#McCord Stewart Museum Montreal
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Costume Balls
Dressing up history 1870-19927
Edited by Cynthia Cooper, Photographs by Laura Dumitriu
5Continents, Milano 2024, 288 pages, 246 colour and black-and-white illustrations, Hardback, 25,4x 34,3cm, ISBN: 979-12-5460-071-9
euro 50,00
email if you want to buy [email protected]
A century and a half ago, extravagant costume balls and skating carnivals were the pinnacle of society’s entertainment, bringing forth a kaleidoscopic array of characters, most drawn from history. The opportunity to reimagine oneself as a noble hero or heroine from the past was no less than the chance of a lifetime. Participants acquired extravagant costumes and flocked to the photographer’s studio, as attested by the sheer abundance of mementos of these occasions in the McCord Stewart Museum’s collections. The book is intended to accompany the exhibition “Costume Balls: Dressing Up History, 1870-1927” at the McCord Stewart Museum. Montreal. A lead essay presents an overall view of the fancy dress phenomenon, and the major events in Canada with their colonial underpinnings. Other essays look in turn at the commemoration of these balls in art, photography, and publications, a decolonizing perspective on the representation of Indigenous and other marginalized peoples in fancy dress, and the ephemeral nature of the extant objects. A section consists of detailed profiles of astounding garments, with several images to show views of each that cannot be seen in the exhibition: interior construction and labels, closeup views of textiles and materials, and comparisons of archival photographs of ball guests in costume. The book is the first historical fashion publication to explore fancy dress in such detail. Exhibition : McCord Stewart Museum, Montreal, November 14, 2024-August 17,2025
Un secolo e mezzo fa i balli in costume e i carnevali sui pattini erano l’apice dell’intrattenimento sociale. Erano un’occasione per trasformarsi in personaggi storici, nobili eroi o eroine del passato, e rappresentavano un’esperienza indimenticabile. I partecipanti sfoggiavano costumi stravaganti e immortalavano il loro splendore negli studi fotografici, lasciandoci un’abbondanza di ricordi conservati oggi nelle collezioni del McCord Stewart Museum. Dietro l’esuberanza di questi eventi si celavano però anche messaggi più profondi, legati al destino coloniale e al futuro imperiale dell’epoca. Il libro accompagna la mostra “Costume Balls. Dressing Up History, 1870-1927” al McCord Stewart Museum di Montreal e offre una panoramica completa del fenomeno dei balli in maschera, sintetizzando le ricerche più recenti e analizzando i principali eventi in Canada e le loro radici coloniali. Altri saggi esplorano la raffigurazione di questi balli nell’arte, nella fotografia e nei libri, offrendo una prospettiva decolonizzante sulla rappresentazione degli indigeni e di altre popolazioni emarginate, e sulla loro natura effimera. Una sezione presenta profili dettagliati di abiti straordinari, con immagini che ne mostrano aspetti non visibili in mostra: la costruzione interna, le etichette, dettagli ravvicinati di tessuti e materiali, e confronti con fotografie d’archivio degli invitati ai balli. Un libro unico nel suo genere, che offre una visione completa e affascinante di un periodo storico ricco di fantasia e teatralità.
02/11/24
#McCord Stewart Museum Montreal#Costume Balls#historical fashion publication#Canada#fashion books#fashionbooksmilano
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Becoming Montreal - James Duncan
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Hi! I’m actually going to Montreal for the first time next week for a wedding, but am staying a few extra days to explore. I’d love any recommendations if you feel so inclined to share any! I also love tearooms and books if you feel comfortable sharing your faves!
god i have been so excited to answer this lol, very pleased to be home and comfy and have the time!!
i'm probably going to give you too many and this is high recency bias but here we go:
drawn and quarterly (bookstore in the mile end, a very cool neighborhood; for coffee/pastries in a beautiful spot, try pastel rita on boul. st. laurent a few streets away!!)
the word (bookstore on rue milton; this is right near mcgill's main campus and it's cash only!!)
mccord stewart museum (my fave museum right across from mcgill; the current exhibits are absolutely stunning, cannot recommend enough; the gift shop also has great stickers and postcards)
notre dame basilica (skip the light show, it's not really worth the money, but go during the day and make sure to see the wedding chapel if it's open! it's absolutely beautiful)
old montreal (it's great to just walk around here and pop into little shops, plus some of the best restaurants in the city. right by notre dame)
high tea at gryphon d'or (this is a bit out of the way in monkland village/ndg, which is where i used to live, but it's worth a trip. the tea selections are incredible [highly rec the cherry almond] and the sandwiches/desserts/scones are great. they give you a bunch of spreads for the scones, including the best caramel i've ever had in my life. bring cash here too, and make a reservation)
for restaurants, i'm going to rec mostly old montreal ones because that's where i was just staying and they're fresh in my mind!
gaspar brasserie (classic yummy french food, the duck is so good)
helena (portuguese food, great if you like seafood, and get the pastel de nata and the churros for dessert)
brasserie 701 (good for brunch/lunch; the 701 burger is stunning and so are their oatmilk lattes)
dinette marcella (really good italian food)
la banquise (for every kind of poutine you can imagine; this in the plateau, which is another great neighborhood to walk around in)
chifa (fun peruvian tapas!)
okay i could go on and on lol i'm sorry, i hope this is helpful!!
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Indigenous Voices of Today
When I visit the McCord Stewart Museum Montreal, I was not expecting anything but then I start exploring the objects, for example, the clothes, the hunting weapons or even clothing for the toddlers. Then, I saw an object that I did not know it would question my whole existence. They were gambling trays, there was not much about it in the description, but I got so many questions that popped in my head. For example, how did they use it, did they put something on it or was it something else? What were they gambling for? Objects? Currency? It inspired me to find out more about them, and it turns out one of the uses was, mostly by women, to throw dices and bet on a number on which the dice were placed.
Then we visited how the Indigenous were victim of racism and discrimination. It only shows us how the world will always be cruel, and wonder if someday cruelty will end.
The visit was rather interesting, the guides were joyful and patient, they looked like they enjoyed what they were doing. One of them even spent time trying to pronounce a word that was rather complicated to pronounce.
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Just visited the first major exhibition devoted to the photographer Alexander Henderson (1831-1913) at the McCord Stewart Museum. Henderson's love for the Canadian wilderness is evident in his stunning landscape photography. The exhibit showcases 250 original prints, reproductions of photographs, and archival documents that take you on Henderson's amazing journey through Montreal, Quebec, and Western Canada. #ArtMTL #insiderMTL #MTLMoments #McCordStewartMuseum #AlexanderHenderson (at Musée McCord Stewart Museum) https://www.instagram.com/p/CpjBvwArdlJ/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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Karen Tam at the McCord Stewart Museum | Tribute to the Chinese community of Montreal
At the end of an artistic residency of several months at the McCord Stewart Museum, the artist Karen Tam exhibits the results of her research which focused on the Chinese community of Montreal, of which she is a part. The exhibition swallow the mountains is also a salute to the resilience of Canadians of Chinese origin who often had to swallow snakes in their adopted country. Posted at 6:00…
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have u ever actually been to a museum or do you just not know how to read
i bet this is my hot take that diaries and scrapbooks of everyday people give more insight on history and should be cherished, so i guess you just misunderstood me, so do you know how to read?
you want me to list the museums i've been to? most museums have more interest in everyday items used by people and yeah like go look at the rich person's hat but like there will be an entire room on how seamstresses used to make clothes and that is way more interesting. so if this is this a quiz? wanna compare top museums, i have been to these and more
museum of modern art
metropolitan museum of art
guggenheim museum
american museum of natural history
brooklyn museum
9/11 memorial & museum
new museum
intrepid sea, air & space museum
hayden planetarium
ellis island national museum of immigration
south street seaport museum
california academy of sciences
san francisco railway museum
san francisco botanical garden
musée mécanique
canadian museum of nature
canadian war museum
canada science and technology museum
canada aviation and space museum
canadian museum of history
national gallery of canada
canada agriculture and food museum
bank of canada museum
ottawa art gallery
canadian children's museum
london children's museum
the royal canadian regiment museum
fanshawe pioneer village
jet aircraft museum
royal ontario museum
art gallery of ontario
gardiner museum
textile museum of canada
casa loma
hockey hall of fame
ontario science centre
musee de beaux arts
mccord
stewart museum
musee d'art contemporain
pointe-à-callière, museum of archaeology and history
biodome
montreal science center
canadian center for architecture
redpath museum
musée de l'holocauste montréal
montreal insectarium
space for life museum
museum of anthropology at ubc
vancouver art gallery
science world
britannia mine museum
british museum
natural history museum
national portrait gallery
charles dickens museum
tate
johnson space center
louvre
musée d'orsay
musée rodin
musée d'art moderne de paris
musée de l'orangerie
petit palais
grand palais
les invalides
alberta aviation museum
royal alberta museum
more and more smaller museums, aquariums, zoos, old castles, memorials, historic buildings and niche interests
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The McCord Stewart Museum loses its president
The McCord Stewart Museum loses its president
Suzanne Savage, president and CEO of the McCord Stewart Museum, is retiring. Posted yesterday at 5:30 PM. Marc-Andre Lemieux Press The Montreal organization reported this on Tuesday. Suzanne Savage is stepping down after 12 years at the helm of the museum. He will remain in office until November when the board of directors allows the appointment of a new person to take over the management of…
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Things to do in Montréal from May 12 to18
We’ve been celebrating Montréal’s 375th anniversary since January, but this week marks the city’s official birthday party and kick-off of springtime activities! We’re also celebrating Mother’s Day in style, the 50th anniversary of Expo 67, a new Cirque du Soleil show and more.
