Monday, July 15, 2019

Stewart Museum 2019: Summer Program


Summer 2019 Programming

Stewart Museum, located on St. Helen’s Island, is housed in Montreal’s biggest historical military site. if you are interested in learning about the history of Canada, Quebec and Montreal, this is the place to visit this summer. In addition, the Museum also offers a superb view of the city, whether from the top of the glass tower or from the spacious inner courtyard.


Indoors, you can discover the exhibition History and Memory that is spread over two floors and displays close to 500 objects from the Museum’s collections that usher visitors through five centuries of Quebec history. The interactive model “Fortified Montreal” takes visitors back in time and breathes life into the city’s history. In addition, guided tours that reveal little-known facts are offered every day. 


Outdoor Tours 
Museum also runs two outdoor tours all summer long.

Tour of the St. Helen’s Island Fort
A great way to discover Montreal’s largest military history site.
Tuesdays to Sundays
At 1:30 p.m. in French
At 3:00 p.m. in English

The Tour of the St. Helen's Island Fort can be followed by

Historical tour From the British Arsenal to Expo 67
It highlights key events in the history of the island, from the building of the fort to the world’s fair, when Expo 67 was held in Montreal and the island was the focus of worldwide attention

At 2:00 p.m. in French
At 3:30 p.. in English

If you want the full experience, you can always do the two tours one after the other. Since places are limited, however, you’d be better to book your tickets online. The cost of the two outdoor walking tours is included in the price of admission to the Museum.




AN ESCAPE GAME 

If you love discovering new things, especially about history, the Stewart Museum offers two very popular highlights of its programming. Organized every second Saturday, the escape game Prisoners of Camp S/43 has you relive a little-known episode of Montreal’s history during the Second World War. An original adventure, for visitors age 9 and up.
Small extra fee on top of your Museum admission is required.



ILLUMINATED EVENINGS

Get away from the crowds and enjoy the view of the fireworks shows at La Ronde from the Museum's courtyard.The Museum will exceptionally stay open on Wednesday evenings from 5 to 10 p.m until July 24.
A special admission fee of $5 for visitors 13 and older (free for children
12 and under).


Click on images to enlarge them.
For more information, visit the Stewart Museum website

Saturday, June 22, 2019

MAC 2019: Summer Exhibition


Rebecca Belmore, Nadia Myre, Chloë Lum & Yannick Desranleau, Ragnar Kjartansson & The National

The Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal (MAC) has just opened its summer exhibition. This exhibition, which has not been originally previewed, is taking place because the museum's renovation project that had been scheduled to begin this summer was postponed. (You can read about MAC's transformation plans here.) MAC will continue to hold its activities throughout the summer and early fall in its current location, on Saint-Catherine Street, offering various programming to its visitors. 

Rebecca Belmore
June 20 -October 6, 2019

MAC presents an award-winning Anishinaabe artist Rebecca Belmore. Her sculptures, videos, and photographs address some urgent issues of Native history and of our times. This exhibition was originally organized and presented last summer (2018) by the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO), under the name Facing the Monumental.


Nadia Myre
June 20 to August 4, 2019

MAC also presents works of a Montreal Native artist Nadia Myre. Some of the pieces come from the MAC's permanent collection, others were newly acquired.

Nadia Myre deals with the topics of Indigenous identity, desire, loss, resilience and knowledge. Meditations on Red, 2013, is a series of photographs depicting a meticulous bead-work. Through this piece, Myre offers a critical reflection on identity as defined by blood and concepts such as “white man” and "red."




Chloë Lum & Yannick Desranleau
June 20 to August 4, 2019

Chloë Lum & Yannick Desranleau, are also included in the MAC's summer program. Their large installation is full of seemingly unrelated objects and vibrant colours. They move the objects around and wrap themselves into them during their performances.


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Hover your mouse over images for description and credits.

In August, MAC Museum will once again partner with  MUTEK festival by presenting the world premiere of the ISM Hexadome installation, a collaboration between MUTEK and the Institute for Sound & Music in Berlin (ISM).

For more information about MAC, visit the museum's website.

Friday, June 14, 2019

McCord: The Polaroid Project


THE POLAROID PROJECT
AT THE INTERSECTION OF ART AND TECHNOLOGY
A CANADIAN EXCLUSIVE AT THE McCORD MUSEUM

June 13 - September 15, 2019

McCord Museum is hosting the Canadian exclusive premiere of The Polaroid Project: At the Intersection of Art and Technology. This international exhibition is organized by the Foundation for the Exhibition of Photography, New York / Lausanne, in collaboration with the MIT Museum in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the WestLicht Museum for Photography in Vienna. It is presented by La Presse +.



