#mitchell riopelle
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Ăa aurait pu ĂȘtre un film
Une artiste mondialement cĂ©lĂšbre, un compagnon qui l'est moins et son amante amĂ©ricaine quasiment inconnue. Autour de ce trio, Martine Delvaux enquĂȘte dans le but de rĂ©aliser un film. Il en rĂ©sultera l'un des romans les plus originaux de cette rentrĂ©e !
 En deux mots LâidĂ©e de rĂ©aliser un film sur trois artistes, Joan Mitchell, Hollis Jeffcoat et Jean Paul Riopelle va sĂ©duire Martine Delvaux. La romanciĂšre va enquĂȘter pendant plusieurs annĂ©es pour ce projet. Ce livre est le fruit de ses recherches et rĂ©flexions. Ma note â
â
â
(bien aimĂ©) Ma chronique Joan, Hollis, Jean Paul et Martine Une artiste mondialement cĂ©lĂšbre, un compagnon qui lâest moinsïżœïżœïżœ
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#Amour#Art#artiste#Ă©criture#Beaux-arts#Biographie#biopic#cĂ©lĂ©britĂ©#EnquĂȘte#exposition#film#Hollis Jeffcoat#Jean Paul Riopelle#Joan Mitchell#Paris#Passion#Peinture#quĂȘte#scĂ©nario#synopsis#vie de couple
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Anne Madden is particularly well known in both Ireland and France where she has divided her time for the past forty years. Of Irish and Anglo-Chilean origin, Anne Madden spent her first years in Chile. Her parents returned to Europe to live in Ireland and in London, where she subsequently attended the Chelsea School of Arts and Crafts. During this period she was impressed by an important exhibition of American painting at the Royal Academy. It was Abstract Expressionism that opened up new possibilities of experimentation for her at that time. She later met some of these artists in Paris and New York among them Jean-Paul Riopelle, Joan Mitchell, Mark Rothko, Lee Krasner and others with some of whom she exchanged works. The techniques employed included palette knife and paint flows and soon involved the use of multiple canvases as a means of creating pictorial interactions.
She began to exhibit in group shows in London and Dublin from the age of 18. The Burren and her love of wilderness informed these early paintings. Her work was then interrupted for three years by a series of operations on her spine. During that time she met the painter Louis le Brocquy who was then working in London. They married in 1958 and set up house and studio in the south of France, where two sons were born to them, Alexis and Pierre.
From the mid sixties on their comparatively reclusive life in Carros village was changed by the opening of the Fondation Maeght in Saint-Paul, where over the years they were constantly meeting painters, sculptors, writers, poets, and musicians forming friendships resumed in Paris and elsewhere. In 1965 Anne Madden represented Ireland at the Paris Biennale, before regularly exhibiting in that city. From the 1960s she began to pour paint onto the canvas making a series of abstract landscapes influenced by her time as a young girl in the west of Ireland, near the Burren in Co Clare. Between 1970 and 1979 she embarked on a large series of vertical works, their size determined by her height and reach. Reflecting on life and death, the works derived from megaliths and other prehistoric monuments seen in the Burren were elegiac in nature. In the 1980s Madden stopped painting for a time and devoted herself to drawing. This resulted in a series of large works in graphite and oil paint on paper entitled Openings, which formed the exhibition of her work at the Fondation Maeght, in 1983 and represented her in ROSC '84.
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Cappelle Calling - Singer-songwriters - 25 november 2024
Deze maandag was het 50 jaar geleden dat de ondergewaardeerde Britse singer-songwriter Nick Drake overleed. Om die reden stonden alle drie zijn albums centraal als LP van de Week, en was dit een speciale singer-songwriter uitzending van Cappelle Calling. Met daarin verzoekjes van luisteraars voor singer-songwriters.
Terugluisteren kan hier.
Dit was de playlist:
Uur 1:
David Gray - Babylon Zach Bryan - This World's A Giant Carole King - (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman Nick Drake - Time Has Told Me (LP van de Week) Al Stewart - Small Fruit Song Shawn Mullins - Anchored In You Bill Withers - Grandma's Hands Mike Lindsay & Guy Garvey - Saturday Sun (DisCovered) Tracy Chapman - Talkin' Bout A Revolution Elliott Smith - Angel In The Snow (Filmplaat - uit 'Up In The Air') Ben Howard - I Forget Where We Were Townes Van Zandt - Waiting Around To Die Bob Dylan - Don't Think Twice, It's Alright Nick Drake - Riverman (LP van de Week)
Uur 2:
Harry Chapin - Cats In The Cradle Kacey Musgraves - Cardinal Nick Drake - Day Is Done (LP van de Week) Joni Mitchell - A Case Of You Nick Drake - Saturday Sun (DisCovered) Judy Blank - Mary Jane Dave Loggins - Please Come To Boston Nick Drake - Northern Sky (LP van de Week) Jerry Riopelle - So Young Michael Kiwanuka - The Rest Of Me Nick Drake - Pink Moon John Martyn - Solid Air Glen Hansard & Markéta Irglovå - Falling Slowly
Cappelle Calling is iedere maandagavond van 20:00 t/m 22:00 te horen op Radio 90FM. Iedere woensdagmiddag wordt de uitzending herhaald van 18:00 tot 20:00. Ook wordt het programma op vrijdagavond van 20:00 t/m 22:00 uitgezonden op Slotstad Radio, waar het op zondagavond van 22:00 t/m 22:00 wordt herhaald. Suggesties voor DisCovered of De Filmplaat zijn welkom via de Facebookpagina van het programma of via [email protected].
#cappelle calling#playlist#filmplaat#radio 90fm#regio90#lp van de week#90fm#slotstad rtv#slotstad radio
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Volume XIII: The Orozco Collection: Abstract
Karel Appel, Pierre Alechinsky, Enrico Baj, Alan Davie, Jim Dine, Oyvind Fahlstrom, Sam Francis, Robert Indiana, Antonio Saura, Alfred Jensen, Asger Jorn, Allan Kaprow, Alfred Leslie, Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Mel Ramos, Joan Mitchell, Kiki O.K., Claes Oldenburg, Robert Rauschenberg, Reinhoud, Jean-Paul Riopelle, James Rosenquist, Kimber Smith, K.R.H., Sonderberg, Walasse Ting, Bram VanâŠ
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Affiche avant la lettre, Québec - 1967 - Jean-Paul Riopelle
Jean-Paul Riopelle was a painter and sculptor from Quebec, Canada.
Born in Montreal, he studied under Paul-Ămile Borduas in the 1940s and was a member of Les Automatistes movement. He was one of the signers of the Refus global manifesto. In 1949 he moved to Paris and continued his career as an artist, where he commercialized on his image as a "wild Canadian".
In 1959 he began a relationship with the American painter Joan Mitchell. Living together throughout the 1960s, they kept separate homes and studios near Giverny, where Monet had lived. They influenced one another greatly, as much intellectually as artistically, but their relationship was a stormy one, fueled by alcohol.