Celebrate Montréal’s 375th birthday!
On May 17, it’s official: the city of Montréal is 375 years old! Watch the 375th anniversary ceremonies starting at 8 a.m. outside city hall – listen for the bells of Oratoire Saint-Joseph on the other side of the city to ring at 8:45 a.m. – followed by a multi-faith mass at Notre-Dame Basilica, a ceremony at Place d’Armes, and later that night the premier of multimedia show Montréal Avudo in the Old Port at 8 p.m. and the illumination of the Jacques-Cartier Bridge at 9:45 p.m. accompanied by the Orchestre Métropolitain, plus a massive Bonne Fête Montréal concert at the Bell Centre. Another major 375th project: La Grand Tournée weekend events, presented by innovative circus company Cirque Éloize, begins May 12 and runs throughout the summer and in every neighbourhood, from group picnics in the park and green alleyway tours to circus shows and cinema under the stars. Visit the Parc des Rapides in the LaSalle neighbourhood for the Rhythm of the Rapids historical performance on May 12-13. And take a tour of Canadian warship HMCS Montréal, stationed in the Old Port later this week.
Celebrate moms!
Show your mom how much you care this Sunday by making her Mother’s Day a joyful and extravagant one. Numerous restaurants offer special Sunday brunch menus, including the Ritz-Carlton, Restaurant Tandem, Restaurant Helena, Les Cavistes, Chez Alexandre and Industria Brasserie Italienne and more brunch favourites Tapas 24, Mercuri, Nolana and Madre. Or try different brunches from around the world or dine at new Montréal restaurants. See the city sights and eat well too on Montréal’s best food tours and relax with a cup of tea at Montréal’s tea houses. Give mom the gift of a luxurious spa day at an internationally renowned spa. If you’re coming to the city with kids, check out the many fun things to do for families in Montréal, including the incredible likenesses of celebrities at the Musée Grévin wax museum (free for moms on May 14!) and Chagall: Colour and Music at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, with free tea and cookies on Mother’s Day plus hands-on kids workshop Chagall’s Little Box. Or spend Sunday afternoon in Mount-Royal Park with a violin and piano concert at 3 p.m. in the Mount Royal Chalet.
May flowers
Take a walk through the Botanical Garden‘s blooming grounds and tropical greenhouse and follow avian experts through the Biodôme during Bird Fest at the Montréal Space for Life. Meanwhile, downtown’s Place des Festivals is awash in colour at the music-making 21 Swings installation and Maëstro interactive digital orchestra and water fountains, part of this year’s Digital Spring art-meets-tech creations, as well as Québec-style “Kitchen parties” May 12-14. Two more signs of spring: the return of Montréal’s food trucks and street food and 18 shades of gay ball floating above Sainte-Catherine Street in the Village – this year instead of their original pink hue, they’re a rainbow of colours! Walk up Saint-Laurent to see bright building-sized murals, pop by Place Riopelle in Old Montréal to step aboard the future of public transit at the Place au Transport Expo May 15-16, or take a walk off the beaten path to discover welcoming and wonderful quirky spots in Montréal. Find out more about free things to do this Spring in Montréal, from art galleries to outdoor activities.
Bonus anniversary: Expo 67
Montréal celebrates the 50th anniversary of Expo 67 with entertaining and history-rich exhibitions: see colourful outfits and products created by Québec designers at the McCord Museum’s Fashioning Expo 67; photographs tell the tale in The Sixties in Montréal: Archives de Montréal at City Hall; marvel (and maybe laugh a little) at the technological innovations of EXPO 67: A World of Dreams at the Stewart Museum and Écho 67 at the nearby Buckminster Fuller designed Biosphère; baby boomer youth culture is a blast in Explosion 67 – Youth and Their World at the Centre d’histoire de Montréal, and it’s all about ’60s artistic expression in the Montréal Museum of Fine Arts’s Révolution: “You say you want a revolution” and the Musée d’art contemporain’s In Search of Expo 67. Photography exhibition Aime comme Montréal celebrates the city’s diversity in an installation at Place des arts. Old Montréal landmark Notre-Dame Basilica, one of the city’s most stunning churches, lights up with beautiful high-tech spectacle Aura, while the surrounding streets are illuminated by the historic tableaux projections of Cité Memoire.
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On stage
Prepare to be stunned by the incredible acrobats, dancers, parkour experts and motor bike athletes of Cirque du Soleil’s VOLTA, under the big top in the Old Port of Montréal. A visual and musical spectacle, Russian performance artist Slava Polunin’s Slava’s Snowshow wows at Theâtre St-Denis to May 14. At Centaur Theatre see Clybourne Park, a neighbourhood drama tracing racial tensions in Chicago, and hilarious and heartwarming Bed & Breakfast; The Segal Centre presents true family story How to Disappear Completely and hit musical Million Dollar Quartet, the true rock ‘n’ roll story of Sam Phillips, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Elvis Presley (moving over to Place des Arts May 17-21 for an extended run); and Aboriginal Spring of Art THREE presents Productions Ondinnok’s dance/theatre performance El buen vestir-Tlakentli May 10-12 at Monument-National. As part of Montréal’s winter-spring dance program: Flamenco Fascination takes us on a colourful, energetic journey inspired by the gypsy passion of Andalusia, at Place des Arts May 16; vibrant, emotional dance and music merge in a show by virtuoso Spanish guitarist José Vega and his Flamenco Company May 17 at Place des Arts; see Dominque Porte’s Conte de faits, family-friendly short danced tales inspired by the poetry of Jacques Prévert and drawings of René Magritte at Agora de la danse May 12-13; and on May 13, NYC dancer-choreographer Heather Cornell and musician Antonio Vilchez present Making Music Dance with African and South American rhythms, a free event at St. Jax church, followed by collaborative event Heartbeats, bringing musicians and dancers from Montréal, NYC and Peru together. Also on May 13, House of Laureen Drag Cabaret hosts a wild and wacky fundraiser for the Festival St-Ambroise Fringe de Montréal.
Art and film
Along with the wonderful exhibition CHAGALL: COLOUR AND MUSIC at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, see deeply moving work by foremost Mexican artist Teresa Margolles and Québec artist Emanuel Licha’s Now Have a Look at This Machine documentary installation at the Musée d’art contemporain and Mexican artist Gilberto Esparza’s biotechnical art exhibition Plantas autofotosintéticas at Galerie de l’UQAM. British artist Ed Atkins poses questions on human bodies, digital creation and reality in video exhibition Modern Piano Music at DHC-ART. Never Apart‘s Spring Exhibition features Two-Spirit Sur-Thrivance and the Art of Interrupting Narratives. Pointe-à-Callière archaeology and history museum presents the fascinating Amazonia: The Shaman and the Mind of the Forest. The Cinémathèque québécoise’s Fête du cinéma screens restored masterpiece Thirty Years of Motion Pictures with piano accompaniment as well as new films by Sébastien Laudenbach and Philippe Falardeau, Frailty in tribute to Bill Paxton, and more May 12-13, all for $10. Travel through virtual worlds in Felix & Paul Studios Virtual Reality Garden at the Phi Centre. Get immersed in new space-exploration double feature KYMA – Power of Waves and Edge of Darkness at the Rio Tinto Alcan Planetarium, or in electroacoustic A/V performance Électro-Acrylique and the high-tech 360° visuals of Orbits at the Satosphere surround-sound dome to May 13, followed by audiovisual wonders / IS //// IS ////// and Plateaux May 16-19.
