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February 16, 2006

Art Matters Events/Curating Session

Newsletter from The Art Collective for Feb. 16, 2006

1) We’re meeting Friday Feb. 17, 10 to 130, room VA-315. Fresh grape juice and bagels and coffee. New Staedtler drawing/painting tools to try out. Bring music if you like and a theme for our work.

2) Curating session last week with Montreal artist Holly King went very well, and some strong work has been selected for next show.

3) Art Matters Special Events will be providing at least two volunteers to help us with our major interactive events, which are:

March 7 in VAV Gallery, 6 to 11 p.m.

March 14 noon to 5 at Halle des Vernissages, at entrance to new Faculty of Fine Arts Gallery on ground floor of new EV building.

We have video cameras reserved for the two events, and one of roles of volunteers will be to help document the events.

March 16: UQAM’s Café des Arts, 11 to 3 p.m.

4) Montreal artist François Morelli has provided copies of several of his drawings that people will be able to colour at our Interactive events if they prefer. These will be included in a video presentation, likely in Flash, that François would like to see put on our website. Other coloured images in this series were done at a special Colouring Party event François was involved in at the Musée du Québec in Quebec City.

More details soon about our next show.

Our proposal was submitted before the deadline today with the Fine Arts Student Alliance for special project funding to help with our materials.

We’re waiting to hear about final approval of our proposed interactive event at a television studio at the start of Art Matters.

Collective member Jarmila Kavena’s show has opened at Galerie d’Art du Parc, in Trois Rivieres, 864 rue des Ursulines, tel 819 374 2355. Show continues until March 26. Tuesday to Friday:10 -12 and 13.30 -17
Saturday and Sunday: 13 -17. See the show’s excellent card in our Photos section. Congratulations to Jarmila!

Also, collective member Kyla Chevrier is preparing for a show of her work at Bain Mathieu in downtown Montreal, as part of the Art Matters festival. Kyla, a third-year Studio Arts student, presents work in a show titled Own Yourself from March 3 to 9, 2006.

Robert Winters
Co-ordinator of The Art Collective
robertwinters@videotron.ca

February 11, 2006

Art Matters schedule/TV show

Art Collective newsletter for Feb. 9, 2006:

Next session: Friday Feb. 10, 10 to 130 in room 315 of Visual Arts Building. Fresh bagels, coffee and grape juice will be served.

This newsletter deals with: new work and photos on website, how we’re documenting our work better, our homage to new MOCCA show, curating session this Friday with Holly King, the collective is going on a television show during Art Matters, our special events at Art Matters, Trans-species Collective history recounted, our next show is moving until late March, Jarmila’s show in Trois Rivières opens on Sunday.


Last week’s session was a very strong one, with several excellent pieces in a variety of styles. I’ve posted about a dozen new images of our work and lots of new photos, including our homage to the Perm Show, an exhibition of work from the permanent collection of the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art. The show, which runs until March 26 at MOCCA in Toronto, includes work by Montreal artist Holly King. These images can be viewed in our gallery, under: Our Work and Photos.

Holly has agreed to curate part of our next show, and is coming to our session on Friday at about 1230 to do a selection and arrangement of work she likes. We can look at work before she arrives to see what is our strongest material, and see if any strong pieces need touching up, as we did before our November show in the VAV Gallery. Holly has work in several museum collections and had a solo show at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts.

Last week was the first time we’ve used a date stamp on a label on the back of each piece, and each piece is initialed by each artist after they’ve worked on it. It went very smoothly and now each piece is dated and we know who worked on it.

Final details are being tied up, but it looks like The Art Collective is going on a television show to do a collaborative piece on live tv to help kick off the Art Matters festival. It will be a morning show, probably on Friday March 3, and we will be joined by artists from the Art Matters executive in our work; they’ll be interviewed during the show about what’s happening in the festival. We’ll also show some of our collaborative work and talk about what we do. Theme of television seems natural as we’ll be in a tv studio, we can draw in the on air people etc. if it seems to work, they’ll be checking in on us as we work.

The Art Matters festival is planning to hold several special events involving collaborative art making that will be co-ordinated by The Art Collective.