Source : https://www.wikiart.org
#Jean-Paul Riopelle#Lithography#Art#Abstract Art#Quebec#Canada#Canadian#Black and white#b&w#1960s#60s
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Perroquet vert / Sans titre / Piroche / Iceberg n°5 / Iceberg n°3 / hommage à Rosa Luxembourg
Le Perroquet vert, 1949, huile sur toile, 110,2 x 140 cm â MusĂ©e du QuĂ©bec, QuĂ©bec, Canada â Catalogue raisonnĂ© de Jean Paul Riopelle, tome 1, pp. 277 et 369
Iceberg n°5
Tes titres figurent, ils figurent et orientent Iceberg Noir Tes titres orientent Perroquet vert, je ne peux que le voir Ton perroquet vert dans lâamas ocre, rouge, marron, vert, caca dâoie, Dans lâamas ocre, sable, sienne, perroquet, caca dâoie, jonquille, brun, Sanguine, sapin, prusse, vert-jaune, sable, vermillon Dans lâamas oĂč le blanc perce neige reflet et dessine Dessine le, les perroquets verts qui dans la jungle Dans le sombre de la jungle capte la lumiĂšre rai reflĂšte Dans quelle jungle, vert vert bois, dans quel zoo, dans quelle merde OĂč se cachent perroquet, sa symphonie Est-ce la symphonie du cacquĂštement QuâĂ la surface craquelĂ©e jâentends Câest perroquet lâexotisme de quel Lieu De quel temps Je pense Ă tes grues Riopelle A tes oiseaux, Ă ta Rosa, A quel exotisme ton Perroquet vert Picassien ou braquois RĂ©pond-il, depuis quel langage Quel apprentissage de quelle rĂ©pĂ©tition ?  Figure-t-il Figures-tu Te figures-tu
from / to vert / Rosa
Figure-t-il Figures-tu Te figures-tu Iceberg Noir Pour Ă toi parvenir Dans le blanc, le blanc Qui Ă la surface Au dessus Ne cessera de sâajouter Le blanc sâajoute Comme ponctue Avant dâadvenir De tout recouvrir Quâenfin le blanc existe Et quâau blanc la couleur Ne fasse que le faire Ressortir Sors De tout temps lâĂ©clat de la neige Qui fond Et tient traduit Quel langage Quelle langue Quelles traces Mystiques
Les monstres des bords blancs des cartesÂ
Au bord tout au bord des cartes Quand inconnu Quand le territoire Ă©tait inconnu Pas explorĂ© mais dĂ©sirĂ© La carte Ă©tait laissĂ©e blanche - telle Mise en scĂšne de Claude Ollier - lĂ oĂč le problĂšme des cartes est toujours celui - des envahisseurs Et dans les bords blancs apparaissaient Des monstres Car au bord des mondes Gardent les mondes de LâinterpĂ©nĂ©tration des mondes Les monstres
Photo: Archives Yseult Riopelle, Sans titre, 1964. Huile sur toile, 130 à 160 cm
Trait dâunion (3)
De Riopelle-Mitchelle Je comprends que le trait dâunion est pour toi le blanc Iceberg Noir Pas la toile, le blanc, la toile seule griffure peut lâatteindre Câest le combat pour faire apparaĂźtre la neige Telle quâelle source dans les toiles de Mitchell Alors de la matiĂšre que faire, car la matiĂšre Iceberg Noir chez toi est couleur Du blanc, du blanc que faire, de la peinture De la matiĂšre peinture blanche avalanche que faire De lâĂ©paisseur du matĂ©riau, de ton travail au couteau Câest Ă lâaveugle  retrouver le tracĂ©, la trace, le trait, la figuration, Sous la neige le trait dâunion
Danse dans la neige, 1948 Françoise Sullivan
De la danse de Mitchell sur les toiles Riopelle vient, en 1948 a, Ă©tait Avec Sullivan, Françoise Sullivan Qui ses danse des qures saisons crĂ©ait Riopelle et Maurice Perron Pour Danse dans la neige Sur le Mont Saint Hilaire OĂč lâinvite Riopelle Ă danser A la suivre filmer photographier Yseult a deux mois, Françoise Riopelle la tient dans ses bras De la danse de Sullivan Ă celle de Mitchell Pas Ă pas de la danse sur neige glacĂ©e Ă lâapprĂȘt plat de la toile Pour, Riopelle, Ă la neige NĂ©cessaire de revenir NĂ©cessaire de revenir Ă Saint-Hilaire Dix ans aprĂšs, Mitchell pour invitĂ©e Et Y tracer, Piroche, Y tracer signes Empreintes DansĂ©s dans ses yeux Si souvent
Piroche, 1976, huile sur toile, 203,3 x 549 cm, quadriptyque â UniversitĂ© de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, QuĂ©bec, Canada
Iceberg n° 5, 1977, huile sur toile, 200 x 260 cm
Iceberg n°1
un iceberg câest blanc, et bleu, et transparent, et gris et
immense
Iceberg n°2
je comprends sans comprendre lâabsence de couleur la sĂ©rie presque tout en noir et blanc quand je ressens la couleur câest dĂšs la lumiĂšre pas le soleil la lumiĂšre dĂšs que les nuages se dĂ©placent jour ou nuit soleil lune ou Ă©toiles quand le soleil ne redevient quâune Ă©toile comme une autre absente
Iceberg n°3
cette toile câest Robert le diable Ă lâenvers pour les couleurs et le blanc pas la technique ou alors la technique Ă lâenvers serait de faire miroiter les coup de couteau carrĂ©s le bocage lâĂ©troitesse Ă lâespace dont les rĂšgles sont celles physiques et toujours spirituelles de la rĂ©pĂ©tition qui se compose Ă la composition qui organise le geste
Iceberg n°4
De la nuit noire Jâai ce souvenir enfant Dans le Vercors Dans le Vercors enneigĂ© gelĂ© Dns le Vercors avec Une dizaine dâenfants Et mon grand-pĂšre Qui se perd nous perd Nous avons skiĂ© toute la journĂ©e Et dans la nuit noire sommes rentrĂ©s Câest-Ă -dire Dans la nuit dâun plateau oĂč les nuages Cachaient de la nuit toute lumiĂšre Dans la nuit de nos yeux de toute la journĂ©e FatiguĂ©s de la neige Blanche ou grise, marron et verte Transparente et jaune Une branche de sapin sous la neige lâirise Il y a ce blanc trĂšs particulier de la neige tassĂ©e Et toutes ces couleurs que les sensations procurent Dâune neige lĂ©gĂšre qui tombe et grise Sur les paupiĂšres les joues Devient rouge la neige brĂ»lure De celle qui glisse sous les patins fartĂ©s Et wootche wootche wootche De celle qui a fondu regelĂ© fondu OĂč se posent fleurs flocons qui nuit tombe se laissent prendre intactes sous des mĂštres encore visibles Celle oĂč trop sont passĂ©s bouillie Celle brillante de reflets Il y a lâeau grumeuleuse  Il y a de la neige mon amour
Extrait de MaĂźtresse-Cherokees de JosĂ©e Yvon (une Mitchell canadienne telle que jâimagine que Riopelle aurait pu la rĂȘver)
Impossible. Mitchell ne meurt pas. Elle est de celles qui n'ont rien Ă perdre, noire Ă©vasive d'actes fous, sincĂšres mais dangereux.Mitchell est descendue de la Baie James, sept ans de travail parcimonieux dans un «office» d'une LG2 paralysĂ©e, sans bouger, elle attendait, elle Ă©tait amoureuse. Au printemps du dĂ©sespoir, les hommes ont changĂ© de camps. La peur l'a accablĂ©e trĂšs vite. OĂč est-il cet amant qui l'avait volĂ©e? Personne. Elle tremble malade de biĂšre dans le bureau hurlant. Elle a revirĂ© le pupitre sur le nom des gars qu'elle devait dactylographier. Un dĂ©sert dans ce camp Ă©lucidĂ©. Rien... Elle a empoignĂ© la petite dans la main droite, son «mickey» dans la poche gauche. Su' le pouce, pas de bagages, ça dĂ©pendrait des lifts... CouchĂ©es dans un lit ou sur le bord d'un ruisseau. Est-ce que ça s'appelle un pays? Quinze jours le long du lac Ă l'Ourse. Se laver sans faire de bruit dans toute la splendeur des cris de forĂȘt, Donna serrĂ©e qui halĂšte plus fort que les hululements. Elle lui raconte que tous les moutons blancs sur les vagues douces cahotent bien moins violents que sa petite Ă©cume tassĂ©e en cris embrasĂ©s de dĂ©sir dĂ©ferlant. Elles buvaient dans la riviĂšre glacĂ©e, jusqu'Ă ce qu'un vieux garde-chasse surgisse, comme le vieillard Ă la lanterne... Elles ont fui dans les sous-bois d'un silence consentant, Ă©perdues, des milles jusqu'Ă l'Ă©claircie, une petite route de terre... On se rend toujours oĂč l'on focuse aller. «I left a woman waiting». Entra dans la premiĂšre brasserie, la petite n'est pas servie, elle dort anyway. Une chambre Ă louer au-dessus de la taverne, couche la petite et redescend boire jusqu'Ă la fermeture.