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Live music
On Friday, discover the world’s finest young pianists at the Concours musical international de Montréal in a major gala concert May 12 at Place des Arts, or see Irish singer-songwriter Gavin James at Cabaret Lion D’or, pop-rock artist Perfume Genius at Théâtre Fairmount, heady indie musician Nick Hakim at Bar Le Ritz P.D.B. or dance to house music by Ben Vedren, Ohm Hourani, Nicolas Kehl and Owly. The eclectic and multidisciplinary Festival Accès Asie coincides with Canada’s Asian Heritage Month – this week featuring musical performance Les préoccupations et les attentes on May 12, the opening of Serendipity art exhibition at the MAI and Indian music concert La magie du Mohan-Veenaon on May 13, and the Golestan (“flower garden”) concert of Syrian and Turkish music on May 18. Meanwhile, Distortion Psych Fest gets heavy with PyPy, We Are Wolves, Co/ntry and many more bands May 12-14 at Église S-E-J du Mile-End and l’Escogriffe bar, plus Le Marché psychédélique printanier afternoon psych-themed market on March 13. On May 13, Bernard Labadie conducts Les Violons du Roy, La Chapelle de Québec and outstanding soloists in Purcell’s King Arthur at Maison symphonique. Saturday also brings German electronic artist Boris Brejcha to Théâtre Fairmount, singer-songwriter Laura Marling to Théâtre Corona, and celebrated German electronic producer Paul Van Dyk to New City Gas.
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On Sunday, the Orchestre Métropolitain continues its Bruckner cycle with Symphony No. 1, accompanied by harpist Valérie Milot at Maison symphonique, CJ Ramone (of The Ramones!) plays Foufounes Electriques and experimental music collective Wrekmeister Harmonies plays Bar Le Ritz P.D.B. Opéra de Montréal, Place des Arts et Le Sac à Dos present Humanitudes – Opéra de rue and a performance by singer Marie-Josée Lord at Cinquième Salle on May 15. If you’re into Russian and Norwegian pagan metal, then you’re into Arkona and Sirenia at L’Astral on Tuesday night – Swedish metal guitarist Yngwie Malmsteen also happens to be in town that night at Théâtre Corona. On Wednesday, singer-songwriter Lewis Watson comes to L’Astral.
Up next:The Giants by Royal de Luxe
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Incipit – COVID-19 | Touching dive into the pandemic
Incipit – COVID-19 | Touching dive into the pandemic
The McCord Stewart Museum presents the exhibition Incipit – COVID-19 which stems from an order placed in 2020 with photographer Michel Huneault to document the first wave of the pandemic in Montreal. The result is 150 images, sensitive, representative, moving, which speak of us: confined, hospitalized, survivors, hospital staff, members of the armed forces. Without forgetting all those who…
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Things to do in Montréal from June 9 to 15
Montréal’s first massive weekend of summer starts now with the F1 Grand Prix, Francofolies music fest, Mural Fest, 375th anniversary and Expo 67 celebrations, Fringe theatre fest, Chagall and Gaultier at the Fine Arts Museum, plenty of live music and more.
Revved for Formula 1 Grand Prix
We’re off to the races June 9-11 as the Formula 1 Grand Prix du Canada turns up the heat at Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve and downtown at the free Crescent Street Grand Prix Festival and Peel Formula events, featuring DJs, fashion shows and driver appearances, and Little Italy’s Grand Prix celebrations. Eat, drink and let loose throughout Grand Prix – get social with the city’s patio scene, and indulge in F1 specials at numerous restaurants and bars. Fashionistas won’t want to miss the free Grand Prix Fashion Event on the third floor of Cours Mont Royal downtown on June 9 or the Bijoux Bijoux jewellery sale at Marché Bonsecours June 9-11 – or any of Montréal’s excellent boutique shopping from Old Montréal and Westmount to the Plateau. And F1 parties keep us up late, from a soirée at The Ritz Carlton to electronic dance music Friday to Sunday at New City Gas, Velvet, Flyjin and many more venues.
Entertainment for all
The sun is out and there’s entertainment in the streets: Summer festival season begins now! French-language music festival Les Francofolies fills Place des Festivals this week with free outdoor shows all afternoon and into the night on several stages – don’t miss Sunday night’s major Québecois star showcase with Yann Perreau, Avec pas d’casque, Safia Nolin and more! Take a walk up traffic-free Saint-Laurent Boulevard during Mural Fest, June 8-18, to watch artists paint new works on buildings’ walls and catch live music – while walking, stop by the St-Ambroise Montréal Fringe Festival outdoor stage for live music and performances – you can buy your tickets to festival shows there too! Science fans young and old will love the Eureka! Festival of free activities in the Old Port. Canada Soccer’s 2017 CONCACAF Gold Cup starts at Montréal’s Saputo Stadium with the Men’s National Team playing Curaçao on June 13. And add more laughs to the weekend with comedian Bill Burr at L’Olympia on June 10.
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Celebrate the city
Watch Montréal history come to life on the Saint Lawrence River in spectacular, free multimedia show Montréal Avudo every night in the Old Port. The Old Port is also where you’ll see Cirque du Soleil’s VOLTA under the big top. From there check out the city’s high-tech 375th anniversary light show on the Jacques-Cartier Bridge. Old Montréal landmark Notre-Dame Basilica, one of the city’s most stunning churches, lights up with beautiful high-tech spectacle Aura, while the surrounding streets illuminate with the historic tableaux projections of Cité Memoire. Urban green space, outdoor eatery and bar in the heart of downtown Les Jardins Gamelin hosts music performances, dance classes, family activities and more all week. Grab a bite from one of Montréal’s great food trucks or pop by the Marché des Éclusiers market in the Old Port for a meal, a drink, local produce and other creations. Head to the Village au Pied du Courrant next to the Jacques Cartier Bridge for music, food and socializing. Walk through the Montréal Museum of Fine Arts Open-Air Museum on Sherbrooke Street. And feel like a kid again on the music-making 21 Swings in Place des Festivals.
Une publication partagée par 1967:Canada Welcomes the World (@expo67world) le 25 Mai 2017 à 9h28 PDT
Expo 67 returns
Montréal takes a look back at city-changing Expo 67 with entertaining and history-rich exhibitions: see colourful outfits and products created by Québec designers at the McCord Museum’s Fashioning Expo 67; photographs tell the tale in The Sixties in Montréal: Archives de Montréal at City Hall; marvel at the technological innovations of EXPO 67: A World of Dreams at the Stewart Museum and Écho 67 at the nearby Buckminster Fuller designed Biosphère; baby boomer youth culture is a blast in Explosion 67 – Youth and Their World at the Centre d’histoire de Montréal; it’s all about ’60s artistic expression in the Montréal Museum of Fine Arts’s Révolution: “You say you want a revolution” and the Musée d’art contemporain’s In Search of Expo 67; Arcmtl presents Expo 67: Avant Garde! – forward-looking, boundary-breaking art of the ’60s at the Cinémathèque Québecoise; and Centre de design de l’UQAM honours architect Moshe Safdie’s Habitat 67 in The Shape of Things to Come.
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Art and film
Don’t miss CHAGALL: COLOUR AND MUSIC at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, ending June 13 – also a must while there: Love Is Love – wedding haute couture and prêt-à-porter by Jean Paul Gaultier. Meanwhile at the Musée d’art contemporain see Hajra Waheed’s The Video Installation Project 1–10 and collections-based Pictures for an Exhibition. Mexican artist Gilberto Esparza’s Plantas autofotosintéticas has us rethinking how biology, technology and art intersect at Galerie de l’UQAM. British artist Ed Atkins intrigues with questions on human bodies, digital creation and reality in video exhibition Modern Piano Music at DHC-ART. Pointe-à-Callière archaeology and history museum presents the fascinating Amazonia: The Shaman and the Mind of the Forest. And see interactive local-history exhibition Mon Coeur est à Montréal – 41 Vies à Découvrir at the Grande Bibliothèque. On screen: The Montreal Israeli Film Festival runs to June 15; travel through virtual worlds in Felix & Paul Studios Virtual Reality Garden at the Phi Centre; explore space in double feature KYMA – Power of Waves and Edge of Darkness at the Rio Tinto Alcan Planetarium, watch saxophone documentary “The Devil’s Horn” under the stars at Place de la Paix on June 12, and the first of the Montreal International Documentary Festival free outdoor film screenings, Swagger by Olivier Babinet on June 14 at 9 p.m. in Parc du Portugal.
