Archive for July, 2008

[L'église d'Auvers-sur-Oise, Vincent van Gogh, 1890, oil on canvas, 74x94,5 cm, Musée d'Orsay]

A selection of recent articles on computer science and art.* Researchers at Penn State analyze the patterns and geometric characteristics of van Gogh’s stroke brush to detect counterfeits. [Article]

* A new software called Zotero allows historians to classify images, web pages and texts more efficiently. Could the image of the college professor surrounded by his/her boxes of documents be soon part of… history? [Article]

* A new technique allows graphic artists to change their images to emphasize one part of the picture to guide a viewer’s attention. [Article]

Quebec-City lovers know that there is excavation work currently underway on Couillard street in the older part of the town, near the convenience store and the Temporel coffee shop.

What these lovers may not know is that this work is going on on a spot designated as rich from an archeological standpoint.

In a 1998 study, the firm Ehtnoscop stated that lot 022 shows masonry structure that was on a 1709 map. This building, built on the former course of the street, was built before that date. Some archeological works already found a stone structure and artifacts.

[Details, excavation work, Couillard street]

How does the city of Quebec treat this heritage? Easy: it uses shovels and scraps the stones.

Very sad.

And just to make matters worse, I’ll put up this picture of the Intendant’s Palace, the residence of the French governor of the colony. So there you have all the 400th-anniversary historical celebration you need, while going to the Paul McCartney concert.

Mea Culpa: User «P» on the French version of this post noted that water pipes werebeing repaired, not gas pipes.

[Pêche interdite/No Fishing [Fishing prohibited/No Fishing], Thierry Arcand-Bossé, 2008, Quebec City]

Efforts to improve nearby ramps of highway Dufferin-Montmorency continue in the Saint-Roch district of Quebec City. The destruction of two ramps freed some space where a new park will be built: Xi’an park.

Since June, manhole covers decorated by Quebec artists have been put in place. These works of art are integrated into the street furniture of the city.

[Future Xi'an Park, 2008, Quebec City]

Non-profit organization Folie/Culture is behind this initiative. In a previous post, I related my visit to the workshop of artist Paryse Martin, who had shown me the design for her cover. The result is as pleasing as the drawing suggested.

[Sketch, Quand la nature fait naître des fictions [When nature creates fictions], Paryse Martin, 2008, Quebec City]

[Quand la nature fait naître des fictions [When nature creates fictions], Paryse Martin, 2008, Quebec City]

Did you know? Folie/Culture “seeks to inform, to raise awareness, and to promote in the area of mental health. It organises events that follow unusual directions in research while at the same time motivating reflection on questions relating to painful social issues.”

[Dérapage [Slippage], Cooke-Sasseville, 2008, Quebec City]

The idea of integrating a banana peel on laughs and to call it Dérapage [Slippage] makes one smile. It should be noted that Cooke-Sasseville appears to have a busy summer! The duo also participates in the Triennal at the Montreal Museum of contemporary art and in Quebec Gold, which takes place in the city of Reims (France).

You can download a map of the circuit by visiting the website of Folie/Culture. I also prepared a circuit on Google Maps.

[Circuit, Google Maps]

[Prière d'écraser [Please crush], François Chevalier, 2008, Quebec City]

Did you know? Xi’an park owes its name to the nearby street. It marks the site of the former Chinatown of Quebec City, ravaged when the highway was built. The city of Quebec also has a cooperation agreement with the Chinese city of Xi’an since 1999.

[Cité suspendue [Suspended City], Laurent Gagnon, 2008, Quebec City]

It would have been interesting to name the artists on their plates. At the very least, a panel indicating the intention behind the idea to passerbies would have communicated the intentions of the exhibit to a wider audience. Furthermore, the absence of a title takes away basic information that adds to the pleasure when watching the works.

Finally, the rust that has emerged quickly surprises me: are these works permanent or will they be withdrawn at the end of the year? An article [in French] suggests that they’ll stay in place until the end of their useful life. Folie/Culture says that the exhibit closes on December 31, 2008. In all cases, it would seem like their useful life is relatively short…

[Vertigo, Jacques Samson, 2008, Quebec City]

It is difficult to talk about this exhibition without a mention of the censorship which hit artist Martin Bureau. Indeed, his drawing of Queen Elizabeth II mixed with a reindeer head was censured by the foundry Bibby Ste-Croix (a subsidiary of McWane located in Alabama) and the city of Quebec. If the artist wanted “to make people talk”, it seems that critic is liken to “Debbie-Downers” in the Old-Capital. The censorship thus took place without raising an eyebrow.

The exhibition Manhole Madness is presented on Saint-Vallier street, under the ramps of Highway Dufferin-Montmorency, until December 31st, 2008. The initiative is an official event of the 400th anniversary of the founding of Quebec City.

Further reading:
* My post on the drawing from Paryse Martin
* My post on manhole cover art
* My circuit on Google Maps
* The site of the organization Folie/Culture
* Official map to identify the works
* Carte officielle pour repérer les oeuvres
* Des Photographs taken during the inauguration on June 2008
* Article in French from weekly Voir with a picture of the artists
* Canoe, in French, on Martin Bureau’s censorship

[Alfred Pellan (1958), Gabriel-Desmarais Fund [Fond Gabriel-Desmarais], Quebec National Library and Archives [Bibliothèque nationale du Québec]]

The Quebec National Library and Archives [Bibliothèque nationale du Québec] has put online their first photographs from Gabriel Desmarais. Working in the Quebec artistic community for many years, it is now possible to see several of his photos on the Internet.

If the collection presents popular quebec artists (like Dominique Michel and Jean-Pierre Ferland), some visual artists were also captured on film like painters Alfred Pellan (1958), Jacques de Tonnancour (1961), Rita Legendre (1961), Guido Molinari (1964), Marcel Barbeau (1964) and sculptor Jean-Julien Bourgault (1964).

It is the first step to digitize 4200 pictures of the photographer.


[Improv Everywhere]

After paralyzing a New York train station and creating a musical in a shopping mall, Improv Everywhere does it again.

This time, the group, helped by pairs of identical twins, created a mirror effect in the New York subway. The video is available on their site and on youtube.


[Cliffs near Dieppe, Claude Monet, 1897, oil on canvas, 65x100 cm]

A Frenchman living in Florida was indicted this week for attempting to sell stolen paintings. He was trying to sell the four artworks stolen at gunpoint from the Museum of Fine Arts in Nice last year - and that have been found since. The asking price? Three million dollars for the four paintings, a bargain!

Makes me wonder how many stolen works are sleeping in the coffers of wealthy individuals without scruples at this very moment…