Iceberg n°3, 1977
Rosa critique
L'indépendance de la pensée est pour nous de la plus haute importance. Or, elle ne sera possible que si, abstraction faite de toute calomnie. de tout mensonge, de toute injure, nous accueillons avec gratitude et sans distinction de tendance, les opinions exprimées par des gens qui peuvent se tromper, mais qui n'ont en vue que le salut de notre Parti. Je ne parle pas pour moi, mais d'une façon générale : c'est avec joie qu'on devrait accueillir des idées nouvelles puisqu'elles rafraßchissent un peu le répertoire suranné, routinier de notre propagande.
Rosa Luxembourg, Liberté de la critique et de la science, 1899
L'hommage Ă Rosa Luxemburg (dĂ©tail) Â
L'hommage Ă Rosa Luxemburg (dĂ©tail), 1992. Acrylique et peinture en aĂ©rosol sur toile  , 155 x 1 424 cm (1er Ă©lĂ©ment); 155 x 1 247 cm (2e Ă©lĂ©ment); 155 x 1 368 cm (3e Ă©lĂ©ment), Coll. MNBAQ. Don de l'artiste.Â
Oiseaux-Blancs
Les grues blanches De ton Hommage Ă Soleil Rose, Iceberg Noir, Ces grues blanches Ce sont autant dâiles Qui reflĂštent nĂ©gatives Les toiles de la rue FrĂ©micourt Câest le blanc ceint Le blanc-seing Que tâaurais enfin donnĂ© Mourant Soleil Rose Tu couronnes le blanc Du corps des grues Elle-mĂȘme Dâun halo noir Tout le blanc enfin revenu Au centre du centre Dans le corps vivant Dâoiseaux coureurs Et Ă©lastiques Ce blanc cet hommage Câest tirĂ© les coins des tableaux Que tu as aimĂ© dâelle Faire un nĆud Ă ton mouchoir Ne jamais lâoublier Câest le blanc qui cesse de tâenvahir neige Câest ce qui de toi fond dâelle, Soleil Rose qui sâaurĂ©ole et que tu peins Iceberg Noir
#mitchell riopelle#mitchell riopelle un couple dans la démesure#jean-paul riopelle#joan mitchell#un couple dans la démesure#iceberg n°5#iceberg n°3#perroquet vert#hommage à rosa luxembourg#rosa luxembourg#josée yvon#maßtresse cherokee#Liberté de la critique et de la science#fhel#landerneau#prolongations#poésie critique#kawala#piroche#danse dans la neige#françoise sullivan#sans titre#monstres#bord des cartes#blanc dans la peinture
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Jean-Paul Riopelle / Joan Mitchell
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NON-AMERICAN POSTWAR ART VIII
JEAN-PAUL RIOPELLE
In the late 1940s and â50s, quĂ©bĂ©cois painter Jean-Paul Riopelle took part in many of the rebrandings of the European art world, which had been disrupted by the war and then displaced by what Irving Sandler has called âthe triumph of American painting.â
Riopelleâs conception of art as the unconscious rendered in abstract forms through the agonistic confrontation with the canvas perfectly mirrors the uneasy cohabitation of lingering indigenous Surrealism and emergent Action Painting Ă lâamĂ©ricaine in the Ăcole de Paris.
Riopelleâs art also participates in another major strain of that catch-all movement, which might be called Post-Post Impressionism. What began in the early 1950s the outright imitation of Jackson Pollockâs direct application of paint from the tube on to the canvas transformed into heavy impastos applied by palette knife in serried rows of hatchmarksâCĂ©zanne crossed with Van Gogh, or a glamourous. extroverted Nicolas de StaĂ«l.
New York School refugee Joan Mitchell showed Riopelle the way past Abstract Expressionism. Living next door to Giverny, both ex-patriates profited from prolonged proximity to the Nymphéas.
NON-AMERICAN POSTWAR ART SERIES: I: Pierre Soulages II. Renato Guttuso III. Guiseppe Capogrossi IV: Nicolas de Staël V: Paolo Scheggi VI: Takeo Yamaguchi VII: Serge Poliakoff
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Paris, 1963. Le couple Joan Mitchell et Jean-Paul Riopelle dans le sĂ©jour de lâatelier-appartement de la rue FrĂ©micourt.
Photo : Heidi Meister
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Mes Nympheas, 33, Joelle Kem Lika
To paint water lilies in 2015 ?? I have been longing to meet Claude Monet for a long time, by this dialogue between painters that has been going on for... a long time... Monet has created this work of art surprising by the modernity of its volume, Monet as the precursor to monumental art works, but also by the way he shaped his increasingly abstract flowers, the harmony of the colours... the choice to abandon the structuring logics of landscape painting... announcing impressionism. Realism and abstraction... In his time, Monet used to dialogue with Jongkind, Bourdin, his elders... And also Courbet, Manet... Courbet used to hate idealism. « Because the ideal, according to him, is far poorer, far less vast, far less mysterious than reality. » (text by Yvon Taillandier in his book : Monet) My search between abstract and figurative-realism has led me to create an accessible kind of abstraction, full of possibilities, thanks to a little figurative «key», inspired by the realism of a water lily... Monet has inspired a whole generation of painters such as Jackson Pollock, Joan Mitchell, Jean Paul Riopelle, Sam Francis. Each one of them moves me, profoundly... I love Pollockâs work, the freedom of his movement, his will to exceed the limits of the frame, Riopelle and his overlapping colours a contemporary vibration and impressionism, Mitchell and her completely abstract paintings, so full of vivid colours... the pure abstraction of Sam Francis, and Jenkins... When contemporary art is recognized by its provocative quality, I want to take a different path that leads, not to construction, structuring, nor to destruction or destructuring, but to feeling our « pulse of life », in our bodies, reconnect this inner source. To feel the link between the beauty of nature, the strength of the living energy, and our lives, our bodies,. A planet like a big body, a common emotion and sensuality. With these paintings, I would like to draw the viewer towards the beauty of real nature, magnificent and so close, all the time, in every context, ocean, forest, field, flowers, rivers, mountains... that needs nothing else but a benevolent and admiring eye. I enjoy approaching the theme of these flowers, in my work with trowels, knives, and other tools created for the occasion... my search for matter effects... of transparencies, light... I have worked with a harmony of colours composed of blues, yellows, greens, turquoises, violets, contemporary and gay, lively... close to Nature. And played with the reflections, the shadows. I love to start off with the beauty of Nature, real, and to let inspiration come to me... an inner vision, that guides my movements. My work on water lilies has procured me great pleasure : to create abstract paintings, and to open a gate to a whole imaginary world... Are we in a blue jungle, on a river bank, a lake... under trees and reflections of the sun... ??? Surprised at first, every viewer travels as he pleases and remains contemplative, calm, peaceful, joyous... The meaning I want to give to my paintings... : to testify of the threatened beauty of our planet⊠We can generate a new world, new relationships⊠a new consciousness of being, in order to change the vicious circle of destruction in which we are⊠I believe there is a whole part of humanity who want to fight to save our planet, and to build in stead of destroying... I have been surprised to read the following in the dictionary of symbols : « A big lotus brought out of the essential waters is the cradle of the sun in the first morning. Opening their corolla at dawn and closing it in the evening, the white water lilies, to the Egyptians, concretized the birth of the world from the wet. » In India, water lilies also represent the beauty of Life, searching the light of the sun, born in the rich mud at the bottom of the water... Even if we wade in the mud of our human meanders, we can feel the richness of our pulse of life, in the bottom of our hearts, and choose to live it, to express it, to let it get the upper hand over our death pulse... Surviving... is exhausting, and doesnât lead any where... I choose to paint the pulse of life, Eros rather than Thanatos... I would like my water lilies to tempt people who contemplate them to dive into peace, beauty, and so finding a kind of resource of natural tenderness and strength, this pulse of life that is present inside all of us, in each flower, each grain of sand, each drop of water, for what we need to do : to reveal ourselves alive, and change every thing. To abandon constraints, to believe in Life... to believe in the butterfly effect, there are already many people on earth who believe in Life... and fight for Life... I love to believe that we can create a force of Life... stronger than anything else.