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Live music
Along with outdoor shows, French-language music festival Les Francofolies features high-talent indoor shows this week with Québec music giants Yann Perreau, Klô Pelgag, Catherine Major, Pierre Lapointe, Louis-Jean Cormier and more artists at Place des Arts, Rymz et la Mifa Friday night and Peter Peter Saturday at Metropolis, Corneille on Friday and Fred Fortin on Thursday at Club Soda, and eclectic artists throughout the week at L’Astral. The Montréal Chamber Music Festival continues with the Dover Quartet, pianist Robi Botos, the Israeli Chamber Project, pianist Jan Lisiecki, free Matinées Musicales and smartphone concerts. The eclectic and excellent Suoni per il Popolo festival continues all month – this week open your ears to: Gypsy Kumbia Orchestra, Eric Chenaux, Framboos, French post-punk band Frustration, the machine experiments of will eizlini and [the user], composer Nicole Lizée, Aussie experimenters Severed Heads, avant-garde jazz icon Roscoe Mitchell and more.
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Friday night brings folk-country singer-songwriter John Moreland to Bar Le Ritz P.D.B. On Saturday night, welcome back the fun 60s-influenced stylings of The Avalanches at Théâtre Corona, let electronic music move your body while visuals dazzle at Substrate with Suzy.Technology in the SAT‘s dome. Spend Sunday afternoon dancing outside at Piknic Electronik with electronic music from Ardalan, Christian Martin, Mandiz, Woulg and Co/ntry. Later on Sunday, join The Jacksons to celebrate 50 years of their music, at L’Olympia, Grammy winners and ’80s music icons Toto swoop into Place des Arts, and indie rockers Day Wave and Blonder play Bar Le Ritz P.D.B. Monday brings the Classical Spree: Spotlight on Adam Johnson and the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal – a free show demystifying the workings of the orchestra at Place des Arts. The Montreal Folk Festival on the Canal starts June 14 with an opening party at Bar de Courcelle and multi-artist Tributes to Willie Nelson and to folk star Penny Lang on June 15 (followed by a weekend of free music outdoors). See rapper Freddie Gibbs on his You Only Live 2wice tour at Théâtre Fairmount on June 14. And on June 15, British electronic duo Mount Kimbie play Théâtre Fairmount.
Up next:Paint the town with MURAL Festival
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Things to do in Montréal from June 2 to 8
It’s still officially spring, but Montréal summer festival season kicks off this week with outdoor music, dancing and F1 parties. Also see the city’s history rendered in light, the sights of Expo 67, circus and theatre, award-winning classical musicians and more.
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375th birthday celebrations
Watch Montréal history come to life on the Saint Lawrence River in spectacular, free multimedia show Montréal Avudo every night in the Old Port. From there you’ll also see the city’s high-tech 375th anniversary light show on the Jacques-Cartier Bridge. The Orchestre symphonique de Montréal under conductor Kent Nagano plays a Symphony for Montréal, with visuals by Moment Factory, June 2 at Maison Symphonique. Old Montréal landmark Notre-Dame Basilica, one of the city’s most stunning churches, lights up with beautiful high-tech spectacle Aura, while the surrounding streets illuminate with the historic tableaux projections of Cité Memoire. And La Grand Tournée weekend events, presented by Cirque Éloize, run throughout the summer and in every neighbourhood, from group picnics in the park and green alleyway tours to circus shows and cinema under the stars.
Outdoor fun
The first First Fridays of the season turns Olympic Park into a giant food truck rally with music and family-friendly things to do on June 2. Ubisoft video game giant hosts L’été Mile End on June 3, with live music, games and a kids zone. Urban green space, outdoor eatery and bar in the heart of downtown Les Jardins Gamelin hosts music performances, dance classes, family activities and more. While downtown, grab a bite from one of Montréal’s great food trucks or pop by the Marché des Éclusiers market in the Old Port for a meal, a drink, local produce and other creations. Drop by Village au Pied du Courrant next to the Jacques Cartier Bridge for music, food and socializing. Join the crowds of cyclists in the streets during the Go Bike Montréal Festival‘s massive public bike rides Tour de l’Île on June 4 and Tour la Nuit on the night of June 2. The F1 Grand Prix festivities begin June 8 at the free Crescent Street Grand Prix Festival and Peel Formula downtown, featuring DJs, fashion shows, driver appearances and more. Take a walk up traffic-free Saint-Laurent Boulevard during Mural Fest, June 8-18, when you can watch artists paint new works on buildings’ walls. Discover the great tunes of French-language music festival Les Francofolies, opening June 8 with Les Trois Accords, Dumas, Pierre Kwenders and Lydia Képinski in a free outdoor concert in Place des Festivals. Find more outdoor activities in our guide to free things to do this Spring in Montréal.
Expo 67 returns
Montréal celebrates the 50th anniversary of Expo 67 with entertaining and history-rich exhibitions: see colourful outfits and products created by Québec designers at the McCord Museum’s Fashioning Expo 67; photographs tell the tale in The Sixties in Montréal: Archives de Montréal at City Hall; marvel at the technological innovations of EXPO 67: A World of Dreams at the Stewart Museum and Écho 67 at the nearby Buckminster Fuller designed Biosphère; baby boomer youth culture is a blast in Explosion 67 – Youth and Their World at the Centre d’histoire de Montréal; it’s all about ’60s artistic expression in the Montréal Museum of Fine Arts’s Révolution: “You say you want a revolution” and the Musée d’art contemporain’s In Search of Expo 67; Arcmtl presents Expo 67: Avant Garde! – forward-looking, boundary-breaking art of the ’60s at the Cinémathèque Québecoise; and Centre de design de l’UQAM honours architect Moshe Safdie’s Habitat 67 in The Shape of Things to Come. Photography exhibition Aime comme Montréal celebrates the city’s diversity in an installation at Place des arts.
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On stage
Prepare to be dazzled and delighted at Cirque du Soleil’s VOLTA, the most exciting circus around – see acrobats, dancers, parkour experts, motor bike athletes and many more incredible performers under the big top in the Old Port of Montréal. Expect extraordinary, boundary-pushing performances in dance, theatre and art at the international FTA – Festival TransAmériques, including major Polish director and set designer Krystian Lupa’s Wycinka Holzfällen – Woodcutters, Marie Brassard’s La fureur de ce que je pense, Barcelona company El Conde de Torrefiel’s Possibilities that Disappear Before a Landscape, incredible contemporary dance, parties and more. Les Grands Ballets presents the contemporary dance of Jiří Kylián’s Falling Angels and Evening Songs in a triple bill with Stephan Thoss’s Searching for Home, at Place des Arts to June 3. For more theatre, eclectic performances and parties than you can shake a silly stick at, go to the St-Ambroise Montréal Fringe Festival, including a Fringe Prom on June 2, and and a Mini Fringe afternoon for kids and evening opening concert on June 8 at Fringe Park.
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Art and film
Colour and music converge in CHAGALL: COLOUR AND MUSIC at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Hajra Waheed’s The Video Installation Project 1–10 and collections-based Pictures for an Exhibition intrigue at the Musée d’art contemporain and Mexican artist Gilberto Esparza’s Plantas autofotosintéticas has us rethinking how biology, technology and art intersect, at Galerie de l’UQAM. British artist Ed Atkins poses questions on human bodies, digital creation and reality in video exhibition Modern Piano Music at DHC-ART. Pointe-à-Callière archaeology and history museum presents the fascinating Amazonia: The Shaman and the Mind of the Forest. And Parisian Laundry gallery presents intuitive experimental new work by collective BGL. On screen: A full orchestra and choir accompanies Milos Forman’s Oscar-winning film Amadeus at Place des Arts, June 2-3. The Montreal Israeli Film Festival opens with Past Life on June 4 and runs to June 15. Travel through virtual worlds in Felix & Paul Studios Virtual Reality Garden at the Phi Centre. Explore space in new double feature KYMA – Power of Waves and Edge of Darkness at the Rio Tinto Alcan Planetarium. Immerse yourself in live music and audiovisual wonders at the SAT’s Satosphere surround-sound dome, featuring Audio Chandelier: Latitude by Dafna Naphtali, Modulations by Chikashi Miyama and Le Loup, Lifting and Myogram by Atau Tanaka and Lillevan.
Une publication partagée par Festival Musique de chambreMTL (@festivalmusiquedechambremtl) le 20 Juin 2016 à 7h05 PDT
Classical music
The Montréal Chamber Music Festival is not only a must for classical music lovers but for jazz fans too – among the concerts, hear The Dover Quartet perform the complete Beethoven String Quartet cycle and play with the Rolston String Quartet, and check out the June 3 TD Jazz Series show with saxophonist Rémi Bolduc. Pianist Alexandre Tharaud and Les Violons du Roy perform the world premiere of an Oscar Strasnoy commission, June 2 at Bourgie Hall. On June 4, hear the sublime sounds of the Orchestre Symphonique de Longueuil’s Concert du Printemps at Place des Arts, the Association des orchestres de jeunes de la Montérégie‘s year-end concert featuring Mahler’s Symphony No. 1 at the Maison Symphonique, and gala concert concert of the 2017 Prix d’Europe winners and invited guest pianist Xiaoyu Liu at Bourgie Hall. On June 6, the McGill Chamber Orchestra and choirs perform Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana and an oratorio by composer Larysa Kusmenko at Maison symphonique. And the Chœur classique de Montréal performs works of Bruckner to Rossini on June 6 at Maison symphonique.