The exhibition features original works of some 100 of the celebrated international artists of the 20th century, including Andy Warhol, Robert Mapplethorpe, David Hockney, Chuck Close and Charles Eames, along with acclaimed Montreal artists like Evergon. The exhibition covers a wide variety of formats, ranging from the standard Polaroid (10.7 cm by 8.8 cm) to some very large sizes, including one assembly measuring 1.44 m by 2.99 m.

Polaroid had strongly impacted the Montreal’s photographic scene. This slice of the city’s history is illustrated by works of Montreal's three acclaimed artists known for their experimenting with Polaroid: Louise Abbott, Benoît Aquin and Charles Gagnon.





The exhibition also presents the  development of various Polaroid cameras and accessories. It highlights the vision of their inventor, Edwin Land (1909–1991), and the Polaroid camera development process that inspired creators around the world. Land's main focus was to bring the photo camera to every person. It was his purpose that people collectively exercise their creativity and artistry in capturing their reality, the images of their friends, family, and surroundings. The idea of being able to capture and freeze a moment of existence and hold onto it, to embody it with a sense of purpose, permanency and even eternity, is strongly present at this exhibition.





In keeping with its role as Montreal’s museum of social history, the McCord Museum has been encouraging Montrealers since April 2019 to contribute to the “Polaroid Project” by donating their photos to an ongoing and constantly evolving photographic installation piece that you will discover in the last exhibition room.






Click on images to enlarge them.
All photos by Marilyn Aitken, courtesy @ McCord Museum

For more information on current exhibitions, visit the McCord Museum website.

Tuesday, June 11, 2019

CCA 2019: Gordon Matta-Clark


Gordon Matta-Clark
Out of the Box

June 7 - September 8, 2019

The Montreal's Canadian Center for Architecture is dedicating its 2019–2020 Out of the Box exhibition series to the works of a trained architect and conceptual artist Gordon Matta-Clark. The items on display were all donated to the CCA by the Estate of Gordon Matta-Clark in 2011.The donation consisted of Matta-Clarke's archives: his professional works such as writings, photographs, films, correspondence, and select artworks that were produced between 1969 and 1978.


Though Matta-Clark had a rather short life (he died at age 35, 1943-1978), he is best remembered for his monumental deconstructive pieces, the bold artistic statements created inside and out of the condemned masonry soon to be demolish. In one such case, the area was zoned for the future iconic building of the Paris' Pompidue Center.


This exhibition is the first part of the study of the CCA Matta-Clark archives, that will be presented to the public in three acts. To explore Gordon Matta-Clark’s critical practice within the architectural scene of the time, the CCA has invited for this series of exhibitions three guest curators from different curatorial backgrounds ranging from contemporary art, film and archival research, to social practice studies.

This first series is curated by Yann Chateigné. It reflects on Gordon Matta-Clark’s material thinking as deducted from his highly diverse personal library. It classifies the books into four main categories of his reading interest: Alchemy, Gravity, Networks, and Inner Spaces. 



The exhibition reveals lesser-known references in Matte-Clark's work that artist expressed during the decade of his artistic practice.



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Hover over images for description and credits.

Additionally, the Gordon Matta-Clark Collection can be studied online. Visit the online finding aid for personal reference.

To find more about this exhibition and other projects exhibitions, visit the CCA website.


Saturday, June 01, 2019

MMFA 2019: OMAR BA

OMAR BA: SAME DREAM
The artist’s first solo exhibition in Canada

May 30 – November 10, 2019

The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (MMFA), in collaboration with the Toronto’s Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, is presenting the first Canadian solo exhibition by Omar Ba. This is the first joint project by those two cultural institutions. It showcases a selection of Ba’s major works from different periods in his career. In addition, the artist has created a large-scale mural for the Montreal public, on a makeshift wall, directly inside the gallery. At the end of the show, this work will have to be dismantled: because of its monumental size it could not be removed through the existing doors.

Omar Ba’s paintings are statement on political, economic, and cultural realities that exist in our world. His work deals with some urgent issues of our time: the global inequality of wealth and power, immigration crises, and our changing relationship to the natural world. He does it through depicting personal narratives alongside collective thus revealing the multidimentional character of his work. He would like the public to realize this about his exhibition: 
“I’d like people to see that we need to give African artists their rightful place, and I also hope they come away with a more positive image of humankind. That we realize that beyond conflict, religion and culture, we are all one. That there are no blacks, yellows or whites – only humans. I also want to convey the idea of an Africa that’s reasserting its place: of countries free of conflict and dictators that people are no longer forced to leave in order to have a good life. In fact, it’s my dream that the continent share its riches with every other country in the world in a mutual respect between African and Western leaders.”

