Articles Tagged ‘Artful Blogger’

ARTFUL BLOGGER: “Wow factor” is high at the National Gallery’s new international indigenous exhibition

Curators from the National Gallery of Canada began scouring the globe a few years ago to find, in the words of one of them, “great” contemporary art.

Richard Bell Life on a Mission, 2009 Acrylic on canvas National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa Purchased 2011 © Courtesy of the artist and Milani Gallery Photo © NGC

The only other ingredient beyond “greatness,” according to the gallery’s chief aboriginal curator Greg Hill, was that the artists had to be “indigenous,” a term generally referring to the original people of a particular geographic area who, over the centuries, have been swamped by colonists to the point of becoming a minority.

In the Americas, indigenous refers generally to First Nations, Inuit, and Métis people. But there are indigenous minorities in Scandinavia, Taiwan, India, Australia, New Zealand, Russia, and other countries.

Once examples of “great” indigenous contemporary art were identified, Hill and his team selected the best of the best and created the newly opened exhibition Sakahan, the largest show ever staged by the National Gallery in its history. Sakahan fills the usual prime temporary exhibition space on the main floor, expands into rooms in the contemporary wing of the building and fills the second floor exhibition space normally displaying temporary shows of prints, photographs or drawings.

There is no overall theme to the show. That gave the curators the freedom to concentrate on the truly “great” and not feel restricted to selecting art that fit into a particular thematic box.

That tactic was wise. The show is indeed great. The “wow factor” is higher than anything the gallery has done since Diana Nemiroff stopped curating contemporary shows there many years ago.

Rebecca Belmore's Fringe is part of the new exhibit at the National Gallery of Canada. National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa. Purchased 2011 Photo © NGC

Among the Canadian highlights is Rebecca Belmore’s photograph called Fringe. A nude aboriginal woman lies on a mat. On her back, a horrific looking scar travels from her left shoulder to her right hip. Blood-red lines (beaded strings, actually) drip from the scar.

In this one scene, Belmore has encapsulated the history of violence against aboriginal people, especially aboriginal women. The beadwork is a nod to traditional aboriginal handicraft but the medium – photography – is very much a contemporary, Western form of expression.

Similar themes related to violence and colonialism and marginalization do run through many of the artworks from around the world, from Australia to Lapland.

The wow factor is also high with the photographs by Maori artist Fiona Pardington from New Zealand. She has photographed the life-casts of the heads of some Maori and other South Pacific indigenous men that were created between 1837 and 1840 under the orders of French explorer Jules-Sebastien-Cesar Dumont d’Urville.

By chance, the artist discovered a trove of these heads — some of her own ancestors — at a Paris museum in 2007. The resulting photographs of these heads are simultaneously horrifying and hypnotic and definitely a reminder of the colonial era when indigenous peoples were treated more like wild animal specimens than humans.

Two Ottawa artists are in the exhibition. There is a Jeff Thomas photograph from a series he did spoofing the statue of Samuel de Champlain on Nepean Point. And there are two drawings by Ottawa-based Inuit artist Annie Pootoogook, one a self-portrait lying down and another unusually large one for her (about 3 metres by 1.5 metres) showing a scene in Cape Dorset of Inuit shoppers peering into a large freezer in a grocery store. That scene naturally makes one think of that old joke about a salesman who was so skilled he could sell “a refrigerator to an Eskimo.” These drawings are two of the most technically skilled I have seen Pootoogook do. She has had a rough patch the last few years, basically living on the street. Let’s hope she gets back to a stable life and lots of drawing.

Sakahan continues at the National Gallery until Sept. 2.

ARTFUL BLOGGER: Bytown Museum’s Mexican exhibition must be causing dear old Colonel By to spin in his grave

So there I was at the Bytown Museum savouring local history. I was fascinated by the plaster cast made from the hand of the very dead Thomas D’Arcy McGee after his assassination on Sparks Street April 7, 1868. I marvelled at the brass clock hand, almost a metre in length, that graced the Victoria Tower of Parliament before the original buildings were destroyed by fire Feb. 3, 1916. And then there was the slide show of Mexican Day of the Dead festivities.

©MUSÉE BYTOWN MUSEUM. Photo: G. Iddon.

Now, why, you may wonder, was such a slide show doing at a museum dedicated to celebrating the history of Canada’s capital? Before answering, take note there were more, many more, inappropriate objects, all of them Mexican, mere steps away from displays on Col. John By, engineer of the Rideau Canal, and Joseph Montferrand, the legendary Ottawa River raftsman whose surname was once proposed by Quebec bureaucrats as the moniker for the amalgamated city of Aylmer-Hull-Gatineau.