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More live music
Heaviness prevails on Friday as Tool rocks the Bell Centre with openers Once & Future Band, while things are a little more laid back with Timber Timbre and Sin and Swoon at L’Olympia. The eclectic and excellent Suoni per il Popolo festival continues all month – this week open your ears to: an hommage to Pauline Oliveros, Pharmakon and Dorothea Paas on Friday; War of the Elements, Alan Licht and Red Mass on Saturday; Mary Margaret O’Hara on Monday; Peter Brotzmann on Tuesday; 2boys.tv on Wednesday; Princess Nokia on Thursday, and more. Saturday night sees famed Scottish indie-rockers Franz Ferdinand with opener Omni at Metropolis, hip hop producer Blockhead with guests Kognitif, Grandhuit and Famelik at Théâtre Fairmount, pop singer-songwriter LP with Josiah & The Bonnevilles at Théâtre Corona, and dance to the electro beat of Boombox Cartel and Drezo at New City Gas. Spend Sunday afternoon outside at Piknic Electronik, with music from Prins Thomas, Marcellus Pittman and more. Singer-songwriter pop-star BANKS performs at Metropolis with opener Toulouse on Monday, June 5. Intricate guitar work meets rock-noise as GIRLPOOL plays Bar Le Ritz P.D.B. on June 6. On Wednesday, Toronto’s outsider-folk-meets-electronic ANAMAI plays L’Esco with Petra Glynt, and electro producer Habstrakt brings the beats to Newspeak. And Synthwave artist DAS MÖRTAL launches a new album on Thursday at Bar Le Ritz P.D.B.
Up next:Your summer guide to Montréal’s Olympic Park
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Things to do in Montréal from May 26 to June 1
As Montréal steps into June, outdoor events become a guiding lifestyle principle: enjoy open-air music and artistic performances, see the historic sights of Expo 67, join the Museums Day crowds, and party in the parks and pop-up villages.
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Montréal celebrates
Watch Montréal history come to life on the Saint Lawrence River in spectacular, free multimedia show Montréal Avudo every night in the Old Port. From there you’ll also see the city’s high-tech 375th anniversary light show on the Jacques-Cartier Bridge. An eagerly awaited annual event, Museums Day means almost every museum and major gallery opens free of charge and features special 375th anniversary activities on May 28. The Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal under conductor Kent Nagano plays a Symphony for Montréal, with visuals by Moment Factory, May 31 and June 1-2 at Maison Symphonique. La Grand Tournée weekend events, presented by Cirque Éloize, runs throughout the summer and in every neighbourhood, from group picnics in the park and green alleyway tours to circus shows and cinema under the stars. See how new car trends serve the city at the Montréal Electric Vehicle Show at Place Bonaventure May 26-28. And expect more cyclists on the streets during the Go Bike Montréal Festival‘s Bike to Work Week – followed next week by massive public bike rides Tour de l’Île and Tour la Nuit.
Open-air urban fun
Urban green space, outdoor eatery and bar in the heart of downtown, Les Jardins Gamelin hosts a musical breakfast on Saturday and an evening of salsa music, followed by Sunday morning family activities and a week of live music and more. Patio season in the Latin Quarter opens with a live-music bang presented by Osheaga on Saint-Denis Street May 26-27. While downtown, grab a bite from one of Montréal’s great food trucks or pop by the Marché des Éclusiers market in the Old Port for a meal, a drink, local produce and other creations. Buy locally designed creations and have a drink while grooving to the beat of the Mile Ex Night Market at AlexandraPlatz Bar on May 27. And on June 1, drop by the annual grand opening party of Village au Pied du Courrant next to the Jacques Cartier Bridge, with funk, soul, jazz and reggae spun by The Goods. Find more outdoor activities in our guide to free things to do this Spring in Montréal.
Expo 67 turns 50
Montréal celebrates the 50th anniversary of Expo 67 with entertaining and history-rich exhibitions: see colourful outfits and products created by Québec designers at the McCord Museum’s Fashioning Expo 67; photographs tell the tale in The Sixties in Montréal: Archives de Montréal at City Hall; marvel at the technological innovations of EXPO 67: A World of Dreams at the Stewart Museum and Écho 67 at the nearby Buckminster Fuller designed Biosphère; baby boomer youth culture is a blast in Explosion 67 – Youth and Their World at the Centre d’histoire de Montréal; it’s all about ’60s artistic expression in the Montréal Museum of Fine Arts’s Révolution: “You say you want a revolution” and the Musée d’art contemporain’s In Search of Expo 67; Arcmtl presents Expo 67: Avant Garde! – forward-looking, boundary-breaking art of the ’60s at the Cinémathèque Québecoise; and Centre de design de l’UQAM honours architect Moshe Safdie’s Habitat 67 in The Shape of Things to Come. Photography exhibition Aime comme Montréal celebrates the city’s diversity in an installation at Place des arts. Old Montréal landmark Notre-Dame Basilica, one of the city’s most stunning churches, lights up with beautiful high-tech spectacle Aura, while the surrounding streets are illuminated by the historic tableaux projections of Cité Memoire.
On stage
There’s nothing quite as exciting and fun as the circus, and Cirque du Soleil’s VOLTA is the best circus around – see acrobats, dancers, parkour experts, motor bike athletes and many more incredible performers under the big top in the Old Port of Montréal. Opéra de Montréal presents Giacomo Puccini’s masterpiece La bohème, May 20-27 at Place des Arts. Les Grands Ballets presents the contemporary dance of Jiří Kylián’s Falling Angels and Evening Songs in a triple bill with Stephan Thoss’s Searching for Home, at Place des Arts May 25-June 3. Expect extraordinary, boundary-pushing performances in dance, theatre and art at the international FTA – Festival TransAmériques, including documentary and participative theatre piece 100% Montréal by Berlin-based experimental Rimini Protokoll collective, 7 Pleasures by choreographer Mette Ingvartsen and Time’s Journey Through a Room by Japanese theatre creator Toshiki Okada. And the eclectic and multidisciplinary Festival Accès Asie features free evening performances of nightlife-inspired Insomniaque on May 27 on Prince-Arthur Street and Les sons primordiaux with Indian Dhrupad singers and percussionist the Gundecha Brothers on May 28 at Bourgie Hall.
Art and film
Dynamic Montréal art scenes come together at the Chromatic Festival, May 27 to June 1 – see work by local and international artists at Expo Chromatic at Studio l’Éloi in Mile End, while Nuit Chromatic opens and closes the festival with late nights of music and dancing, and families join in the creative fun of the Chromatic Kids activities on May 28. Colour and music converge in CHAGALL: COLOUR AND MUSIC at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Hajra Waheed’s The Video Installation Project 1–10 and collections-based Pictures for an Exhibition intrigue at the Musée d’art contemporain and Mexican artist Gilberto Esparza’s Plantas autofotosintéticas has us rethinking how biology, technology and art intersect, at Galerie de l’UQAM. British artist Ed Atkins poses questions on human bodies, digital creation and reality in video exhibition Modern Piano Music at DHC-ART. Pointe-à-Callière archaeology and history museum presents the fascinating Amazonia: The Shaman and the Mind of the Forest. And Parisian Laundry gallery presents intuitive experimental new work by collective BGL. Travel through virtual worlds in Felix & Paul Studios Virtual Reality Garden at the Phi Centre, also presenting The Princess Bride 30th anniversary screening on May 27. Explore space in new double feature KYMA – Power of Waves and Edge of Darkness at the Rio Tinto Alcan Planetarium. Immerse yourself in wild audiovisual performances at the Satosphere surround-sound dome: dance work CORE to May 26 and the Sub-Strate party on May 27 with Archipel, Pheek and more electronic producers and visual artists.
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Live music
Shake up Friday night with a massive outdoor concert by The 1975 with openers Pale Waves and Colouring at Parc Jean-Drapeau, or guitarist and singer-songwriter Eric Johnson Band with special guest Arielle at Théâtre Corona, and electronic producers Com Truise and Clark at Théâtre Fairmount. On Saturday night, lose yourself in the sounds of Animal Collective and Circuit des Yeux at Théâtre Corona, head to Cinéma L’Amour for Gallery Never Apart’s Off-Site series with freestyle electronic music by V1984, Jesse Osborne-Lanthier and CECILIA, check out amazing musicians Patrick Watson, Gasandji and Elisapie at the 2017 Prix Ambassadeur De La Conscience at L’Astral, levitate on the dance floor with Blasterjaxx at New City Gas, or dress in your best summer duds and dance with friends and strangers alike at the Montréal Summer Slowdance at MainLine Theatre.