https://www.saatchiart.com/art/Painting-Mes-Nympheas-33/718590/3257592/view
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Monet et lâabstraction
Monet and abstraction
Thierry DufrĂȘne, Jacques TaddĂ©i, Paloma Alarco, Michel Draguet
Hazan, Paris 2010, 175 pages, ISBNÂ 9782754104791
euro 40,00
email if you want to buy [email protected]
L'héritage de Monet continue de susciter de nouveaux rapprochements et son influence auprÚs des peintres abstraits de la seconde moitié du XXe siÚcle est, depuis quelques années, l'objet de nombreuses recherches.             Cette exposition poursuit ce travail de réflexion et propose un face à face de quelque 44 tableaux impressionnistes et abstraits.                       Le parcours s'attache à mettre en lumiÚre les résonances de l'oeuvre de Monet avec celles des peintres abstraits : #Pollock, #Rothko, #Hofmann, #Gottlieb, #Vicente, #Riopelle, #Krasner, #Tobey, Still, #Francis, #Mitchell, #Zao Wou-ki, etc. Au milieu du XXe siÚcle, la « redécouverte » de Monet à travers la matérialité de sa peinture, sa technique « all-over », ses touches vives et ses formes estompées sont une véritable révélation pour la jeune génération de l'abstraction américaine, mais aussi pour les adeptes des « informalismes » européens. Paris, Musée Marmottan, 16 juin-26 septembre 2010
21/04/20
orders to: Â Â [email protected]
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#Monet#Claude Monet#abstraction#art exhibition catalogue#Musée Marmottan#peintres abstraits#all-over#fashion inspirations#fashionbooksmilano
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Joan Mitchell (1925 Chicago, USA - 1992 Paris, FR)
Untitled, c.1955
Oil on canvas, private collection
MITCHELL | RIOPELLE Un couple dans la démesure
16 dĂ©cembre 2018 au 22 avril 2019Â
Fonds HĂ©lĂšne & Ădouard Leclerc, Landerneau
Photo : Helene Aupee 03/2019
#art#modern art#abstract expressionism#painting#joan mitchell#american artists#oil on canvas#exhibition#fonds hélÚne et édouard leclerc#landerneau#france
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#Repost @matchwithart La rencontre de deux grands Ă la @fondationlv. Le lien entre Joan Mitchell et Claude Monet mâĂ©tait familier grĂące au musĂ©e de lâOrangerie, oĂč une oeuvre de lâartiste amĂ©ricaine vous attend Ă la descente des escaliers. Cette exposition met face Ă face deux artistes Ă l'expression artistique diffĂ©rente mais dont les palettes de couleurs se rejoignent parfaitement. Il y en a pour tous les goĂ»ts, ceux qui aiment la douceur de Claude Monet, avec des oeuvres qui nâont pas Ă©tĂ© vues depuis un siĂšcle en France ; la dĂ©couverte dâune autre Joan Mitchell, avec des tableaux recouverts de matiĂšre et de couleur oĂč le blanc nâa plus sa place. Pour ce premier match, place Ă Mitchell. Alors quâelle construit sa carriĂšre dâartiste Ă Chicago, Joan Mitchell dĂ©couvre la peinture europĂ©enne, Claude Monet, Vincent Van Gogh, des peintres de la nature, aux paysages figuratifs. Elle se familiarise plus tard, Ă New York, avec des artistes comme Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock dont lâart est plus abstrait, expressif. Elle est une artiste reconnue et expose dĂ©jĂ rĂ©guliĂšrement ses oeuvres. En 1955, Ă Paris, elle rencontre le peintre canadien Jean-Paul Riopelle, qui devient son compagnon jusqu'en 1979, et partage sa vie entre notre capitale et New York avant de venir sâinstaller en France. Ses oeuvres commencent Ă porter les noms lyriques de « Tilleul », « un jardin pour Audrey », montrant que son inspiration est dĂ©sormais la nature. Mais elle ne veut pas la reprĂ©senter telle quâelle la voit, mais telle quâelle la ressent, se basant sur ses souvenirs plutĂŽt que sur la rĂ©alitĂ© dĂ©clarant « Je prĂ©fĂ©rerais laisser la nature oĂč elle est. Elle est assez belle comme ça. ». C'est naturellement que l'artiste se rapproche de sa source d'inspiration en s'installant Ă VĂ©theuil, un village situĂ© prĂšs de Giverny... Joan Mitchell Beauvais, 1986 Exposition « Claude Monet â Joan Mitchell, dialogue » Ă la Fondation Louis Vuitton jusquâau 27 fĂ©vrier 2023 ââââââââââââââââââââââââ Avec le soutien de lâĂ©cole de management de lâart et de la culture @icart_officiel ââââââââââââââââââââââââ #fondationlv #fondationlouisvuitton #claudemonet #monet #joanmitchell #MonetMitchell @joanmitchellfdn https://www.instagram.com/p/CjuSP3YI_xu/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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Artist Interview #1 - JĂ©rĂŽme Nadeau
William: So for redundancy's sake just I guess introduce yourself and the basic gist of what youâre interested in your work.
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah so Iâm originally from Levis, which is across the river from Quebec City. And I moved to Montreal about 10 years ago to go to Concordia in Photography. I did my undergrad there and I did an MFA there that I finished two years ago. I also studied during my MFA in Gothenburg in Sweden. While doing my MFA I also a thing called Soon.TW which is a publishing house and then two years ago when I finished my MFA we actually turned the project into a contemporary art gallery which is right there. And at this point we decided to take over this space and turn it into an actual physical space. I was joined by two artists Jean-François Lauda and Nicolas Lachance, and then at some point in the process thereâs Simon who joined us. Simon was in Chicago doing his MFA, we also studied together we did our undergrad together and then he moved to the United-States and came back. So we started that project. In my practice Iâm interested in photography and like I said before, mostly in the process of photography so whatâs usually left unseen from the photographic process. Exploiting photography for what it is. Kind of a challenging indexical link with reality.
