Darling Foundry visual arts centre
Montreal
745 Ottawa street
514 3921554 FAX 514 3920579
WEB
Three exhibitions
dal 13/6/2012 al 1/9/2012

Segnalato da

Laurent Sasiela



 
calendario eventi  :: 




13/6/2012

Three exhibitions

Darling Foundry visual arts centre, Montreal

Guillaume La Brie uses a stratagem of economy to represent two monuments of art history. Mixed Misuse by Jon Knowles marks a continuity between production and display based on a period of engagement with the behaviourism of studio work. 'Courte-pointe' follows previous collaborations between Philippe Allard and Justin Duchesneau.


comunicato stampa

Guillaume La Brie
Les oeuvres qui n'étaient pas là
Main Hall

Guillaume La Brie uses a stratagem of economy to represent two monuments of art history observing each other despite their own absence in the large industrial hall of the Darling Foundry. The outline of George Washington, placed overhead on a ledge serving as pedestal, is cut out of an organized, prefabricated pile-up of white furniture on the tall brick wall. Facing it in opposite symmetry, a totem of stylish dressers, "mass produced" in plywood and piled up on top of each other, harbour in their uniform center the cut-out of the raw shape of a Moai sculpture from Easter Island. As anachronism or a culture clash, "the invisible representative of a closed, spent world contrasts with that of an imperial world in constant expansion", says the artist. Are these negative sculptures Guillaume La Brie's way of responding to the Darling Foundry's monumental emptiness?

Since 2002, Guillaume La Brie has shown his work in several exhibition spaces in Quebec, such as Skol, Circa, B-312; Clark in Montreal; and Axenéo 7 in Gatineau. He has also taken part in several group exhibitions, international residencies, and events, such as those organized by Pique-Nique.

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Jon Knowles
Mixed Misuse
With the participation of Vincent Bonin
Small Gallery

This show marks a continuity between production and display based on a two and a half year period of engagement with the behaviourism of studio work at the Darling Foundry (strategic showroom, quasi domestic living room, artisanal shop, etc). I have formulated my studio production through an aesthetic of re-use, the repurposed and a kind of performed distress that characterizes the Darling Foundry environment.

Showing with your landlord is analogous to the idea of a renter cooking dinner for their landlord while repairing their leaky faucet. Autonomy, agency, and a gift economy are part of the equation. Needless to say, friendship can also unfold from this contingent situation. Repairing a leaky faucet or improving the state of the physical space in any way (while feeding the landlord) would incrementally improve the value of this space, for your landlord and temporarily for yourself. Renters and landlords share. We all know that the further the space (and in tern the house) is improved (while others in the neighbourhood are generally following a similar logic of improvement) the neighbourhood will also slowly rise in value along with the property. Real-estate developers and the banks are also very much implicated. Outside of this fairly modest first exchange between tenant and landlord (though this is never without social complexities and power relations), what can be made of some people interested (and seeing to it) that the neighbourhood's value rise steadily, all without lifting a finger? What is my "petit métier" in this rendering of things?
–Jon Knowles

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Philippe Allard & Justin Duchesneau
Courte-pointe
Installation outside the Darling Foundry

Courte-Pointe (Quilt) wraps around the building of the Darling Foundry as though a passing giant had left his bed cover to dry in the sun. This cumbersome mass interferes with the building's functionality and creates its own environment. A formless, uncanny component, is it in miniature or blown up? The people's bed cover, pixellated out of milk boxes—these makeshift racks proliferating on Montreal's bikes—, is on display to attract passersby under its canopy of filtered light.

This new intervention follows in the footsteps of previous collaborations between Philippe Allard and Justin Duchesneau. Working in the space between art and architecture, their collective uses strategies of accumulation of mass-produced objects.

More informations:
Laurent Sasiela tel: 514 392.1554 fax: 514 392.0579 laurent@fonderiedarling.org

Vernissage june 14 h 8pm

Darling Foundry, visual arts centre

745 Ottawa Street Montreal, QC, H3C 1R8

Hours: Wed–Sun 1–7pm, Thu until 10pm

IN ARCHIVIO [8]
Two Exhibitions
dal 17/6/2015 al 22/8/2015

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