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On Sunday afternoon wear your finest dancing whites for massive outdoor party Bal en Blanc dans le Parc at Parc Jean-Drapeau, featuring electronic producers Martin Garrix, Borgore and more music on two stages. On Sunday night, incredible Grammy-winning singer Norah Jones and her brilliant band grace Place des Arts, Celtic punks Flogging Molly rock Metropolis, and Aussie singer and hip hop artist Tkay Maidza comes all the way to Montréal’s Bar Le Ritz P.D.B. The wonderous Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds make Monday night one to remember at Metropolis. Also wonderful: atmospheric Icelandic experimenters Sigur Rós at Place des Arts, May 30-31. Also on Tuesday, The Weeknd comes to the Bell Centre with opener Rae Sremmurd, and must-see British soul musician Michael Kiwanuka plays Théâtre Corona. Wednesday night welcomes Bonnie Raitt to L’Olympia. On Thursday night, it’s a party at the Bell Centre with EDM-pop duo The Chainsmokers and Kiiara, Lost Frequencies and Emily Warren, while supercool Montréal band She-Devils throws an album release show at Bar Le Ritz P.D.B.
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Things to do in Montréal from May 19 to 25
Warm weather means an explosion of outdoor entertainment in Montréal this week: step back in time to celebrate the city’s 375th anniversary and 50 years since Expo 67, walk with giants downtown, party in the parks and bagel shops, see award-winning performances and rock out to live music.
Celebrate 375 years of Montréal
Keep your eyes open for a truly larger than life event this weekend: The Giants – Royal de Luxe street theatre’s building-sized figures roaming the streets of downtown and Old Montréal. See the city’s history unfold on the Saint Lawrence River in the Old Port in spectacular – and free! – multimedia show Montréal Avudo every night. From the Old Port you’ll also see the high-tech light show on the Jacques-Cartier Bridge. Meanwhile, 17th and 18th century local history comes to life with performers, music, food and more at the New France Market outside the Pointe-à-Callière Museum, May 19-22. Another major 375th project: La Grand Tournée weekend events, presented by innovative circus company Cirque Éloize, runs throughout the summer and in every neighbourhood, from group picnics in the park and green alleyway tours to circus shows and cinema under the stars. And take a tour of ship HMCS Montréal, stationed in the Old Port later this week.
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Open-air parties
Urban green space, outdoor eatery and bar in the heart of downtown, Les Jardins Gamelin holds its grand opening on the evening of May 19, featuring DJ Speakeasy Electro Swing, dance lessons by Salsafolie, kompa funk tunes by pianist Henri-Pierre Noël, R&B duo Skinny Bros followed by the high-energy sounds of Poirier. Join the good times at punk rock festival Pouzza Fest‘s outdoor stage in the Quartier des Spectacles May 19-20 – including music for kids, bouncy castles and more family fun on Saturday morning. While downtown, grab a bite from one of Montréal’s great food trucks or pop by the Marché des Éclusiers market in the Old Port for a meal, a drink, local produce and other creations. On Saturday evening, dance under the stars to traditional and electro music, outside Beaver Lake Pavilion in Mount Royal Park. Legendary Mile End bagel makers St-Viateur Bagel hosts a 60th anniversary block party all day on Sunday, May 21 with entertainment, a kids’ zone, BBQ, drinks and more. And Sunday afternoon marks the first Piknic Electronik massive outdoor dance party of the season, featuring music from Maus, Mightykat and more – followed on Monday (a holiday!) by Tiga and Jacques Greene, all in beautiful Parc Jean-Drapeau. Find more outdoor activities in our guide to free things to do this Spring in Montréal.
Expo 67’s future vision
Montréal celebrates the 50th anniversary of Expo 67 with entertaining and history-rich exhibitions: see colourful outfits and products created by Québec designers at the McCord Museum’s Fashioning Expo 67; photographs tell the tale in The Sixties in Montréal: Archives de Montréal at City Hall; marvel (and maybe laugh a little) at the technological innovations of EXPO 67: A World of Dreams at the Stewart Museum and Écho 67 at the nearby Buckminster Fuller designed Biosphère; baby boomer youth culture is a blast in Explosion 67 – Youth and Their World at the Centre d’histoire de Montréal; it’s all about ’60s artistic expression in the Montréal Museum of Fine Arts’s Révolution: “You say you want a revolution” and the Musée d’art contemporain’s In Search of Expo 67; and Arcmtl presents Expo 67: Avant Garde! – forward-looking, boundary-breaking art of the ’60s at the Cinémathèque Québecoise. Photography exhibition Aime comme Montréal celebrates the city’s diversity in an installation at Place des arts. Old Montréal landmark Notre-Dame Basilica, one of the city’s most stunning churches, lights up with beautiful high-tech spectacle Aura, while the surrounding streets are illuminated by the historic tableaux projections of Cité Memoire.
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On stage
Something fun and a little wild is afoot under the big top in the Old Port of Montréal: Cirque du Soleil’s VOLTA, featuring acrobats, dancers, parkour experts, motor bike athletes and many more incredible performers in a story about being true to oneself. Opéra de Montréal presents Giacomo Puccini’s masterpiece La bohème, May 20-27 at Place des Arts. Les Grands Ballets presents the contemporary dance of Jiří Kylián’s Falling Angels and Evening Songs in a triple bill with Stephan Thoss’s Searching for Home, at Place des Arts May 25-June 3. Expect extraordinary, boundary-pushing performances in dance, theatre and art at the international FTA – Festival TransAmériques, opening May 25 with documentary and participative theatre piece 100% Montréal by Berlin-based experimental Rimini Protokoll collective. The eclectic and multidisciplinary Festival Accès Asie features a Middle-East dance competition on May 20, Perles d’ailleurs Indian dance performances May 25-28, and Balinese ensemble Giri Kedaton and Bollywood Blast dance troupe on May 25-26 at Jardins Gamelin. Gallery Never Apart and The House of Venus present Wiggle, a Wearable Art and Performance Extravaganza on May 20, with guest star hostess NYC’s Candis Cayne. At Centaur Theatre see the hilarious and heartwarming Bed & Breakfast. Meanwhile, The Segal Centre presents true family story How to Disappear Completely and hit musical Million Dollar Quartet, the true rock ‘n’ roll story of Sam Phillips, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Elvis Presley (moving over to Place des Arts May 17-21 for an extended run). And the performers of Passion Burlesque and I am still here theatre shimmy and strut “con mucha passion” in Latino-burlesque show Passion Tropical on May 20 at Café Cléopâtre.
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CORE Etape de travail from Herve birolini on Vimeo.
Art and film
Discover how colour and music converge in CHAGALL: COLOUR AND MUSIC at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, see Hajra Waheed’s The Video Installation Project 1–10 and collections-based Pictures for an Exhibition at the Musée d’art contemporain and Mexican artist Gilberto Esparza’s biotechnical art exhibition Plantas autofotosintéticas at Galerie de l’UQAM. British artist Ed Atkins poses questions on human bodies, digital creation and reality in video exhibition Modern Piano Music at DHC-ART. Pointe-à-Callière archaeology and history museum presents the fascinating Amazonia: The Shaman and the Mind of the Forest. And Parisian Laundry gallery presents intuitive experimental new work by collective BGL. Travel through virtual worlds in Felix & Paul Studios Virtual Reality Garden at the Phi Centre, also presenting docuementary I Am Heath Ledger on May 19 and BMX Bandits on May 23. Explore space in new double feature KYMA – Power of Waves and Edge of Darkness at the Rio Tinto Alcan Planetarium. Immerse yourself in wild A/V performances / IS //// IS ////// and Plateaux to May 19 at the Satosphere surround-sound dome followed by the audiovisually-enhanced dance work CORE, May 23-26. And two major, out-of-the-ordinary creative conferences happen this week: C2 Montréal, an ideas-packed hands-on exploration of creativity in business (with great parties too), May 24-26, and Chromatic Pro, opening the Chromatic Festival, a celebration of Montréal’s diverse art scenes, May 24-25.
