Friday, September 28, 2018

MMFA 2018: ITHQ Educational Partnership


MMFA and ITHQ
Interdisciplinary Educational Partnership 

September 27, 2018 

The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (MMFA) and the Institut de tourisme et d’hôtellerie du Québec (ITHQ) announce a new interdisciplinary educational partnership, stemming from a common desire to promote learning and creativity. Its goal is to sensitize ITHQ students to different forms of art, through opportunities to meet with artists and connect with artworks from the Museum’s collection.



Beginning this semester, ITHQ students in the Formation supérieure en cuisine [Advanced Culinary Training] program will have the opportunity to visit the MMFA's collections free of charge and to exercise their culinary creativity after encounters with artists exhibiting at the Museum. These experiences will help raise the students’ awareness about various forms of cultural expression and enrich the artistic and emotional content of their training.

Guided tours of the collection will be provided to the student, with the intention to spark their imagination and inspire new creative techniques. The meetings with artists will be an opportunity to learn more about the artistic process and its creative source. Back at the ITHQ kitchens, the students will be asked to create dishes inspired by their emotional response to the works: and the artist whom they had met will be invited to sample their culinary works and listen to the narratives behind their creative process.


Nathalie Bondil, Director General and Chief Curator of the MMFA stated:

"Cooking is an art. Food-related occupations are increasingly popular among our younger generations, almost to the point of becoming a 21st-century religion! Quebec is known for its creativity, and that includes its culinary talent." 


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For more information about the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts exhibitions and activities, visit the museum's website.

Monday, September 24, 2018

MMFA 2018: Alexander Calder


ALEXANDER CALDER: RADICAL INVENTOR
First Canadian retrospective of a modern art giant

September 21, 2018 - February 24, 2019

The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (MMFA) presents the first Canadian retrospective of an American artist Alexander Calder (1898-1976). This major exhibition is a result of in-depth research. It sheds new light on Calder’s work, as seen through the perspective of his innovative artistic concepts. It showcases the full scope of his career, especially how he set art in motion.


The exhibition was developed and organized by the MMFA. It brings together over 150 works: paintings, sculptures, jewellery and Calder's other graphic works, thus highlighting the true extent of his remarkable, innovative and multidisciplinary career. The works most prominently displayed include his paintings, his wire in-space portraits that are actually small scale sculptures, his monumental sculptures, and his sculptural mobiles. The exhibition examines Calder's artistic path and the progressive development of his artistic concepts.

The exhibition also highlights Calder's international career that spanned half a century. He exhibited on five continents and worked in many fields, including drawing, sculpture, painting, design and performance, especially circus acrobats and animal tricks. A video projection at the exhiobition shows Calder performing circus tricks with his miniature  wire sculptures.


Loans from prestigious institutions

Among the 150 objects on display are numerous works and documents that have rarely or never been presented and have been specially restored for the exhibition: the sculptures The Brass Family (1929), on loan from the Whitney Museum of American Art; Kiki de Montparnasse (II) (1930), on loan from the Centre Pompidou, Paris; White Panel (1936), on loan from the Calder Foundation; and the mobile Red Gongs (1950), on loan from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, to name but a few. Alexander Calder: Radical Inventor also reveals little-known sculptures made by the artist in his childhood

Other than those from the Calder Foundation, the exhibition has benefitted from major loans from museums in the United States and France, including the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (New York), the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York), the Centre Pompidou (Paris), the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), the Smithsonian American Art Museum (Washington), the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden (Washington), the National Gallery of Art (Washington) and the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago; as well as from loans from American, Canadian and French private collectors.



Alexander Calder: Radical Inventor

The exhibition presents an original reading of the uniqueness of the artist’s work and contribution to art history. A radical inventor, Calder not only introduced a new dimension to sculpture but changed the way we experience art in the modern world, based on a series of novel concepts. Beyond the actual objects on display, the exhibition draws attention to the space they occupy.


