Thursday, May 30, 2013

Claude Cormier in the spotlight at the MMFA


Montreal Museum of Fine Arts
Sculpture Garden

MMFA: May-October 2013

Field of Poppies - TOM II

Claude Cormier is an internationally renowned Quebec landscape artist, an architect and urban designer. His work, entitled Field of Poppies - TOM II, is installed in the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts' Sculpture Garden on Du Musée Avenue. Located at the heart of the Museum complex, the Sculpture Garden features twenty-three works by Quebec, Canadian and international artists. It is one of the largest collections of public art in the city. The section of Du Musée Avenue bordering the Sculpture Garden has been transformed into a pedestrian mall until October.

This year, to celebrate this public space created at the heart of the Quartier du Musée, the MMFA and the Ville de Montréal asked Claude Cormier to create another temporary work. Field of Poppies - TOM II is composed of 5,060 red, green and white TOMs. The surprising optical effect, inspired by Claude Monet’s Poppy Field, transforms the avenue into a “field of flowers” where pedestrians are free to roam.



MMFA: May - October 2012
Carpet of Daises - TOM I

Previous year, in 2012, for several months Claude Cormier transformed a section of the asphalt on Du Musée Avenue into a carpet of daisies, as seen in the picture below. The work was called Carpet of Daises - TOM I. It was made of 3,500 temporary overlay markers (TOMs), which are raised markers that delineate temporary lanes on highways.


The markers were laid out as a regular grid, forming pointillist shifts between the yellow and the white. This  work created a strong chromatic link between the Museum’s separate pavilions.

For the subsequent editions of Claude Cormier's TOM installations visit these articles:

  • MMFA 2014: Mirage - TOM III  here.
  • MMFA 2017: Flower Power - TOM IV  here.

Click on images to enlarge them.

Sunday, May 26, 2013

SIDIM 2013: Montreal International Design Show



SIDIM: 25th Edition

May 24-28, 2013

In June 2006 Montreal was officially designated UNESCO City of Design. The city has a long tradition in design excellence, of which it is very proud. Each year, it holds a vast design show at the Place Bonaventure exhibition area which is extremely popular with the Montreal public.





This year, SIDIM, the Montreal International Design Show, celebrates its 25th edition. Founded in 1989, the DESIGN SHOW is coordinated by PID Agency. In 25 years, it has become the major design event in Canada. Recognized as one of the most elegant and design performer-oriented shows in North America, The DESIGN SHOW is a major forum displaying the best achievements in industrial and interior design. It covers architecture and construction, graphic design and multimedia, as well as fashion design.




 During four days, under one single roof, the Show brings together interior designers, architects, distributors, business people, consumers, and a number of media professionals.



Whether people wish to undertake renovations or construction, to find design elements that will rejuvenate their home or simply add a touch of originality, colour or elegance to their favourite room, more than 20,000 visitors to the DESIGN SHOW will be able to meet industry leaders chosen for the quality of their products and excellence in their respective fields.





For more information about the show visit
http://www.sidim.com

Here are three more photos from the show:





Saturday, May 11, 2013

CCA: Archaeology of the Digital










Archaeology of the Digital

7 May–13 October 2013

The Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA) is hosting a new exhibition Archaeologyof the Digital which delves into the beginnings and the establishment of digital tools for design, mainly the  conceptualization, visualization and production at the end of the 1980s and the beginning of the 1990s. This is the first in a series of activities at the CCA that is concerned with the study, preservation, and presentation of the digital in architecture.

The exhibition is curated by an architect Greg Lynn. Both the exhibition and the related publication were chosen to be object-based investigations of four pivotal projects which established distinct directions in the architecture’s use of digital tools:

- Lewis Residence by Frank Gehry (1985–1995)

- Peter Eisenman‘s Frankfurt Biozentrum (1987)

Chuck Hoberman‘s Expanding Sphere (1992)

- Shoei Yoh‘s roof structures for Odawara Gymnasium (1991) and Galaxy Toyama Gymnasium (1992)

The CCA Director and Chief Cutrator Mirko Zardini stated:
"Archaeology of the Digital also suggests a great sense of loss marked by the fact that most of the digital material produced for these projects is gone. The imminent danger of losing even more records compelled us to take a first step towards collecting, documenting, and making them accessible."
This project represents the first step in the CCA’s strategic objective of creating a collection of digital architecture.

Captions of the photo montage above

From left to right: 

Frank O. Gehry, Lewis Residence, Lyndhurst, Ohio: Study model of the entry hall (detail). 1989 –1995. Image provided by Gehry Partners, LLP 

Peter Eisenman, Eisenman/Robertson Architects, Biozentrum, Biology Center for the J.W. Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany: Schematic representation of a DNA sequence (detail), 1987. Peter Eisenman fonds, Canadian Centre for Architecture 

Chuck Hoberman Hoberman Associates, Expanding aluminum sphere, partially deployed (detail), 1991. © Walter Wick 

Shoei Yoh + Architects, Galaxy Toyama, Gymnasium, Imizu, Toyama, Japan: Experiment of photoelasticity for the roof (detail), 1990 –1992 © Shoei Yoh + Architects

Wednesday, May 01, 2013

McCord Museum: Wearing Our Identity



Wearing Our Identity
The First People Collection

Opens May 2, 2013 

The Montreal's McCord Museum is hosting a new exhibition - Wearing Our Identity. This show will unable the public to explore the complex heritage of the First Peoples of Canada and to understand how their dress helped to define their rich culture and identities.



The dress, beyond its main purpose of protection, tells others about the wearer's age and status, gives information about the nation the person belongs to and his achievements. It also highlights the relationship between people and nature as an inseparable whole.
  

This First People Collection consists of some 100 items dating from the end of the 19th century till today, including works by contemporary Aboriginal artists. Twice per year new works will be selected and added to the exhibition. In addition, about
85% of the exhibited items will be renewed each year. This will provide the public with an opportunity for additional visits to the museum.



Visit the McCord Museum's website for more information about the opening hours and other activities.