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Live music
On Friday night, see what Detroit’s electronic experimenters Adult are up to at Newspeak, while Pouzza Fest opens with a free outdoor punk rock show in the Quartier des Spectacles, late-night shows at Foufounes and Katacombes, comedy, BBQs and more all weekend long – including Lagwagon on the outdoor stage on Sunday night. Blues-punk heavy hitters Boss Hog jam at Bar Le Ritz P.D.B. on Saturday night, while audiovisual wonders add to the electro joys of the Sub-strate party at the Satosphere, and rapper-producer PartyNextDoor gets the dancefloor hopping at New City Gas – followed by a Sunday-night DSTRKT party with Mark Knight. Festival Vue sur la releve wraps up with music by Lydia Képinski, Jérôme St-Kant, Cédrik St-Onge, SHYRE and more at Monument-National May 19-20. Famed Chinese soprano Li-rong Dong performs Chinese traditional folk music and more accompanied by Orchestre Nouvelle Génération and choir at Maison symphonique May 21. On May 23, catch Chicago rockers The Orwells and The Walters at Bar Le Ritz P.D.B. Kent Nagano conducts the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal in Shostakovitch’s Final Symphony and Beethoven’s last piano concerto at Maison symphonique May 24-25. Legendary British punks The Damned rock hard with The BellRays at Club Soda on May 25 while Grammy-winning Chance the Rapper is at the Bell Centre and soulful singer-songwriter JMSN blends R&B.
Up next:Travel back in time at Encounters in New France
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Things to do in Montréal from May 5 to11
With spring comes new delights in Montréal: step back 50 years in exhibitions about Expo 67, conduct an orchestra of fountains downtown, marvel at a Cirque du Soleil show, new theatre and illuminating visual art, listen to live music of all kinds, and explore the city.
Springtime scenes
It’s time to play in the heart of downtown: hop on a colourful, music-making swing at the 21 Swings installation and conduct your own virtual orchestra connected to a system of high-powered water jets in Maëstro – both outside Place des Arts in the Quartier des Spectacles, part of this year’s Digital Spring art-meets-tech creations. Walk through the Botanical Garden‘s blooming grounds and tropical greenhouse and take a tour with avian experts during Bird Fest at the Biodôme at the Montréal Space for Life. Also fun for kids: solving forensic mysteries at the Montréal Science Centre’s CSI: The Experience in the Old Port. Walk up Saint-Laurent to see bright building-sized murals or take a walk off the beaten path to discover welcoming and wonderful quirky spots in Montréal. Find out more about free things to do this Spring in Montréal and the city’s secret corners in this spring’s Grande Tournée events.
Une publication partagée par Spade & Palacio Tours (@spadeandpalacio) le 20 Sept. 2016 à 8h56 PDT
Food and fashion
See the city sights and eat well in the process on Montréal’s best food tours. Explore the menus of new Montréal restaurants, relax with a cup of tea at Montréal’s tea houses, try a signature cocktail at one of Montréal’s hidden bars or indulge your sweet tooth at the city’s best candy shops. Whether you’re a committed vegan or simply love a high-quality animal-free meal, read our ultimate guide to vegan eating in Montréal. As the weather warms to al fresco dining temperatures, keep an eye out for Montréal’s food trucks and street food. In fashion, check out the Phi Centre’s Luxury Rubbish art-meets-boutique, and pick up something new and stylish at Puces Pop, a designer craft fair full of Montréal-made art, housewares, clothing, accessories and more, at L’Église Saint-Denis (5075 Rivard) in Mile End, May 5-7.
Expo 67 and beyond
Montréal celebrates the 50th anniversary of Expo 67 with entertaining and history-rich exhibitions: see colourful outfits and products created by Québec designers at the McCord Museum’s Fashioning Expo 67; photographs tell the tale in The Sixties in Montréal: Archives de Montréal at City Hall; marvel (and maybe laugh a little) at the technological innovations of EXPO 67: A World of Dreams at the Stewart Museum and Écho 67 at the nearby Buckminster Fuller designed Biosphère; baby boomer youth culture is a blast in Explosion 67 – Youth and Their World at the Centre d’histoire de Montréal, and it’s all about ’60s artistic expression in the Montréal Museum of Fine Arts’s Révolution: “You say you want a revolution” and the Musée d’art contemporain’s In Search of Expo 67. Photography exhibition Aime comme Montréal celebrates the city’s diversity in an installation at Place des arts. Old Montréal landmark Notre-Dame Basilica, one the city’s most stunning churches and historical landmarks, lights up with beautiful high-tech spectacle Aura, while the surrounding streets are illuminated by the historic tableaux projections of mobile-app project Cité Memoire.
Une publication partagée par #CINQCENTQUATORZE ® (@jfsavaria) le 28 Avril 2017 à 18h04 PDT
On stage
Incredible acrobats, dancers, parkour experts and motor bike athletes awe in the millennial-era story of Cirque du Soleil’s VOLTA, under the big top in the Old Port of Montréal. A visual and musical spectacle, Russian performance artist Slava Polunin’s Slava’s Snowshow wows at Theâtre St-Denis May 2-14. Inspired by painter Frida Kahlo, Jean Piché and Yan Muckle’s opera Yo soy la desintegración comes to life at Cinquième Salle, May 5-7. In theatre: at Centaur Theatre see Clybourne Park, a neighbourhood drama tracing racial tensions in Chicago, and hilarious and heartwarming Bed & Breakfast; The Segal Centre presents hit musical Million Dollar Quartet, inspired by the true rock ‘n’ roll story of Sam Phillips gathering Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Elvis Presley for an historic recording session; and Aboriginal Spring of Art THREE presents Productions Ondinnok’s dance/theatre performance El buen vestir-Tlakentli May 10–12 at Monument-National. As part of Montréal’s winter-spring dance program: Danse Danse presents Flemish choreographer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker’s Rain at Place des Arts May 4-6; Agora de la Danse presents free outdoor show 15 X LA NUIT every night at 9 p.m. in Place des Festivals; and Mykalle Bielinski’s immersive multimedia opera Gloria wows at La Chapelle May 2-6.
Une publication partagée par Therese Nguyen (@miss.t.nguyen) le 3 Mai 2017 à 15h50 PDT
Art and film
The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts special exhibition CHAGALL: COLOUR AND MUSIC brings vivid colour into your springtime with 340 pieces by the Russian-French artist with musical accompaniment. Over at the Musée d’art contemporain see work by foremost Mexican artist Teresa Margolles and Québec artist Emanuel Licha’s Now Have a Look at This Machine documentary installation, while Galerie de l’UQAM presents Mexican artist Gilberto Esparza’s biotechnical art exhibition Plantas autofotosintéticas. The eclectic and multidisciplinary Festival Accès Asie coincides with Canada’s Asian Heritage Month – this week featuring a recital by Japanese pianist Kimihiro Yasaka on May 6, exhibition Smile of Afghanistan by Iranian photographer Hamed Tabein at the Gesù, the Afghanistan & Culture Shock talk on May 7, and flamenco and Persian Music performance Kimia on May 11. British artist Ed Atkins poses questions on human bodies, digital creation and reality in video exhibition Modern Piano Music at DHC-ART. Never Apart‘s Spring Exhibition features Two-Spirit Sur-Thrivance and the Art of Interrupting Narratives. Pointe-à-Callière archaeology and history museum presents the fascinating Amazonia: The Shaman and the Mind of the Forest. Travel through virtual worlds in films by Felix & Paul Studios at the Phi Centre‘s Virtual Reality Garden and see short films for free in the Not Sure on Talent showcase. Get immersed in new space-exploration double feature KYMA – Power of Waves and Edge of Darkness at the Rio Tinto Alcan Planetarium, or in electroacoustic A/V performance Électro-Acrylique and the high-tech 360° visuals of Orbits at the Satosphere surround-sound dome May 4-13.
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Live music
On Friday night, American country duo Florida Georgia Line whoops it up at the Bell Centre, alt-rock royalty Redd Kross plays Bar Le Ritz P.D.B., Around the World in 80 Raves provides hours of dancing at New City Gas and Kilter and JNTHN STEIN let us dance or happily chill at Newspeak. Saturday brings international entertainment icon Engelbert Humperdinck and his hits to Place des Arts, while the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal presents Organ and Space: Gaze up to the Heavens featuring celestial symphonies by Dvořák and Holst and reflections by astronaut David Saint-Jacques at the Maison symphonique. Also on Saturday night: British shoegaze luminaries Slowdive play L’Olympia, Montréal indie-rockers We Are Munroe kick up a good, loud time at Théâtre Fairmount, and Dutch production duo Bassjackers take over the dance floor at New City Gas. And on Sunday: pop singer-songwriter Jojo with opener Craig Stickland at Théâtre Corona.