Montreal, a Calder city

The last section of the exhibition is devoted to the sculpture Trois disques, commonly called Calder’s Man, a monumental work that has become an icon of Canadian heritage. This 22-metre stainless steel stabile installed on the Île Sainte-Hélène belvedere in Parc Jean-Drapeau (currently under reconstruction), is Calder’s second-tallest stabile, after that in Mexico. It was commissioned for Montreal’s Expo 67 and was gifted to the city at the end of the exhibition. This is the first time that the two original maquettes of the work have been brought together in the same location – one of them being the maquette that is installed front of the Michal and Renata Hornstein Pavilion, on loan from York University, in Toronto, which was recently  restored. This retrospective will give the public a chance to discover the artist behind this masterpiece of public art.


Nathalie Bondil, Director General and Chief Curator, MMFA, stated:
Montreal is home to the most important work of public art in Canada: the monumental sculpture Trois disques, or as Montrealers affectionately call it, Man, remembering ‘Man and His World.’ Evoking humanism as did Expo 67 – an exhibition that looked toward the future – this sculpture alludes to humanity’s technical progress and efforts, and its aspiration toward a collective harmony. And yet, the life and work of this modern art giant remain underappreciated in Canada. That is why I initiated this retrospective... Calder moved in the cosmopolitan modernist avant-garde circles with figures such as Arp, Cocteau, Le Corbusier, Léger, Miró, Mondrian, Man Ray, Prévert and many others. His art, joyful and serious at the same time, attracted crowds from the very start of his career in the Paris of the Roaring Twenties, with his miniature circus. Today, in Montreal, world capital of the circus arts, Calder’s talents as a storyteller, inventor, painter and sculptor are revealed, thanks to this fresh perspective and research done by the curators, with the support of the Calder Foundation.”  


Alexander Calder Biographical Notes

Calder was born into a family of artists, and his probing mind, love of materials and penchant for invention equipped him from his early career to discard the conventional parameters of art. During the 1920s in Paris, Alexander Calder developed his art among the artistic and intellectual circles of the day, forging friendships with Cocteau, Duchamp, Le Corbusier, Léger, Mondrian, Miró, Prévert, Varèse and other prominent figures of the international avant-garde. Around this time, he presented a miniature circus, which is today considered a precursor of performance art, and invented wire sculpture, tracing the silhouette of his subjects, including acrobats and well-known personalities like Kiki de Montparnasse and Josephine Baker. He was a protean creator whose practice continues to amaze us for both for the diversity and the unique experiences his works offer.

Calder revolutionized the art world by adding the dimensions of movement and time to sculpture. In so doing, he created a new way for art to be experienced in the modern world, which itself was in a state of flux in an era of rapid industrialization and great social change. It was in the early 1930s that he invented what Marcel Duchamp termed “mobiles,” to describe the kinetic sculptures in which the various components in precarious equilibrium generate a unique series of movements, transforming the way in which objects can animate space. At the same time, he created immobile abstract works, which Jean Arp, in 1932, labelled “stabiles.” Later, global commissions for Calder’s distinctive monumental stabiles earned him international renown, and he progressively redefined the urban space through his public art.


Momentum: the public activation of 10 mobiles

A rare opportunity to see Calder’s mobiles in action, the Momentum presentations will allow visitors to observe the works being set in motion by a MMFA restorer. These activations of the mobiles offer a truer representation of the artist’s vision for these kinetic works. These events promise a unique experience and will be held Tuesdays through Fridays at 2 p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.



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This exhibition is located the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts' Michal and Renata Hornstein Pavilion – Level 2.

For more information about the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts exhibitions and activities, visit the museum's website.


Saturday, September 08, 2018

MMFA 2018: Book of Hours


RESPLENDENT ILLUMINATIONS
BOOK OF HOURS FROM THE 13th TO THE 16th CENTURY IN QUEBEC COLLECTIONS

September 4, 2018 – January 6, 2019
  
The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (MMFA) for the first time presents Books of Hours, conserved in seven Quebec collections. This exhibition is a result of an extensive research. It represents a unique opportunity to admire works primarily from illuminated manuscripts – the priceless legacy of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance in Europe.

Books of Hours were works of private devotion that first appeared in the 13th century. They were the most popular prayer books made for the laity and were used as primers for learning to read. Often given as wedding gifts, they were “bestsellers” until the 16th century. Over time, they evolved in a variety of ways both textually and iconographically, adapting to the regional differences in devotions, languages and artistic styles of European Christianity.


