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Showing posts with the label Galerie Laroche|Joncas

Reviews: Clay Mahn at Galerie B-312 | Steve Giasson at Laroche/Joncas | Kara Eckler at Atelier Suarez | Caroline Schub at Espace Maurice

Steve Giasson’s Andy Warhol at Laroche/Joncas Steve Giasson paints and draws several copies of Warhol works, often filtered through the copies of those works by other artists to the point that they are more depictions of copies. As exercises in representing painting, the works at Laroche/Joncas are exercises in intimacy and affection that are very different from the wrapped works of Tammi Campbell’s On View shown at Blouin|Division recently. Here, the show becomes a demonstration of touching through the reproduction of the image, given new mediation, and reconstituted. Generally of a different scale than the first and its copies, these re-imaginings are not simply invitations to a kind of mental comparison, itself perhaps rife with a kind of nostalgia. The framing justification claims “[h]is committed and tongue-in-cheek practice is based on pre-existing artworks or historical or daily fragments, which he appropriates in different ways, in order to undermine romantic notions

Reviews: Anna Torma, Istvan Zsako, Balint Zsako and David Zsako at Projet Casa | Jim Hollyoak at McBride Contemporain | Oda Iselin Sønderland at Projet Pangée

There were three exhibitions focusing on the Torma-Zsako family in the city over the past month or so. One at Robert Poulin ( Métamorphoses ) that featured them heavily, one at Laroche/Joncas ( 1 famille, 4 artistes, 2 expositions ), and this one at Projet Casa ( Flowers, Warriors, Beasts, Hands: Divergences et réciprocité ). Unsurprisingly, there was a fair amount of overlap between them. The Poulin and Casa shows were, however, the stronger. The Casa show displayed them at their most uneven and Istvan’s and David ’s sculptures dominated. At Poulin it was Balint ’s watercolours and Anna ’s sewn works that overshadowed the others. The Casa show was very much a sculpture show and the Poulin show was a wall art one.

Reviews: Annihilation at Galerie Laroche/Joncas | Alain Paiement's Cosmic Blues at Galerie Hughes Charbonneau

They are more interesting for making explicit something that has been implicit in a number of shows over the last while, namely a general ambivalence about the destruction of the world. This is not the sort of thing that seems to be curatorially admitted, even if it is logically implied in many of the works included in such shows. Dante Guthrie , Lindsay Lion Lord , William Mora , Andrew Rutherdale , and Cléo Sjölander are the artists showing under the banner of Annihilation at Galerie Laroche/Joncas . Sparely placed around the room, the show is dominated by the work of Rutherdale, who presents various insect reliquaries and some Chapmanesque gag about the Enlightenment. There is a hodgepodge of over-ornamentation that suggests the Spanish Baroque recast in more decorative than religious form. These are nicely complemented by the sculptures in stoneware and clay by Mora, which have the quality of dilapidated outsider art rescued from an abandoned farmhouse. Framed in explicitly the

Reviews: Hannaleah Ledwell's Rêves insolites at Galerie Popop | Anne Sophie Vallée's Visions at Galerie Laroche/Joncas

  You don’t see a great deal of erotic art in the city, so it was a pleasant surprise to walk into Hannaleah Ledwell Rêves insolites at Galerie Popop . The works span the last few years and there is some divergence in terms of the treatment of spatialization even if the colour schemes remain consistent. These shifts don’t appear to have been linear, although there does seem to have been a gradual flattening of the surface and simplification of its texture. The earlier paintings are a bit more built up, almost sculptural in articulation, which also gives them a slightly more morbid quality.  Rêves insolites explores the physical manifestations of love languages. Focusing on intimacy with oneself and with others, this body of work aims to convey tangible sensations, both corporeal and emotional. It is an exploration of the viscerality of touch, the softness of a caress, the vulnerability of pleasure and the chaotic mix of all these feelings at once. The more surprising thing about

Review: Antoine Larocque’s Acheter une maison, l’assurer et calicer le feu d’dans at Galerie Laroche|Joncas

Antoine Larocque ’s Acheter une maison, l’assurer et calicer le feu d’dan s at Galerie Laroche|Joncas is one of the more startling things I’ve seen in a Montréal gallery for some time. This is primarily down to how explicitly and aggressively Québécois it is, a trait that is increasingly rare in contemporary art in the province (not that it has been common since the 1970s). Unsurprisingly then, the works displayed explicitly link to the province in the 1970s, to the October Crisis ( Leur police attrapent un Chaoin radical ) and up to the presence of Legault ( François Legault ), as well as the marginal lives of the rural populace.