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Tuesday night comes alive with punk-garage rockers The Black Lips and Surfbort at Le National. Discover the world’s finest young pianists at the Concours musical international de Montréal, in gala concerts May 9-10 at Place des Arts. Beloved weirdo singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Mac DeMarco plays May 10-11 at Metropolis. Also on Wednesday: metalcore band I Prevail and Starset at Théâtre Corona, hip hop artist Ab-Soul with British rapper Little Simz and Nick Grant at Théâtre Fairmount, and Bare Noize and Lo Key at Newspeak. Thursday shines with legendary French electronic composer and producer Jean-Michel Jarre at the Bell Centre, The M Machine at Théâtre Fairmount, Hessle Audio Showcase with Heatwave, Ben UFO, Pearson Sound and Pangea at Newspeak, rockers Hollerado and PS I Love You at La Sala Rossa, and the Afro-Caribbean jazz-pop sounds of Prince Ali-X and his Ambassadors at Rialto Hall.
Up next:La Grande Tournée: Experience Montréal like a local
The post Things to do in Montréal from May 5 to11 appeared first on Tourisme Montréal Blog.
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Things to do in Montréal April 28 to May 4
Montréal coasts into May with colourful shows from Cirque du Soleil and more international productions, visual art that illuminates the city, the return of gourmet food trucks, the literary delights of Blue Metropolis, and live pop, punk, soul and electro.
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May in motion
Hop on a swing and make some music at mini-playground 21 Swings outside Place des Arts in the Quartier des Spectacles, part of this year’s Digital Spring art-meets-tech creations. It’s the final weekend to see hundreds of pre-migration butterflies at the Botanical Garden greenhouse’s Butterflies Go Free event and the start of Bird Fest at the Biodôme, part of the Montréal Space for Life‘s many activities. Attend readings, panel discussions, workshops, parties and more at the annual Blue Metropolis literary festival, April 24-30 – also featuring a wonderful Children’s Series. Or let kids solve forensic problems at the Montréal Science Centre’s CSI: The Experience. Walk up Saint-Laurent to see bright building-sized murals or take a walk off the beaten path to discover welcoming and wonderful quirky spots in Montréal, from urban caves to arcades to Montréal’s best karaoke bars. Watch Major League Soccer team the Montréal Impact take on the Vancouver Whitecaps at Stade Saputo on April 29. And have fun for free with free things to do this Spring in Montréal.
Food and drink
See the city sights and eat well in the process on Montréal’s best food tours. Treat yourself to fine dining in one of downtown’s most historic and decadent districts during Golden Square Mile Restaurant Week. Catch Québéc’s traditional sugar shack season just before it ends at Cabane à sucre urbaine in Plateau-Mont-Royal on April 30 at Parc Wilfrid-Laurier, featuring maple syrup taffy, pouding chômeur, folk music and more. There’s more sugar where that came from at the city’s best candy shops. Explore the menus of new Montréal restaurants, relax with a cup of tea at Montréal’s tea houses, or try a signature cocktail at one of Montréal’s hidden bars. Whether you’re a committed vegan or just trying it out, consult our ultimate guide to vegan eating in Montréal. And as the weather warms to al fresco dining temperatures, consult our 2017 guide to Montréal’s food trucks and street food.
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On stage
Don’t miss incredible acrobatics, costumes, parkour and motor bikes in the millennial-era story of Cirque du Soleil’s VOLTA, under the big top in the Old Port of Montréal. A visual and musical spectacle, Russian performance artist Slava Polunin’s Slava’s Snowshow wows at Theâtre St-Denis May 2-14. In theatre: at Centaur Theatre see Clybourne Park, a neighbourhood drama tracing racial tensions in Chicago, and hilarious and heartwarming Bed & Breakfast; The Segal Centre presents hit musical Million Dollar Quartet, inspired by the true rock ‘n’ roll story of Sam Phillips gathering Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Elvis Presley for an historic recording session. As part of Montréal’s winter-spring dance program: the National Ballet of Ukraine performs The Marriage of Figaro at Place des Arts; Danse Danse presents Flemish choreographer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker’s Rain at Place des Arts May 4-6; Agora de la Danse presents free outdoor show 15 X LA NUIT every night at 9 p.m. in Place des Festivals; Danse Cité presents TIERRA by Netherlands choreographer Jens van Daele and O Vertigo’s Ginette Laurin, inspired by the invisible maelstrom of the universe, at Cinquième Salle to April 29; and (MORE) Propositions for the Aids Museum merges music, images and movement in memory of the AIDS crisis, at La Chapelle on April 28, followed May 2-6 by Mykalle Bielinski’s immersive multimedia opera Gloria.
Une publication partagée par Musée McCord Museum (@museemccord) le 26 Avril 2017 à 14h59 PDT
Montréal past and present
See how the ’60s changed the city in three new exhibitions: the photography of The Sixties in Montréal: Archives de Montréal at City Hall, colourful outfits and products created by Québec designers for Expo 67 at the McCord Museum‘s Fashioning Expo 67, and the technological innovations of EXPO 67: A World of Dreams at the Stewart Museum. Old Montréal landmark Notre-Dame Basilica is not only one of the city’s most stunning churches but currently lights up with beautiful high-tech spectacle Aura, while the surrounding streets are illuminated by the historic tableaux projections of mobile-app project Cité Memoire. Photography exhibition Aime comme Montréal celebrates the city’s diversity in an installation at Place des arts. And Aboriginal Spring of Art 3 presents Kahnawakeró:non (Kahnawá:ke) artists Carla Hemlock and Babe Hemlock’s Tehatikonhsatatie: For the Faces That Are Yet to Come at the Maison de la culture Frontenac in the HOMA neighbourhood.
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Art and film
Bring vivid colour into your springtime at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts special exhibition CHAGALL: COLOUR AND MUSIC, featuring 340 pieces by the Russian-French artist with musical accompaniment. Over at the Musée d’art contemporain see work by foremost Mexican artist Teresa Margolles and Québec artist Emanuel Licha’s Now Have a Look at This Machine documentary installation. The eclectic and multidisciplinary Festival Accès Asie opens May 2 and coincides with Canada’s Asian Heritage Month – its first week features a free opening night cocktail party at Lion d’Or, recital by Japanese pianist Kimihiro Yasaka on May 6, exhibition Smile of Afghanistan by Iranian photographer Hamed Tabein at the Gesù, and the Afghanistan & Culture Shock talk on May 7. Berlin-based British artist Ed Atkins poses questions on human bodies, digital creation and reality in video exhibition Modern Piano Music at DHC-ART. Never Apart‘s Spring Exhibition features Two-Spirit Sur-Thrivance and the Art of Interrupting Narratives. Pointe-à-Callière archaeology and history museum presents the fascinating Amazonia: The Shaman and the Mind of the Forest. Travel through virtual worlds in films by Felix & Paul Studios at the Phi Centre‘s Virtual Reality Garden and in the high-tech visuals and music of Résonances Boréales and the Music Legacy Project at the Satosphere surround-sound dome to April 29.
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Live music
Friday night’s eclectic: singer Fredy V lauches his world-music meets disco-funk album #ItTakesAVillage at the Phi Centre, atmospheric Brooklyn indie-rockers Wilsen play Bar Le Ritz P.D.B., and none other than cult Canadian metal band Anvil let loose at Foufounes Electriques. On Saturday, popular French singer-songwriter Zaz jazzes up the Bell Centre, South African electronic dance music duo Goldfish make waves at Bar Le Ritz P.D.B., and trance producer Andrew Rayel conjures up a magical night on the New City Gas dance floor. Bernard Labadie returns to conduct The Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal in a concert of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven on April 29 and 30 at Maison Symphonique. Chill out with the live ambient music of Californian-based Tycho, with opener Beacon, on Sunday, April 30 at Metropolis, while folk-soul duo Overcoats and Yoke Lore add more smoothness to Sunday night in an early show at Divan Orange. Legendary British punk band The Damned slips into town with soulful garage rockers The BellRays on Tuesday, May 2 at Club Soda, while L.A. psych-rockers Froth trip us out at Bar Le Ritz P.D.B. Wednesday night features British rockers Catfish & The Bottlemen at Théâtre Corona, ’90s rock stars Supersuckers and The Von Rebels at Divan Orange, hip hop artist and Juno award winner Jazz Cartier at Le Belmont, and the joys of local jazzy singer-songwriter Sara-Danielle at Bar Le Ritz P.D.B. On May 4, Miguel Harth-Bedoya conducts violinist Alexandre Da Costa and the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal in a concert of contemporary Latin music at Maison symphonique, while Florida pop-punk band Mayday Parade and Knuckle Puck give lessons in romantics at Théâtre Corona, and Philly’s Laser Background brings his psych-pop stylings to Bar Le Ritz P.D.B.
Up next:Montréal history awes in Montréal Avudo
The post Things to do in Montréal April 28 to May 4 appeared first on Tourisme Montréal Blog.
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