The 59 artefacts presented for the first time belong to the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, McGill University, the arts library of the Université du Québec à Montréal, the Séminaire de Saint-Sulpice, the Archives of the Jesuits in Canada, to Concordia University and the Musée de l’Amérique francophone in Quebec City.

The works on display show the exquisite elegance of some Gothic and Renaissance illuminations from France, the Southern Netherlands, Italy and Southern Germany, as well as other contemporaneous expressions of popular piety. These small images, featuring decorations similar to decorative folk art carved into wood or painted, were probably produced for clients of more modest means. Seven books come from the early days of printing. The books illustrate the development of woodcuts and metal cuts that gradually replaced the art of illumination.


 Women were more than just pious readers of Books of Hours. As the works in the exhibition demonstrate, thye contributed their expertise at various stages of production.

In comparison with other collections of early books in North America, what is special about the Books of Hours held in Quebec is the fact that they were first and foremost devotional works of New France. This is evidenced in the Jesuit Relations as of 1653 and in requests made by the Hospitalières (nursing sisters in Quebec) between 1664 and 1668 to their benefactors in France. In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, these devotional books found a new vocation, becoming collectible artefacts. Whether complete or fragmentary, Books of Hours came into Quebec by way of inheritances or purchases in Europe. 


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This exhibition is located the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts Graphic Arts Centre: Jean-Noël Desmarais Pavilion, Level S2

For more information about the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts exhibitions and activities, visit the museum's website.

Tuesday, September 04, 2018

World Press Photo 2018


World Press Photo 2018
61th InternationalEdition
Montreal 2018 - 13th Montreal Edition

August 29 - September 30, 2018

THis EVENT SHOWCASEs THE PHOTOGRAPHs FROM THE WINNERS OF THE WORLD’s MOST PRESTIGIOUS PROFESSIONAL Photo COMPETITION 

For the 61st edition of World Press Photo, the competition jury, chaired by Magdalena Herrera, director of photography for GEO France, sifted through more that 73,000 images submitted by over 4,500 photojournalists hailing from 125 countries. They awarded prizes to 42 photographers from 22 countries.



This photograph is part of an international exhibition that offers a visual journey through the year’s major events, broken down into eight categories: Contemporary Issues, People, Environment, General News, Spot News, Long-Term Projects, Nature and Sports.



Among the themes and topics explored: the terrorist attacks on London’s Westminster Bridge, the liberation of Mosul in Iraq, during which civilians were taken hostage, the exodus of thousands of Rohingya refugees from Myanmar (formerly Burma) to Bangladesh to escape violence, young Roma refugees who suffer from resignation syndrome, the growing production of human waste in Nigeria, the anti-poaching efforts to protect rhinos in South Africa, the rescue of abandoned elephant calves in Kenya and a bioenergy village in Austria. 


Discover the Montreal's World Press Photo extensive exhibition, which offers a visual panorama of the year’s major news events, as well as a number of complementary exhibitions: The aftermath of Quebec City’s Great Mosque tragedy, by Alexandre Champagne; and also Dans La Rue Photos, by at-risk youths from the organization Dans La Rue; the 6th edition of Regards by Oxfam-Québec about women’s fight for equality around the worlda photo reportage by LaPresse+; an ICI RDI installation in collaboration with MASSIVart about the work carried out on the ground by its international correspondents; and an interactive experience presented by Planète+.


NEW VISITOR EXPERIENCE FOR 2018: NEW LIGHTING AND PHOTOGRAPHS HUNG FROM CEILING

In partnership with Bonsecours Market, the World Press Photo Montreal team has invested in the acquisition of a brand-new lighting system and has hung the majority of photographs from the ceiling, thereby creating a superior visual environment to previous years.



The World Press Photo Montreal is presented daily, from August 29 to September 30, 2018 at Bonsecours Market in Old Montreal, andproduced by Arkar, in collaboration with Oxfam-Québec, ICI RDI, La Presse+, Planète+, Newad, La Vitrine culturelle, Nightlife.ca, Publicité Sauvage, L’Itinéraire and Urbania, and the support of the SDC Vieux-Montréal. 



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All Photos @ Nadia Slejskova