William: Did you start your art experience with photography or?
JĂ©rĂŽme: No I actually started, well in Cegep I studied film-making and by the end of that I realized I was never going to do that. Iâm still really interested in cinema and yeah I still think itâs the most amazing medium in the way that it has this kind of capacity to attract mass media even with very kind of-
William: Artistic?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah artistic aesthetic or philosophical kind of questions and itâs something that goes beyond any other medium which I think is interesting but itâs this thing where you have to collaborate with many people and I donât know⊠Iâm not a fan of that industry which is something that is always a long process to be able to achieve that and I saw that coming quite early. I mean what you need to do to be able to make it I guess in this world. At this point I finished studying filmmaking and then I went travelling to Australia. And I was like should I  buy a video camera or a photo camera and it was kind of at the beginning of digital photography being kind of affordable so I bought this digital camera for a few hundred dollars which is now completely obsolete. Iâve kind of learned to photograph through that, like there was a manual mode and I started to kind of experiment with it and I really-
William: So then you learned photography digitally before eventually going back to analog?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah exactly but again I was at this point interested in abstraction. I remember the portfolio I submitted for Concordia for the undergrad was a lot of like longer exposure and colourfield photographs and it was all not necessarily very straightforward and I was also very interested in painting but I have absolutely no talent in painting and no patience toâŠ
William: To get better?
JĂ©rĂŽme : To get better and Iâve never been formally trained as a painter so I like I remember as a teenage kind of, like in the backyard making this huge kind of Riopelle painting. Like I had a lot of fun with the process of painting but just, yeah I was lacking this kind of training that would allow me to get better. Or be able to actually do-
William: Like take something from your mind and put it onto the canvas?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Exactly, exactly. It felt like it was really limited but I was very interested in painting and I remember I had an art history class and I was interested actually with Canadian painting. Painters like Riopelle and stuff like that. I remember Riopelle because he died on this island called Isle-aux-Grues which is not too far from Quebec city, itâs in the middle of the river and my momâs cousin has a house there so yeah I just remember seeing his work and at the National Museum in Quebec (city) and being kind of⊠really transported by his practice. I never really had a contact with art growing up like my family was just more involved in sports and stuff like that. So I remember walking into that museum and just kind of, I donât know, really amazed by that painting. You know what I was saying about cinema? Like I kinda found a little bit of that in his work you know so I was just feeling stuff and is that even possible? Like you canât really understand that from just reading about it or having a slide lecture in Cegep about it. So I was kind of mystified by that in a way but then again it was such on a large scale so this understanding of materiality that was kind of beyond me.
William: So do you think that experience informed your future work?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Oh yeah it informed the rest of my life. Like I remember that moment and they still have that painting in a permanent collection and I go back almost every year to see it. And there was this big show he did at the end of his life called the: âLâhommage Ă Rosa Luxemburgâ because he had this relation with Joan Mitchell, the American painter, and when she passed he started this 120 meter long painting thatâs an homage to her and it was shown in its entirety. It was bought by the museum now so itâs on permanent view and last year they actually made a show of Joan Mitchell and Riopelle too which was kind of interesting. So yeah I grew up with that-
Wanda: How young were you when you saw it?
JérÎme: I was in High School when I saw that for the first time so it just stuck with me and this kind of part of my life life where I started being more aware of like⊠culture in general but at this point there was internet but it was harder to find independent movies and even in Quebec city to find this kind of more edgier stuff.
William: And yeah especially in Levis too.
JĂ©rĂŽme: But a young age I started working in Quebec and getting involved in music a lot too. The electronic music scene was kind of beginning so I started being involved a little with film-making and a lot with music at this point. So you know I started making music, producing music, it was the beginning of what they call laptop techno. So you were moving on from vinyl and actually the programs like Live just came out and so it was quite easy to make music in your bedroom.
William: Do you think music still informs your work in some way?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah, yeah totally. I mean not necessarily in terms of production because when I moved to Australia there was this, I donât know, itâs still pretty expensive to buy records and just kind of constantly invest in all of that so I decided to travel and I started focusing on photography and when I came back I applied for Concordia while I was away and I got back and moved directly to Montreal to study. So I already made my choice to pursue visual arts and that music was not going to be a number one priority but its always been there. Like Iâve DJâd for the past 15 years as a side job so I think itâs more this aspect that informs my work. Well not that it informs it but I feel that-
William: Do you work with music? Like in your space?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Oh yeah I listen to music all the time like if I donât have my headphones thereâs a good chance Iâm not going to the studio. I know that thereâs a lot of artists that canât work with music but with me itâs just the opposite.
William: I kind of feel the same way when I do any sort of series I make a playlist specifically for it and I only listen to it when I working on it.
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah, sometimes Iâm not even listening like I know, I donât do it here as much but when I was doing my MFA I had a studio in a basement of the VA so there was no signal whatsoever so I could listen just to the same song over and over. Itâs just you know especially physically when Iâm working you donât really listen to it. And thereâs this thing where I feel, not with painting but with working even just on the computer, where you really get in the zone of something. Like it just feels like a different state of mind and thereâs a lot of exterior signals that can be blocked out. But I just feel that music is just filling this weird void and it just allows me to focus. But sometimes you know if I do more quiet operation I listen just to white noise but I need something-
William: So you just essentially need noise?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah
William: Does it, like are you looking for a mood or just a feeling while working or?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Hmm not necessarily I mean it informs what Iâm listening to. But yeah it just gives me this form of energy. Especially when Iâm working with headphones, it feels like Iâm really blocking out the exterior and allows me to go deeper with my thoughts and with what Iâm doing. Thatâs the only thing thatâs happening is what Iâm doing right now which is nice.
Wanda: If youâre in the space by yourself, do you ever listen to the music with no earphones?
JĂ©rĂŽme: No, no, then I get scared because someone would walk in and Iâm just there with my headphones playing super loud.
William: Yeah I can only work with headphones too, I think itâs the physical part of having something in your ear that help block out those signals that you were talking about.
JĂ©rĂŽme: And when Iâm writing I canât really listen to any music, it has to just be sound. Or I have earplugs too sometimes. So I think it has something to do with my ear, maybe they need to be blocked.
Wanda: How do you see yourself or express yourself through your work?
JĂ©rĂŽme: To kind of go back to what I was saying with music and cinema then photography. I started at Concordia and the first thing weâre doing in the 210 class, you start working in the darkroom. Then I got really absorbed by the process of it. Like being in the darkroom. Especially starting with a digital camera where you take an image and then you put it on the computer screen you donât really question it. It just appears there and itâs kind of magical but you donât really see it as a physical thing. Then working in the darkroom and learning the basic of the film and I was really interested in the colour theory and physics behind photography. The mistakes that would happen in the darkroom too because there was a lot obviously. But I feel like something that informed my work up until now is following what messed up and try to accentuate it and always playing. I feel like the more I learned about the process of photography the more I could dismantle it. To just focus on certain specific areas of the photographic process.
