; I might be satisfied but there’s still something missing…

Also, large paintings by Courbet were being restored. The work is carried out in front of visitors. While museum professionals must feel like animals under observation, it is always pleasant to see these expert hands at work. “The workshop of the painter” by Courbet underwent at least a dozen of retouchings.

[The workshop of the painter, Courbet; Photo: Marc Gauthier]

A trip to Paris is impossible for an art historian without making a stop at 7, rue des Grands Augustins in Saint-Germain des Pres. At this address is set the action of the short story “Unknown Masterpiece” by Balzac. The story that the author tells is that of a painter who presents his masterpiece to friends. These are stunned by what they see: they do not understand the canvas which is under their eyes.

This is a literary figure of premonition because it is also at this address that Picasso settled in 1930. He painted one of its best-known paintings: Guernica.

The Museum of the Romantic Life of the city of Paris presented “The Golden Age of German Romanticism - Watercolors and Drawings at the time of Goethe.” Although I liked the place, the exhibition left me a little cold. However, it allowed to become aware of my ignorance about German art and these artists.

I also attended my first auction at the Hotel Drouot-Richelieu. A highly rewarding experience which confirms my interest in the life of the art object after its artistic creation.

As always, exhibitions at the Museum of Luxembourg are sought after by Tout-Paris. During my visit, “Vlaminck - A Fauve instinct” was running. A total success that alloed me to see many paintings of the artist in one place. There, I bought another catalogue that I will read back home!

Another artist that I do not know much was Gustave Moreau. Ingenious, he spent the last years of his life setting up a museum dedicated to his work. It was therefore a discovery of his paintings but also many drawings of this Symbolist. Only problem in the museum: many canvas proposed are those of unfinished works. Personally, I like this type of work because it helps us understand the method of work of an artist.

[Inside the Gustave Moreau museum; Photo: Marc Gauthier]

[Drawing no. 1015 (detail), Gustave Moreau; Photo: Marc Gauthier]

To be continued…