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THE ARTFUL BLOGGER: If this is springtime, it must be Newfoundland

"Valley Mist 2" by Shawn McNevin.

By Paul Gessell

You know it’s spring when Shawn McNevin has her annual exhibition of misty Newfoundland landscapes at Galerie McKenzie-Marcotte in Wakefield.

McNevin lives just north of Gatineau in Chelsea – in the winter – but spends her summers painting in western Newfoundland, where she has a cottage at Cow Head, near Gros Morne National Park. Each year’s crop of paintings is exhibited at McKenzie-Marcotte in the spring before the artist heads off for another summer of beachcombing, hiking and, of course, painting.

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THE ARTFUL BLOGGER: The agony and ecstasy of a ballet dancer

Western Tour images by Aleksandar Antonijevic of the National Ballet of Canada.

By Paul Gessell

The National Ballet of Canada has moved on, after three nights of performing The Seagull at the National Arts Centre. But highly personal mementos, some of them thought-provoking, even disturbing, have been left behind.

Aleksandar Antonijevic is one of the stars of The Seagull, a work inspired by the Anton Chekhov play of the same name. Antonijevic is also an accomplished photographer with several exhibitions listed in his resume.

This dancer-photographer has compiled a portfolio of dramatic images of ballet dancers at work, often intense gruelling work. An exhibition of those images, titled Feet and Mirrors, remains in the foyer outside the NAC’s Southam Hall until April 29. Some of the photographs are simply pretty pictures. Others tell a story not quite so pretty.

“My visual language and understanding of my subject – the human body– has been formed over my 25-year career as a professional dancer,” says Antonijevic. “Having been observed, criticized, appreciated, judged, and celebrated, I find myself grappling with a sense of isolation and solitude, in striking contrast to the very public life I live. This is what I explore in my photography.”

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ON THE RADAR: Ottawa artist Dennis Tourbin finally gets his due

By Paul Gessell

Ottawa’s art community went into mourning in 1998 upon the untimely death of 51-year-old Dennis Tourbin, a poet, performer, visual artist, arts activist and all-round, energetic  nice-guy.

Now, 14 years after his death, his art is being honoured with two exhibitions.

News In The Making by Dennis Tourbin. Acrylic on canvas. Image courtesy Ottawa Art Gallery.

The biggest show will be in Tourbin’s hometown of St. Catharines. The retrospective, running from Sept. 29 until the end of the year at Brock University’s Rodman Hall Art Centre, will cover the period from 1968 until his death. The show will actually be spread over three venues in the city, including Rodman Hall, a tiny gallery called CRAM, and the Niagara Artists Centre (an artist-run centre Tourbin helped found).

Another, smaller exhibition, from Aug. 31 until Nov. 18, is being organized by the Ottawa Art Gallery for its Firestone Gallery. That show will establish a dialogue between cubist works in the Firestone Collection with cubist-influenced works by Tourbin and other artists.

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ARTFUL BLOGGER: Is this a “fitting tribute” to the Queen? A not so complimentary review of the Postal Museum’s latest exhibit

By Paul Gessell

I can’t speak for the Queen, but I can say that I was not amused with the new exhibition at the Canadian Postal Museum marking Her Majesty’s Diamond Jubilee as monarch.

Said museum is a step-child of sorts — think of poor Cinderella — of the Canadian Museum of Civilization and is located, way at the back, within that huge building in Gatineau.

I visit the postal museum frequently, having developed a love of stamps during my childhood. I gave up stamp collecting eons ago but I still have a soft spot for the little sticky things and, I confess, for the monarchy. So, it was with much eagerness that I went to visit the newly opened exhibition of 645 stamps, bearing the Queen’s likeness, collected from around the Commonwealth during the last 60 years.

The stamps were well chosen, many from outposts of the Empire one rarely ever hears mentioned on the news, the exception being the Falkland Islands that are still coveted by Argentina despite having already lost a war over the south Atlantic bits of rock largely inhabited by sheep. There were, for example, stamps from Pitcairn Islands, infamous home of the descendents of the mutineers from The Bounty. One of their stamps showed a double portrait of the Queen and Prince Philip issued at the time of their 25th wedding anniversary.