So I guess what Iâm trying to achieve⊠itâs a really hard question. Itâs not that I donât think I have anything to say. I just feel we feel in really complex times. Specially medium specificity and setting up these things itâs the process of photography thatâs speaking for itself itâs not necessarily me. Itâs funny because itâs always what Iâve been interested in, just the process, physics, and theory. And someone once mentioned to me itâs also a way of hiding any sort of personal expression from the work which could or could not be seen as a reflection of my personality. But coming from that person it really stayed with me. Itâs what really motivated me a while later to introduce the writing in the actual work. So itâs a way to make something about the process a bit more personal through poetry and through self-expression that I feel a strong connection through poetry and visual abstraction. I feel that itâs functioning the same way. Obviously one is more visual than the other one but I feel the end process in your brain is quite similar and I thought it was a way to do that. And obviously even that isnât really straightforward but for me thereâs a connection to an event or a moment or person, something like that. It could be reflective, even if itâs abstract. I can look back at older work, me having produced that, itâs a moment in your life and it transports you to where you were. But for everyone else itâs not possible to achieve that. So I feel that leaving little clues can make that happen.
William: When did you realize you needed to have a studio space? And when you were trying to find a studio what were you considering? Did the image in your mind translate into reality?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Iâve always wanted a studio space. I was hanging around painters and I mean I had a studio in my apartment for awhile. I lived with a roommate and we had this huge apartment so I took the dining room and made it my studio. But at some point I was working with chemicals so I had to work outside and it just wasnât convenient to do that in your own house. But I mean I was obviously restricted by budget and when I started the MFA I was pretty excited because you have a studio. Then I realized in photography you donât really have a studio itâs an office on the same floor as where the labs are so I was pretty disappointed. But I started working in the spray painting room and using that but everything was scattered and always at school so it didnât really make sense to have an outside studio at this point. When I moved to Sweden I was told it was the same thing that in this program you have this huge studio and some people even lived in it but when I moved there they decided to transfer me into the photography program and the photography program only had offices too so I was like are you kidding me. But they found me a little place in the basement where I could work and I came to Concordia and I applied for a studio in the VA which is more of a traditional space. I could do anything, and I really liked it. It was really small. Maybe half the size of here, no windows, I would just close the door-
William: And it was kind of like the earplugs?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Exactly. I could just close the door, no computer, it was just work. So I feel it was a really productive time. Then after your second year of your MFA you donât have access to a studio anymore so you still have access to the facilities but you donât have a physical space thatâs assigned to you. So during that summer, my friend Ătienne was subletting from Alexy and was going to Glasgow. So it was a last minute thing. I was working and I asked him what are you doing with your studio when youâre leaving? And he didnât know so I was like ok Iâm going to sublet it from you. So I worked here for that whole summer. It was while he was gone that the lease was transferred through Vincent. And Vincent asked if I wanted to stay since weâre doing this photography based studio and I said yes. Ătienne came back and for a few months I was in a corner and we decided to share the space for that time.
Wanda: Youâve had studios with other people and by yourself, do you think you express yourself differently when youâre sharing a studio versus when you have a space to yourself? Also do you think it shows in your work?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah totally. Now that youâre saying that Iâm thinking that I had another studio for a few months in that building on Van Horne & Parc but it was before they renovated it. My friend he had a studio there for a year but the studio was maybe as big as both our studios here. There were like six people there And he had this big table and heâs doing collage⊠but I never actually worked in there I used it as storage because it was at the moment that I had to leave the studio at Concordia before I found it here. So I moved some of the stuff from that office there. But when I found this studio it was pretty much empty, just a few paintings tossed up along the wall so I had this whole 600 square feet space to myself. So I was like yeah...yeah I donât want to be with six people in a small space. But sharing the space with Ătienne was great because we were really close friends and we had the space open and it was messy. We had a beam here and he would hang stuff so there was some separation but then we decided to build this wall so even though itâs a shared space it feels pretty private. I can just close the door here and work without being disturbed. Weâre also pretty quiet and respectful here so if someone is working we donât just knock on the door for anything. Especially being here, it happens quite often that people leave and donât even know so they lock the door so it feels like itâs my own studio.
Itâs also pretty convenient with the gallery being there because I can work while tending the gallery. And now itâs pretty necessary because we sometimes have to use the studio as storage space.
Wanda: Do you see a change in your work when youâre working in a studio alone versus with a lot of people?
JĂ©rĂŽme: I couldnât really do it with a lot of people like let's say right now Iâm working on a lot of different stuff at the same time so thereâs a lot of stuff thatâs not resolved and I donât necessarily want people to see that. And itâs where having the gallery is a little inconvenient because if thereâs a vernissage weâll do a bar here and itâs open so I have to clean. I donât want this stuff around that I donât want people to see. But then again I could decide to leave it closed but I donât really mind that. I think itâs actually something thatâs a good exercise, knowing that some people are coming over. Like if youâre having a studio visit you can pull some stuff out. Especially when youâre in the process of making your work, to look at all your work. It informs you And the way I work, I try not to work series even though itâs really difficult especially when it comes time to mount a show and propose a show. To dig in a whole lot of different processes and see how they talk to each other. And that, to follow back to what you were saying about music, thatâs where I find a link. Especially with DJâing and mixing. Thereâs a whole lot of digging and using things that you couldnât really see together and when you put them together thereâs this dialog that opens and goes beyond the individual work that starts to speak. Thatâs something that I like, itâs not really something that you can see and just sit down and say oh Iâm going to do that. Sometimes itâs just by chance, Iâll be pulling stuff out from boxes and then I look at them and say âoh my god!â. It could be formally or in the content or me and how I see it, but thereâs a connection happening. Thatâs something that I really like and try to do and so when people do come over itâs a chance to do that and rearrange and look at your work in a different way.
William: Since youâve already built and organised a studio, is there anything that you would warn against to anyone building their own studio or just general advice?
JĂ©rĂŽme: I guess it depends what you want to do. I guess build clever storage. Here weâre pretty lucky because itâs outside the studio but I feel before we had built that storage space I had accumulated stuff from Concordia, from the studio I had at my house, the studio I had on Van Horne so there was stuff that would pile up and itâs nice to be able to have storage. But then again I would advise against keeping too much stuff. I feel that again with the studio visit it helps to at least once or twice a year to do a cleanup. Go around the studio and get rid of stuff, itâs important to keep some because youâll never know what youâre going to need but personally I feel I tend to hold onto things for too long and it just weighs on you. So itâs nice to clean everything out and get a fresh start. Which is something that if you go on a residency like when I went to Sweden I donât have a studio I have nothing at this point. So you can very easily restart and youâre not starting from nothing you still have all these ideas and everything youâve previously done thatâs in your mind. Thatâs usually where it starts and you can start to experiment with new material and new ideas and I feel itâs nice to provoke that sometimes. Like Iâve rebuilt the table this summer and I completely emptied everything out and took everything out of the storage right after a show where there was tons of accumulation of images and tests. And I decided to move over that I was done, time for a new chapter. So yeah, be organised with the way youâre putting stuff in storage because oh someone wants to see a piece they saw online and you want to rework on it and you go and try to find it and itâs in a box that isnât labelled. Itâs quite a nightmare sometimes.
William: Is there anything in here that if you had absolute omniscient power to change anything in the room, what would be the one thing you would get rid of, add?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Repaint the wall and plaster everything. Especially because itâs years and years of oil paint. If I could sand it all out. And while I donât mind the floor being dirty itâs just that itâs not sealed and has so much dust stuck to it so I would fix that. Maybe the ceiling too, make it more soundproof. Weâre pretty lucky now itâs quiet I donât know whatâs happening maybe theyâre freaking out because they know the building just got sold. I donât know what they do but they I feel like they always have these I think itâs clothing racks moving and itâs almost scary. Probably why Iâm listening to music so loud all the time but sometimes itâs annoying.