Tuesday March 7, 6 to 11 p.m., VAV Gallery: interactive session we’ll be leading in the VAV Gallery the evening of March 7 as the interactive part of the French Kiss UQAM-Concordia show. This will be a large-scale collaborative event with artists from UQAM and Concordia and could turn out to be very significant. We need to talk about themes for this event and the others, whether we include collage.

Our preliminary conclusion is we should probably have a separate table for collage and mixed media and one for painting and drawing, if there is enough space.

Wednesday March 8, noon to 4 p.m., Reading Room: This one may be too much to handle with our other events. We have been offered a show here as well which could be an alternative. We apparently can draw and paint on the walls here if it comes off. If we go ahead with this one, I’m going to check whether we might be able to work directly on the walls, in a controlled, planned way, with materials that would stay on walls. This could make the event more interesting. Now that we have tv event looking like a go and three other major events, we should talk about whether we should drop this one.

Tuesday March 14, noon to 5 p.m. in new EV building, Halle des Vernissages: The other top event is an interactive session in the Halle des Vernissages, on the ground floor of the new EV building, at entrance to new Faculty of Fine Arts gallery. The gallery has said it is interested in being involved in this project. The Fine Arts alumni chapter might invite its members to join us.

Thursday March 16, 11 to 3, UQAM’s Café des Arts: Also we’re doing collaborative drawing at UQAM’s Café des Arts on March 16, 11 to 3, a repeat of last year’s successful event. Mathieu Lacroix, a UQAM student who participated in all of last year’s event, helped in setting up this year’s event which will have a lot more UQAM students than last year when the strike was going on.

Finally, we have been offered a show at the Reading Room, which could be an alternative. The plan now is to do an interactive session there on March 8, noon to 4, although we’ll have to figure out if this now is too much to handle.

We will be able to put up examples of our collaborative work, mini-shows, at least some of these events, two of which involve galleries.

With the busy early March period, and our giving up our slot before Art Matters, we’re now looking at the week of March 19 or 26 for our show, or else putting it to early. Let me know what you think at Friday’s session. I’m leaning to March 19 week over the 26th week but maybe April 2 or 9 week might be better to leave some breathing room after Art Matters.

Collective member Jarmila Kavena’s show is about to start at Galerie d’Art du Parc, in Trois Rivieres, 864 rue des Ursulines, tel 819 374 2355. Opening is on Sunday Feb. 12, 2 p.m. Show continues until March 26. Tuesday to Friday:10 -12 and 13.30 -17
Saturday and Sunday: 13 -17. See the show’s excellent card in our Photos section. Congratulations to Jarmila!

Also, collective member Kyla Chevrier is preparing for a show of her work at Bain Mathieu in downtown Montreal, as part of the Art Matters festival. Kyla, a third-year Studio Arts student, presents work in a show titled Own Yourself from March 3 to 9, 2006.

On our website, you’ll notice some history about the Trans-species Collective, the forerunner to The Art Collective. One of our pieces last week dealt with trans-species issues, making it relevant to fill out some of our roots in this show, which involved Rodrigo Marti, Simone Rochon, Emily Stoddart, curator Juliana Espana Keller, and myself. The show, at the Belgo Building in April 2003, was co-sponsored by the Montreal Gazette, which gave us $3,400 in advertising support, and the VAV Gallery, which co-sponsored the Interactive Day on the final day of the show. This is when the large-scale pieces were created that were exhibited in the lobby during our show at the VAV Gallery in November.

Robert Winters
co-ordinator of The Art Collective
robertwinters@videotron.ca

February 10, 2006

Homage to MOCCA's Perm Show

The Art Collective did several pieces at its Jan. 27, 2006, session that were an homage to The Perm Show which opened that day at the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art in Toronto.