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ARTFUL BLOGGER: Canadian Museum of Nature exhibition “a potent cocktail of the sinister and the fanciful”

By Paul Gessell

As a child growing up in Newfoundland, Helen Gregory was always dragging home birds, frogs, mice and other creatures, both dead and alive. Little Helen also loved to dig in dirt and create special “biospheres” for insects.

“My parents didn’t know what to do with me,” says Helen, now grown up and, if all goes according to plan, soon to be a temporary artist in residence at the Canadian Museum of Nature. “My mother always said ‘Helen played with dirt longer than is natural.’”

Well, Helen Gregory made a career out of her unnatural love affair of nature. She is now an artist, working on her Ph.D. and exhibiting her splendid paintings of bird and animal specimens at the Museum of Nature.

The exhibition of 11 larger-than-life paintings of dead birds and one giant squid runs until Sept. 3. This is probably the wisest pairing of art and venue ever made in this town.

Blue Tanagers by Helen Gregory

One of the paintings, Blue Tanagers, was even inspired by four blue tanagers in the collection of the Museum of Nature. The hand-lettered specimen tags on the small South American birds are included in the painting. The actual specimens rest in a case just below the oversized painting.

Blue Tanagers, like all the paintings, have a decided Victorian air to them. The Victorians loved to collect everything possible from the natural world. Every true gentleman, and many a gentlewoman, loved gathering plants, fossils, shells, and other offerings from nature.

Gregory’s specimens, in some cases, are painted atop what appears to be Victorian wallpaper. So, the paintings fit in perfectly with the newly restored Victorian architecture of the building.

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OPENING: Jonathan Hobin’s hyper-realistic photos wow Ottawa’s art royalty

 

By Paul Gessell

One of the works on display as part of the Jonathan Hobin show Little Lady/Little Man at the City Hall Art Gallery.

Jonathan Hobin’s new exhibition of life-sized photographs of his aged grandparents is, frankly, one of the best shows by a local artist to hit this city in the past year.

But that shouldn’t be surprising. Hobin’s last major body of work, a series of staged photographs of children re-enacting dark scenes from myth and reality, was eye-popping, memorable and, yes, disturbing.

The new exhibition, on view at at Ottawa City Hall Gallery, is called Little Lady/Little Man. A series of photographs on aluminum show how the years have ravaged the bodies of Hobin’s grandparents, William Horace Merrill and the former Marjorie Ann Cory. The old couple wear their scars and sagging flesh with dignity and stoicism.

The showstopper is The Deathbed, a photograph of Hobin’s grandmother literally on her deathbed. The life-sized photograph is presented horizontally upon a flat surface. Visitors look down upon her, as if they were visiting grandma in a hospital.

The Deathbed is reminiscent of a Ron Mueck sculpture Old Woman in Bed that was included in the Australian artist’s solo show in 2007 at the National Gallery of Canada. Mueck’s work goes beyond being realistic to being hyper-realistic. The same could be said for Hobin. Indeed, the entire Hobin show is what Mueck would deliver if he decided to start photographing real people instead of creating them in his studio.

There were compliments all around at the recent vernissage of Hobin’s show, not just for the artist’s work but for the spectacular way the exhibition was arranged and lighted by the city’s Julie Dupont and her crew.

Rest Your Heart by Jonathan Hobin.

There was a sense of magic in the gallery that evening as members of Ottawa’s visual arts royalty oohed and ahhed. They included such artists as Jerry Grey, Michele Provost, and Claude Marquis (who has returned to painting while still leading musical sensation The Peptides), Hobin’s former dealer Dale Smith, Sandra Dyck (curator of the Carleton University Art Gallery), and collectors par extraordinaire Glenn and Barbara McInnes.

There will inevitably be some people unhappy with Hobin’s work, believing it to be voyeuristic, sensationalistic, and exploitative of his own aged kin. But such critics are wrong. This is a work of love.

Old people should not be hidden away. And neither should photographs of them. Hobin and his grandparents were brave to collaborate on this excellent body of work.

Little Lady/Little Man is on view at the City Hall Art Gallery until April 29.

Listen to clip of Hobin’s grandfather singing a lullaby that he used to sing to his girls here. The recordings form part of the exhibition.

REVEALED: Joyce Wieland quilt marks Art Bank anniversary (and proves there’s more to Canadian art than pristine landscapes)

By Paul Gessell

Maple Leaf Forever 2 by Joyce Wieland.