Wanda: Do you personally feel as though you work better in situations of controlled chaos or very tidy?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Itâs a mix in between, like Ătienne that had this other part of the space, have you seen Francis Baconâs studio? It was exactly like that. A mountain of fucking shit he bought from Dollarama and just complete mayhem. So you know when you look at my studio compared to that it was the most organized thing in the world. But itâs always a play between resetting everything. Everything is organized and cleaned up but I need stuff laying around to play with and remind myself. So itâs cyclical. I would say Iâm quite organized but Iâm not insane about it.
William: Yeah youâre not like Georgia OâKeefe levels.
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah exactly, I wish I was like that. Iâm like that in my house but here, maybe if I had a bigger space I could do that and Iâd have a clean area. An area for printing and an area for experimenting with other materials and dirty practices. So I feel I could do that. Have an area thatâs restricted by different processes.
William: What do you use most often in your studio?
JĂ©rĂŽme: I mean computer I guess but I wish it wasnât that answer.
Wanda: So how long did it take to get the studio you wanted it to be or are you still evolving it?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Itâs changed a lot. Like we built the wall a year and a half ago. So that changed a lot. When I got the printer I changed a lot of the configuration. I mean Iâve accumulated a lot of stuff. Thereâs also a moment where I was living in this really large apartment and I moved out so there was a lot of stuff like books that I had at my place that I moved here or in the storage. But I feel like itâs been like this since the summer, like I said I rebuilt the table so I built this platform underneath that works as storage. So it feels like itâs constantly changing.
Wanda: Did you have any inspirations when building it? If so who were your inspirations?
JĂ©rĂŽme: No, I mean it was about practicality. Stuff that I found. Nothing really belongs to me here. Like thereâs some wood panels that I found and this someone gave to me [legs for desk], and there were so many ex tenants that left wood that I used to build. Lot of finding stuff. Even the table I mean most simple studio table you can build for cheap. If I could build the ideal studio I guess the inspiration would be Donald Juddâs studio in New York and Marfa. He even left instructions when he died like the little rock there and the pen. He was a collector and has all these books, built everything and designed everything himself. If I had more space I wish I could do that. Even here doing renovation, you start cutting wood and thereâs wood chip everywhere.
William: And the into the floors must be a nightmare.
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah if I do that thereâs also the other studio so itâs a bit difficult. Weâve been through quite a bit of renovation. Painting the walls and rebuilding the whole gallery space about two years ago.
William: Universally, what do you think is a must for any studio? Like one thing that every artist should need.
JĂ©rĂŽme: An exact-o knife.
William: And what do you use yours for?
JĂ©rĂŽme: For everything. I donât know. Not that Iâm dealing with collage but like if you need to cut a piece of paper. Mine was lost for awhile, I left it in my friends car-
William: And you were lost without your exact-o knife?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah and it was a really good one with the black blade that I paid thirty dollars for. And he said like âoh I have the same I kept itâ and he never gave it back to me now that I think about it. I feel like itâs the thing that especially after realising that it was gone for awhile.
William: You donât know what you have until you lose it?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah. Yeah. So I guess that and headphones.
Wanda: Do you find yourself stressed when youâre working here or do you find that it relaxes you?
JĂ©rĂŽme: I donât think the studio informs that, itâs more about what I have to work on or if I have a deadline.
William: Is there a part of the process that you dislike or like more than another one then?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Not really. I like starting a new project because usually you have more time and itâs easier to place your ideas and thereâs this playfulness. But I also really like the last stretches, putting up a show and deciding. Having people over looking at your work and seeing what youâre going to present and doing studio visits that are really directed towards what youâre going to show. I really enjoy that when everything is done. Like I was saying when I was doing my MFA I was working with my teacher and adviser a lot. I would just bring boxes and boxes of work that I had done throughout the year on her table and we would play with it. So I like that. And I try when Iâm working to not overthink it. I just get it out. Work and experiment, get stuff out. And then when Iâve accumulated enough and I find something that makes sense I can take a step back. Start to think about it, see how it situates with ideas and theory and see if it makes sense. If thereâs anything happening between the works.
William: So then is there a prevailing emotion when youâre in here or is it really just based on what youâre currently working on then?
JĂ©rĂŽme: I guess it really changed throughout the years. Like at some point I moved out and I was I was in this weird thing where I didnât have anywhere to stay. It was just a lot of change in my life. So the studio became this place where I was here everyday. I would just work a few nights a week. I was just here all the time so I think it was not really good because it just became my second house. Like I would come here even though I didnât really have any shows planned. Work on the computer, make some tests, and then Jean-François would be here and we would just hang out and there was the gallery so I wasnât really coming here to work. But again I feel like itâs sometimes good to be in the studio all the time. I kind of miss it. Like sometimes I would put that on myself. Like this summer it was insanely, insanely hot in here. It was unbearable so there was this whole month after a show where I told myself I canât be in here. Iâm forcing myself not to be in here. Because sometimes you want to work on something but you know youâre not in the right state of mind and work for nothing. So it was nice to miss it and when I came back and put everything in order I felt this renewed energy from me not being here everyday for a whole month when it was 45 degrees.
William: Did you work outside of your space during that month?
JĂ©rĂŽme: No I just read, researched, and prepared the class for Concordia and thinking of the facilities there. So how I could work there. So it was more like making lists of things I wanted to do with those facilities, knowing that I would be here and that Iâd have access to a lot of stuff I didnât have access to before.
William: Do you think then that itâs important to sometimes take a step back away from your studio space and organize your thoughts?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah for sure. Since itâs hard for you to do that when youâre in the space working. So itâs nice to impose that on yourself as a constraint.
Wanda: Do you have any recommendations then for people who canât afford to have a separate studio? Like a lot of the times they end having a living room or in their bedroom, do you have any advice?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah Iâve done that for a long time and itâs personal. I know a lot of people love to have their studio in their space. With the winters itâs more convenient. I like the idea of going to work but I know itâs a lot of money and not only that you have to find a studio not too far from your house. Who you want to be with, who are you going to be sharing with? So thereâs all these questions. Like mine was in my room for awhile⊠that I would not recommend except you canât have it anywhere else. Itâs nice to keep your room for sleeping, itâs healthier that way. But then I had this dining room that after a year we made diner and invited people once so Iâm taking it over and I was paying extra and my roommate had a bigger room so it was this common agreement we had. It just made sense and it doesnât have to be big it just has to-
William: Be somewhere to be productive in that space?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah and your stuff is there and you know that when you go there you go there to work itâs not like youâre working from your couch or your bed. I even do that for writing like I canât write in here.
William: Because itâs more visual?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Itâs more visual, like I always want to work on something else when Iâm here like I look and thereâs all these ideas and I need to be in a neutral space. Like the library is good for that, in my house I set up a space where I write so itâs nice when you have a space dedicated-
William: For specific tasks?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah specific tasks, function. When you go there it feels like your mind is already settling into that mode. Even reading like I donât see the point in coming here to read, Iâll go to the library, a cafe, or outside if I can.
Though actually if I could change something about the studio I wish there was more space where we could do this and be more comfortable. Have people over. I know Marc Seguin would invite people over all the time; collectors, curators, friends-
William: Have almost like a social space, like an old coffee house type of thing.
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah and again with Jean-François it was always like that. End of our day and just have a beer so you hang out and itâs nice when you have the chance to do that. Have conversations and talk about your work.
