RDI Matin, by Stéphane Leclair
Dec 7, 2019
Plus de 40 000 billets vendus pour l'exposition « Imagine Van Gogh Montréal ». Elle sera présentée l'an prochain à Québec.
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Plus de 40 000 billets vendus pour l'exposition « Imagine Van Gogh Montréal ». Elle sera présentée l'an prochain à Québec.
Read MoreFor years, Jean-François Bouchard has made work that documents people deemed to be on the “fringes” of society.
Read MoreEntrevue avec Annabelle Mauger, coréalisatrice de l’exposition immersive « Imagine Van Gogh » : Dès le 5 décembre à l’Arsenal de Montréal (imagine-vangogh.ca).
Read MoreWhether he is looking at trance states, the human brain, ancient rocks, or the physics of clouds, Mat Chivers is always looking for patterns that unite the human species.
Read MoreIn 1962 Andy Warhol began to make repetitive silkscreens of fatal car crashes that appeared on the front page of major newspapers.
Read MoreSince the early 1970’s Suzy Lake has been at the forefront of Canadian art, forming a prolific corpus that blends photography, conceptualism and performance.
Read MoreAdam Basanta uses sound and image to illustrate the behavior of feedback loops, blurring the line between technology and nature while testing the boundaries of authorship.
Read MoreDavid Altmejd’s practice is often beyond words. In breadth and variety that is astounding, he has given rise to werewolf heads and surreal humans beyond wild imagination.
Read MoreRose Marcus is known for photographic works that blur the boundary between photograph, abstract painting and sculptural object. Printed on vinyl and adhered to display and construction substrates, her photographs are then incised, layered, punctured with large cut out shapes or partially veiled in fabric.
Read MoreGlasgow-based artist Rachel Maclean is known for dramatic, highly staged, satirical and grotesquely funny films that poke fun at British politics and other current topics like the rise in plastic surgery, effects of social media, and cuteness culture.
Read MoreGenesis Belanger is quickly gaining recognition for her ceramic sculptures that playfully critique visual tropes of gender, desire, work and addiction.
Read MoreSince 2009 Caroline Monnet has been writing and directing films that centre on the strength and resilience of indigenous peoples in Canada. In her sculptural and installation work she uses materials like concrete, wood, arrows, copper and clothes to explore the complexity of indigenous identity from the vantage point of her urban position and lifestyle.
Read MoreJulie Favreau is known for mixing mediums to create immersive environments that heighten the viewers’ attention to touch.
Read MoreBreasts stacked like frog’s eggs; the imprint of the artist’s arm or legs in motion as it progressively deconstructs the very sculpture representing it; plaster that captures the memory of her body leaning on or sitting in the confines of a space exploration habitat—these are the discoveries that await you in the uncanny world of Brazilian artist Juliana Cerqueira Leite.
Read MoreA preeminent figure in contemporary Canadian art, Wanda Koop has been making waves stateside recently for her au courant paintings of silhouetted skylines that comment on the intersection between urbanism and the natural world.
Read MoreArsenal Contemporary NY recently partnered with Edythe for an upcoming exhibition featuring works by Canadian painter, Kim Dorland. On view from March 7 through April 22, 2018, Same Old Futures will be part of the gallerys mission to promoting dialogues between Canadian artists and their international contemporaries.
Read MoreBritish artist Hannah Perry took over Manhattan during Frieze New York this year, with a solo show that opened on 3rd May at Arsenal Contemporary entitled Viruses Worth Spreading (on until 2nd July 2017).
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