It is rare for someone to use the phrase “quintessentially Canadian” without referring to maple syrup, hockey, or the Mounties. We used to apply that term also to Eaton’s and the Dionne Quintuplets but they have dropped out of sight in recent years.

So, what about artists? Is there such a thing as a quintessential Canadian artist?

Yes. And her name is Joyce Wieland. And thankfully her art is far more interesting and truthful than the fantasyland wilderness landscapes cooked up by Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven. That gang never even hinted at the fact there were sawmills, mines, and First Nations communities behind each clump of pine trees in their supposedly people-less environments.

“Quintessentially Canadian” is the expression used — and used wisely — by the Canada Council Art Bank to describe the late Wieland, whose paintings, quilts, films, and other artworks from the 1960s and 1970s perfectly captured the forces of feminism, patriotism, politics, kitsch, and good humour prevalent at the time.

Recall Wieland’s 1968 quilt carrying the words “Reason over Passion” — the artwork ushered in perfectly Canada’s long-running love-hate affair with Pierre Trudeau, whose personal motto was Reason over Passion.

Wieland’s quintessential Canadian-ness makes it fitting that her mixed media work, Maple Leaf Forever II, created in 1972, should be used this week to launch 40th anniversary celebrations of the Art Bank. Maple Leaf is a work that, 40 years later, is still relevant, moving, and funny. That’s the mark of a true work of art for the ages.

“Created in 1972, this renowned work by one of Canada’s most celebrated artists features lightly-coloured female lips mouthing a patriotic song, framed in a series that references film and animation, set against a quilted cotton background with intricately stitched maple leaves,” says an Art Bank press release. “It is quintessential Joyce Wieland and is quintessentially Canadian.”

To mark the Art Bank anniversary, 40 signature works have been selected from the bank’s collection of more than 17,000 paintings, prints, photographs and sculptures. Each work represents a year of the Art Bank’s existence. These 40 images will be posted every Monday, until October, on the website of the Art Bank and on the Canada Council’s Facebook page.

The online presentation of the 40 works will be followed by a real bricks-and-mortar exhibition of the same 40 works at the Art Bank, on St. Laurent Boulevard. Called Spotlight on 40 Years: Artworks from the Canada Council Art Bank, the exhibition will be held Sept. 28-30 during Culture Days. The public will be invited to view the exhibition and tour the Art Bank facilities.

The Art Bank’s 40 years have been turbulent at times. It was initially formed to help put money into artists’ pockets. Artists could sell work to the Art Bank and then buy back those works when finances permitted. Artworks in the collection were rented out, mainly to federal government offices. Following a near-death experience a decade ago, the Art Bank was recreated to make it run more like a business. Now, it only buys work deemed to be “rentable” to government or private sector clients. Many unrentable works in the collection — including installations, videos, and paintings of nudes — were sold back to artists or donated to museums.

Revenues from the rental of artworks is used to purchase more works each year. A jury of artists and other art professionals decides what works to buy.

Because of the need for artworks to be rentable, certain media and subject matter are excluded from the Art Bank collection. So, it is not a true representation of the artwork being created in Canada each year. But it does help dozens of artists every year to put food on the table and it is still a great entry on an artist’s resume to say he or she has sold work to the Art Bank.

ARTFUL BLOGGER: Hanging out with Vietnamese-Canadian literary sensation Kim Thuy

By Paul Gessell

Kim Thuy. Photo by Benoit Levac.

Kim Thuy is everywhere these days and not just to pick up literary awards from such luminaries as the Governor General and Princess Caroline of Monaco.

One morning at La Sportheque in Hull, as I was doing my daily treadmill run, I happened to look up at the bank of television screens on the wall and, on one channel, spotted Thuy. The restaurateur-turned-author was a guest on the Radio-Canada cooking show, Les Chefs.

I had never met Thuy at that point. But the cook preparing some exotic Vietnamese eggplant dish on national television looked exactly like the glamorous movie-star-style portrait Thuy’s book publisher, Random House, had just sent me.

A few hours after Les Chefs, I met Canada’s skyrocketing literary sensation in person for an interview about her new – newly published in English, anyway – book, simply entitled Ru, a word that means “lullaby” in the author’s native Vietnamese but, in French, means a small stream, as well as a flow of tears, blood, or money.

(Canadian books that sell 5,000 copies are considered bestsellers. Thuy has sold more than 100,000 copies in French of Ru in Canada and abroad. The English version of Ru has just hit stores in Canada.)

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