William: So you think itâs important to be able to have that social aspect?
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah I guess itâs really personal but I feel like, I give meetings with people here and most of the time itâs convenient because Iâm here working. Itâs another reason why having a studio outside of your house is nice because I had studio visits at people's house and you like judge everything itâs not comfortable for the other person for like an hour just standing there in someone's house. So itâs nice when ok you look at peoples work but you can sit down and relax, talk. But yeah itâd be nice if the space could function like that. Because collectors and curators youâll have studio visits like so to be able to make the space as nice as possible would be cool. Also makes it go for longer.
William: Like ow my legs are hurting
JĂ©rĂŽme: Yeah and the chair is full of paint and you donât want to touch anything. But then again some people might like it if you go to place and itâs just mountains of shit laying around and work.
William: I mean personally I wouldnât want to go to Francis Baconâs studio. That place looked insane.
Wanda: I would love to go like youâve seen my room I wouldnât be too upset.
William: Yeah but can you imagine doing a studio visit there just standing there for hours?
Wanda: Yeah can I move this pile of trash to this side of the room for one second!
William: Itâs not trash, needs to be right there!
#artresidency#artistseries#montreal#montrealart#artstudio#artistspace#artist interview#interview#film photography#photographer interview#canadian art#quebec art#concordia university#concordia
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Another great Abstract Expressionist, totally different from DeFeo. Amazing use of colours.
She said of her work, âThat particular thing I want canât be verbalized. . . . Iâm trying for something more specific than movies of my everyday life: To define a feeling.â âShe could make yellow heavy,â Brice Marden later mused of her uncanny ability to infuse her paintings with mood.
Taken from MoMa website:Â https://www.moma.org/artists/4026
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FondĂ© au milieu du XIX siĂšcle, ce MusĂ©e comprend cinq pavillons de part en dâautres de la rue Sherbrooke Ouest et sont reliĂ©s par des passages souterrains. Lâendroit oĂč lâon prend les billets est le Pavillon Jean-NoĂ«l Desmarais, Ćuvre dâune grande modernitĂ©.
Comme ce musĂ©e prĂ©sente un rĂ©sumĂ© de lâart mondial, il est bien Ă©vident quâon ne peut lâapprĂ©hender dans son ensemble au cours dâun sĂ©jour bref.
Lorsque nous lâavons visitĂ©, Picasso primitif Ă©tait lâexposition temporaire phare que nous avions visitĂ© Ă Paris il y a 2 ans.
Ce mini -Louvre prĂ©sente un rĂ©sumĂ© de lâart mondial Ă travers les siĂšcles et les collections permanentes.
Nous avons choisi de se âlimiterâ Ă lâArt quĂ©becois et canadien et aux Arts dĂ©coratifs et Design.
Art québecois et canadien
Ce pavillon, appelĂ© Pavillon Claire et Marc Bourgie, est composĂ© dâune ancienne Ă©glise et dâun bĂątiment moderne. Ce panorama dĂ©marre au 4Ăšme Ă©tage pour se poursuivre jusquâau RDC. Impossible donc de donner une vision gĂ©nĂ©rale, aussi, je limiterai la prĂ©sentation Ă mes coups de cĆur !
Os de baleine- Andrew Innuklun â 1971 â Art contemporain Inuit
Casque Ă cimier-Le corbeau, crĂ©ateur et bienfaiteur de lâhumanitĂ© chevauche un poisson Ă©vidĂ© est un casque en bois que le danseur porte au cĂ©rĂ©monie rituelle.
Masque représentant une grousse (oiseau)
A lâombre de la treille â Helen Gallaway Mc Nicoll â 1914
Ăa ressemble Ă âŠ. Normal ! Helen Gallaway Mc Nicoll est LE peintre impressionniste au Canada qui a sĂ©journĂ© en France.
Couple de caribou de Shorty Killiktee, sculpteur contemporain Inuit
Lâemprise de la pensĂ©e â Alfred LalibertĂ©-
Pareil ⊠Normal, Alfred LalibertĂ© est venu Ă©tudier Ă Paris, notamment dans lâatelier de Rodin. Mais, lĂ encore câest LE sculpteur quĂ©becois.
Saint SimĂ©on Marc-AurĂšle Fortin â 1938
âLe prolifique Marc-AurĂšle Fortin a Ă©tĂ© peintre, aquarelliste, graveur et dessinateur et ses paysages trĂšs dĂ©coratifs et colorĂ©s mettent en valeur lÂŽaspect pittoresque de la nature. Parmi ses sujets prĂ©fĂ©rĂ©s, mentionnons dÂŽĂ©normes ormes feuillus, des maisons rustiques, des charrettes de foin et le port de MontrĂ©al; ses rares sujets humains semblent habituellement Ă©crasĂ©s par la nature. Sur le plan technique, Fortin Ă©tait inventif, expĂ©rimentant Ă lÂŽaide de diffĂ©rentes mĂ©thodes dÂŽaquarelle, de peinture Ă lÂŽhuile et de techniques mixtesâ. MusĂ©e des Beaux-Arts du Canada
Mais, lâenfant du pays des temps modernes, câest Jean-Paul Riopelle. Rendez-vous compte, bien avant lâexposition universelle Ă MontrĂ©al qui a eu lieu en 1967 et qui a fait connaĂźtre la ville et la province du QuĂ©bec au monde entier, Jean-François Riopelle a exportĂ© ce pays dans ses recherches picturales lorsque New-York a comptĂ© dans lâArt international.
âJean-Paul Riopelle est un expressionniste abstrait canadien surtout connu pour ses paysages non figuratifs. Riopelle utilise de la peinture pressĂ©e directement du tube et appliquĂ©e librement Ă lâaide dâun couteau Ă palette pour Ă©laborer des mosaĂŻques denses et Ă grande Ă©chelle. AprĂšs un voyage Ă Paris en 1947, Riopelle devient lâun des membres de lâĂcole de Paris, dont fait partie Joan Mitchell, avec laquelle il vit et travaille pendant prĂšs de 15 ans. â Artnet
Vertige â Jean-Paul Riopelle 195
Gros plan
Gravité-1956
Autriche III â 1954
Soleil de minuit â Collection Iceberg- 1972/1978
DĂ©tails
Owl â 1979
Hibou II â 1970
Un autre enfant du pays et celui-ci exclusivement dans le domaine de la sculpture, câest Louis Archambault (1915-2003), un grand artiste de lâart moderne.
Dame lunaire â 1992
Lâoiseau lunaire -1954
Et, je terminerais par ce tableau pour témoigner de la richesse de la création au Québec.
Jardin rouge â Alfred Pellan â 1958
 Questions pratiques:
Musée des beaux arts Montréal
1380, rue Sherbrooke Ouest Pavillon Jean-Noël Desmarais
Visite d'une partie du Musée des Beaux-Arts à Montréal. Art québecois et canadien Voir « à la place de » pour donner envie Fondé au milieu du XIX siÚcle, ce Musée comprend cinq pavillons de part en d'autres de la rue Sherbrooke Ouest et sont reliés par des passages souterrains.
#art#Art américain#Art canadien#Art québecois#Beaux Arts#Billet de voyage#Canada#Chronique de voyage#Histoire de l&039;art#MBAM#Montréal#Musée des Beaux-Arts Montréal#MUSEE#Musee des Beaux Arts#music#Peintures#Peintures inuit#Peintures modernes#Québec#Sculptures#Scultures canadiennes#VOYAGE
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