To read a story in Concordia University's The Journal about David Liss by Robert Winters, co-ordinator of The Art Collective, click here:
Story about David Liss

The pieces, which explore issues of fashion, performance and celebrity, were inspired by the invitation card for the show, which can be viewed in our Photos gallery.
MOCCA's Perm Show is a selection of Beauties from the permanent collection of the museum. The exhibition, which is on from Jan. 27 to March 26, 2006, includes work by Montreal artist Holly King, an adviser to The Art Collective who curated part of the group's next show at a special curating session on Feb. 10, 2006.
To find out more about Holly King's work:
Holly King

To view the MOCCA Perm Show invitation card, please visit the Photos section of our website.
A photo of MOCCA director David Liss by Robert Winters is in our Photos gallery.
To find out more about the MOCCA show, please click here:
MOCCA's site

Here is how the MOCCA website describes the show:
The show features "a selection of highlights from the museum's collection of over 400 pieces by 150 Canadian artists. January 27 to March 26. This is not a passing fashion!"
The exhibition includes work by these artists: Stephen Andrews, Carl Beam, Edward Burtynsky, Chris Cran, William Eakin, Paterson Ewen, Graham Gillmore, Betty Goodwin, Angela Grauerholz, Geoffrey James, Shelagh Keeley, Holly King, Micah Lexier, Arnaud Maggs, Damian Moppett, Roland Poulin, Tony Scherman, Jeannie Thib, David Urban, Ian Wallace, Tim Whiten and Kelly Wood.
David Liss was honoured with an Artistic Achievement Award by Concordia University Alumni Association's Fine Arts Chapter at an event at MOCCA in November.
To find out more about this event, you can visit the Fine Arts Chapter's website at:
Fine Arts Alumni website/a>

February 09, 2006

Trans-species Collective: Forerunner of Art Collective

The Trans-species Collective is the forerunner of the current project, The Art Collective. One of the pieces done at the Feb. 3, 2006, session of The Art Collective refers to trans-species relationships; it can be viewed in Our Work.

In April 2003, Simone Rochon, Rodrigo Marti, Robert Winters and Emily Stoddart presened their show: trans-species collective* - Why are we so species-centric? The show was at the Belgo Building in downtown Montreal, the city's leading fine arts centre, with top galleries such as Galerie René Blouin, which represents such top Canadian artists as Nicolas Baier and Geneviève Cadieux. The Trans-species Collective show was co-sponsored by the Montreal Gazette, which provided $3,400 in advertising support, and the VAV Gallery, which supported an interactive collaborative art making event on the last day of the show. Work done that day was exhibited in November 2005 as part of the VAV Gallery's Inter/Activity show where The Art Collective led an interactive art making event.

Several Concordia Fine Arts alumni and students, undergraduate and graduate level, participated in the interactive event, including painter Kylie Sandford. Concordia Magazine published a photo and item about the interactive event. To read this item, click here:
interactive event story

Rodrigo went on to help co-found the current art collective and has provided advice on a continuing basis. Emily attended several of the first sessions of the current collective and helped develop the conceptual framework for the group's first show in November 2004 at the VAV Gallery. Simone, an affiliated artist with the collective participated in the interactive event at The Art Collective's VAV Gallery show. To read about an art project Simone worked on with Montreal artist Ulgen Semerci, click here:
Story about Simone

Montreal artist Juliana España Keller, who curated the Trans-species Collective show, is an affiliated artist with The Art Collective. Juliana attended the founding meeting of the current project and made the official First Mark that was placed on Interactive Wall No. 1 at the November 2004 show by The Art Collective at the VAV Gallery. To visit Juliana's website, click here:

Juliana's site

To visit Galerie René Blouin's website, click here:
René Blouin's site

February 02, 2006

Art Collective works on Art Matters Festival Events

Art Collective newsletter for Feb. 2, 2006:

Next session: Friday Feb. 3, 10 to 130 in room 315 of Visual Arts Building. Fresh bagels, coffee and grape juice.

We’ve been doing some very strong work lately, some of our new pieces are posted on the website along with some photos from recent sessions and the Painting and Drawing Association show, where several of our members showed work.

I have posted some details of the Art Machines piece on the website as well, which we discussed as possible elements for the invitation for our next show.

Montreal artist Holly King has agreed to curate part of our next show, and is coming to our session on Feb. 10 after her class finishes around 1230 to do a selection and arrangement of work she likes. We can look at work that session to see what is our strongest material, and see if any strong pieces need touching up, as we did before our November show in the VAV Gallery.

Holly, who has work in several museum collections and had a solo show at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, visited a recent session and really likes how the Art Machines piece has developed. It looks like Jarmila will have time to put a few finishing touches on the piece before it is show, as she feels it still needs a bit of work, and we gave her responsibility for completing the piece, implementing advice on the finishing stage of large-scale pieces, given to us by David Moore, a Montreal artist and professor at Concordia University’s high-profile Studio Arts Department.