In his work, Omar Ba synthesizes the visual context and texture of his two homes – Dakar, Senegal and Geneva, Switzerland. He combines historical and contemporary African and European motives, imagery, and many different textural element. He also uses his bare hands along with a range of techniques and tools to create his art. Most of the works are painted on corrugated cardboard. He prepares his surfaces – be they cardboard, canvas, or wood – with a black ground, upon which he layers vivid colours and complex compositions full of details. His figures merge with lush flora, fauna and biomorphic forms inspired by the Senegal coast where he grew up. Micro-worlds exist in his paintings within larger environments that evoke a shared habitat between humans, plants and animals.

About the Artist
Omar Ba (born 1977, Dakar, Senegal) lives and works between Dakar and Geneva. His work has been shown at BOZAR, Brussels, Belgium (2017); Ferme-Asile, Sion, Switzerland (2015); Hales Gallery, London, UK (2017, 2014); Biennale de Dakar, Senegal (2014); Aargauer Kunsthaus, Aarau, Switzerland (2012) among others. Ba’s works can be found in private and public collections, including Credit Suisse, Switzerland; Fonds municipal d’art contemporain de la Ville de Genève, Switzerland; Fonds municipal d’art contemporain de la Ville de Paris; Centre national des arts plastiques, France; and the Barbier-Mueller Collection, Geneva, as well as the Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris, France, and the Louvre Abu Dhabi, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. In 2011, Ba received the Swiss Art Award.

Catalogue
Published in English and French by the Power Plant Contemporary Art GalleryToronto, under the editorship of Gaëtane Verna, the 150-page catalogue is a complement to the exhibition. On sale at the Museum Boutique and Bookstore.


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Hover over images for description and credits.

Exhibition Location
The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts
Contemporary Art Square, Jean-Noël Desmarais Pavilion – Level S2

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


Friday, May 10, 2019

CCA 2019: Our Happy Life

Photo by Stefano Graziani, ”Rankings of Happiness 2015–2017”
World Happiness Report 2018. © CCA

Architecture and Well-Being
in the Age of Emotional Capitalism

8 May - 13 October, 2019

Can architecture contribute to general human happiness? Do sleek building designs combined with the equally sleek interior designs and landscaping alter a person’s mood from negative to positive? Does the comfort of plush carpets and bright lights have the power to alter your mood and make you happy?

Can the sense of grounding, freedom, peace, and even unconditional love one feels when being in nature be labelled as a hedonistic pleasure, as if it were something unnatural, superfluous, not really a basic human need to be connected to the source of all that is alive on Earth?

Can an architect or an urban designer create a sense of pleasure and deep satisfaction that has a power to border on a spiritual experience purely by artificial, artistic, and commercially strategic means?

To what an extend a human being becomes a commodity to be studied intensely with surveys and computer algorithms in order to determine how to structure the living environments in such a controlled way as to provide an illusion of a well being while constructing a sustainable, commercially profitable venue?

This new Canadian Center for Architecture (CCA) exhibition is offering its visitors to ask just these types of questions and seek personal answers.

Curator: Francesco Garutti
Curatorial team: Irene Chin, Jacqueline Meyer
Visual identity and design: OK-RM, London 
Exhibition design: Bernard Dubois, Brussels 
Design development: Sébastien Larivière, Anh Truong

To find more about this exhibition and other projects exhibitions, visit the CCA website.

Friday, May 03, 2019

MMFA 2019: Avant-garde Montrealers


Jewellery, Glass and Ceramics as Envisioned by Gallerists Jocelyne Gobeil, Elena Lee and Barbara Silverberg

April 30, 2019 - March 2020

The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (MMFA) dicates its Design Lab to three Quebec former gallery owners whose expertise ensured that glass, ceramics and jewellery became recognized fully as artistic disciplines. Avant-garde Montrealers: Jewellery, Glass and Ceramics as Envisioned by Jocelyne Gobeil, Elena Lee and Barbara Silverberg pays tribute to these women and their resolutely contemporary and practices.

Bringing together 60 of the works – which the Museum now boasts in its collection – Avant-garde Montrealers attests to the vast creative potential of jewellery, glass and ceramics.

The gifts of works from these galleries reveal the exemplary role played by Gobeil, Lee and Silverberg as true Canadian pioneers. The Louise and Laurette D’Amours bequest from the Liliane and David M. Stewart Collection and the Anna and Joe Mendel Collection respectively showcase Canadian glass art from 1970 to 2015, and Canadian and international glass art from 1962 to 2008. The gift of Barbara and Philip Silverberg highlights the oeuvre of American and Canadian ceramicists, especially of the 1980s and 1990s. The pieces from the personal collection of the late Jocelyne Gobeil were fashioned by artists who made their mark on the history of contemporary jewellery during the same period. The confluence and synergy of the works in this exhibition add to the depth and diversity of the Museum’s decorative arts and design collection, a unique holding in North America.
  