The Art Matters festival is planning to hold several special events involving collaborative art making that will be co-ordinated by The Art Collective.

We have some strong high-profile events planned, including an interactive session we’ll be leading in the VAV Gallery the evening of March 7 as the interactive part of the French Kiss UQAM-Concordia show. This will be a large-scale collaborative event with artists from UQAM and Concordia and could turn out to be very significant.

Our show delayed: There was a scheduling conflict with this VAV show opening on Feb. 28 and our planned vernissage the same night as the lobby space is to be a performance space that night. Art Matters and everything around it makes the use of these spaces more complex, and so our show will be delayed, unfortunately. But it’s important to adapt to major projects going on at the same time, and our relationship with the VAV Gallery is an important one and we want to work with them to help them achieve their goals. We will figure out new dates shortly.
We need to talk about themes for this event and the others, whether we include collage etc.

The other top event is an interactive session in the Halle des Vernissages, on the ground floor of the new EV building, at entrance to new Faculty of Fine Arts gallery, noon to 5 on March 14. The gallery has said it is interested in being involved in this project.
Also we’re doing collaborative drawing at UQAM’s Café des Arts on March 16, 11 to 3, a repeat of last year’s successful event. Mathieu Lacroix, a UQAM student who participated in all of last year’s event, helped in setting up this year’s event which will have a lot more UQAM students than last year when the strike was going on.

Finally, we have been offered a show at the Reading Room, which could be an alternative. The plan now is to do an interactive session there on March 8, noon to 4, although we’ll have to figure out if this now is too much to handle.

We will be able to put up examples of our collaborative work, mini-shows, at at least some of these events, two of which are related to galleries.

Collective member Jarmila Kavena’s show is about to start at Galerie d’Art du Parc, in Trois Rivieres, 864 rue des Ursulines, tel 819 374 2355. Opening is on Saturday Feb. 12, 2-5 p.m. Show continues until March 19. Tuesday to Friday:10 -12 and 13.30 -17
Saturday and Sunday: 13 -17.

Also, collective member Kyla Chevrier is preparing for a show of her work at Bain Mathieu in downtown Montreal, as part of the Art Matters festival. Kyla, a third-year Studio Arts student, presents work in a show titled Own Yourself from March 3 to 9, 2006.

Robert Winters
co-ordinator of The Art Collective

February 01, 2006

François Morelli at Montreal Museum of Fine Arts

Montreal artist François Morelli gave a well-received lecture at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts on Jan. 18, 2006, as part of the high-profile Defiant Imagination series that is a joint project of the Museum and Montreal's Concordia University. François, who has given key advice to The Art Collective, titled his presentation Sleep, Eat and Go. In this overview covering 30 years, he presented a selection of his sculptures, installations and graphic works that stem from these three activities of his daily life. Alone or accompanied, he systematically notes and celebrates his encounters and the passage of time. Weaving a peripatetic narrative framework, he has developed a poetic and personal syntax built from a system of symbols that is dream-based and political. The presentation was framed as a journey that highlighted the key moments of his career.

To read an account of the presentation in The Journal, please click here:
Journal Story here

To read about François Morelli's work presented at the Biennale de Montréal in 2002, please click here: Biennale page

Here is an excerpt from the website of the University of Lethbridge, where he gave a presentation in December 2003: Morelli's research questions the status of the object within the creation process and the perception of the work. Notions of passage, circulation and transformation are essential in his work; according to him, the object is often the echo of a passed action or an intervention translating the relation of the artist with society, individuals between themselves, or of an individual with the object.

Born in Montreal, François Morelli completed his BFA at Concordia University in 1975 and an MFA at Rutgers University in 1983. Morelli's work has been shown extensively; including solo exhibitions at Lewis and Clark College, Portland, 2003; Gallerie R3, Trois Rivières, 2003; Galerie Christiane Chassay, Montreal, 2002; and in group exhibitions Walkways, Portland Institute of Contemporary Art, Portland, Western Washington University, Washington and Oakville Art Gallery, Oakville; Corp et Machine, Galerie d'art de I'UQAM, Montreal; and La Biennale de Montréal, Le Centre international d'art contemporain de Montréal.