Jocelyne Gobeil, Elena Lee and Barbara Silverberg opened their galleries in a period when these changing fields were shifting focus from utilitarian and decorative objects to sculptural and conceptual works of art. These gallery owners fostered the dissemination and promotion of such creations by solo and group exhibition programming, by presenting them at artistic shows, promoting them in publications, as well as pursuit of other avenues. The women convinced the artistic milieu and a wider public of such works relevance and endurance.

Located near the Museum, their galleries took advantage of the high traffic on Sherbrooke Street and the close by presence of other art galleries. 


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Galerie Elena Lee (1976-2017) specialized in Canadian contemporary glass art. Representing new and established artists alike, the gallery showcased traditional blown-glass works as well as more complex and sculptural art that exploits the many facets of glass and its potential for combining with other materials – works that put Canadian glass art on the international stage.

Galerie Jocelyne Gobeil (1987-1999) sought to give jewellery its due credit as wearable works of art. Jocelyne Gobeil primarily represented Quebec artists but also featured American and European creations to raise the profile of international jewellery. Renowned creators expressed their reflections on jewellery with novel and experimental pieces made in a wide array of materials that effected undeniably powerful statements.

Galerie Barbara Silverberg Contemporary Ceramics (1985-1998) started out showcasing the conceptual approaches of Quebec artists and then expanded into works from the United States as well as other parts of Canada, including representatives of the Regina Clay movement. The versatility of this art form was exploited to the fullest by emerging artists and ceramicists celebrated across Canada and around the world. Materiality, plasticity, emotional expression, and creative inspirations together contributed to the great diversity of the artworks.

Exhibition Location

Montreal Museum of Fine Arts
Design Lab, Liliane and David M. Stewart Pavilion – Level 2
Until end of June 2019, this exhibition can be accessed via the 3410 Du Musée Avenue entrance only. Tickets must be purchased at the Lobby of the Jean-Noël Desmara

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

Thursday, May 02, 2019

McCord Museum Reinvented


New Montreal Museum

April 30, 2019

McCord Museum, located in the heart of Montreal, announced major re-structuring and construction of new museum extensions on its present site. While preserving its Sherbrooke and Victoria Streets façades, it will expand upwards from the present historical McCord Museum building. It will also overflow into the adjacent Victoria Street that runs along the west side of the museum, as well as southwards into the lot that houses the former Caveau restaurant on President Kennedy Avenue. The combined area of these sites will enable the museum to meet its needs for additional space.




Working closely with the City of Montreal that granted the right to build on Victoria Street, the Museum selected the site after conducting a feasibility study. The new building will house under the same roof three recently merged museums: McCord Museum, Stewart Museum and Fashion Museum. Instead of the present 1%, this will allow to display 4-5% of items from the combined permanent collection consisting of 1.4 million artifacts. In addition, the Museum wishes to change its name. The preliminary name proposed is Montréalais.


The new museum will triple the space and will double the number of visitors per year from the current 300,000 to 600,000. It will also triple its educational space and will allow for a far greater number of school group visits, as presently McCord Museum is unable to satisfy all school trip requests.

The project is expected to cost $180 million. It is projected that 1/3 of the cost will be covered by the Federal Government, 1/3 by the Provincial Government, and the remaining 1/3 by private donations.


New museum to receive historic donation

The McCord Stewart Museum also announced that La Fondation Emmanuelle Gattuso had pledged to donate $15 million towards this project. It is the largest single private monetary donation to a Quebec museum in over 30 years. In 1987, the J.W. McConnell Foundation donated $50 million to the McCord Museum for its expansion and the creation of an endowment to preserve its collection.

Madam Emmanuelle Gattuso, Vice President, Public Affairs of Gattuso Inc. food company founded by her parents, stated:
"Although I have lived in Toronto for many years, I am still a Montrealer at heart. This donation is in memory of my parents, Lina and Pasquale Gattuso, Montrealers of Italian origin who chose this city to raise their family and start a food business that still bears their name and has thrived across the country since 1936. It is my hope that this new museum will break ground very soon and that my donation will encourage the various levels of government, Montrealers and ex-Montrealers to mobilize for this magnificent project that will enrich Montreal’s cultural life."

All pictures of the new museum in this article are only preliminary concepts. McCord Museum will be launching soon an architectural competition for the best new museum design.

McCord museum will be closed during the construction works. Visit the museum now to be able to compare it later to the all new museum.




Click on images to enlarge them.
All photos by DMA, courtesy @ McCord Museum

For more information on current exhibitions, visit the McCord Museum website.