Author: artoronto

  • RECENT WORKS by SOPHIE PRIVÉ and TIM LAURIN

     

    July 13 – August 13, 2011
    TELEPHONE BOOTH GALLERY
    3148 Dundas Street West
    Toronto, Ontario M6P 2A1
    (The Junction, Dundas at St. John’s Rd.)
    T: 647.270.7903
    E: sharlene@telephoneboothgallery.ca 
    www.telephoneboothgallery.ca
    Hours: Tues by appt., Wed and Sat 11-6, Thurs and Fri 11-7

    A narrative suite of paintings that depict beautifully rendered figures that float in a landscape of relationships and conversations that permeate daily life. Sophie Privé has a Bachelor of Visual Arts from Université Laval (1999). She is an award winning artist that has exhibited nationally and internationally. Privé has artworks within several public collections in Québec including Loto-Québec, Colart Collection, CPOA du Musée National des Beaux-Arts du Québec, Fédération des caisses Desjardins du Québec and Bibliothèque Nationale du Québec.

    Tim Laurin graduated from Sheridan College School of Design, Mississauga in 1985.  He furthered his studies in painting and printmaking at Georgian College in Barrie, Ontario, and also completed master classes with notable artists Joanne Tod, Tim Zuck and Eric Fischl.  He has exhibited throughout North America and internationally, including a 2009 exhibition at the MacLaren Art Centre in Barrie. His award-winning work is included in collections of the Royal Ontario Museum and the Corning Museum of Glass, New York. Originally working in sculpture and painting, Laurin’s current focus is on traditional and non-traditional print media.

  • NEW WORKS by ÉTIENNE GÉLINAS

     

    July 14 – August 7, 2011
    Opening:  July 14, 6 – 9  Artist in attendance
    Thompson Landry Gallery
    The Distillery District
    55 Mill Street, Building 5, #102
    & The Cooperage Building #32
    Toronto, Ontario, M5A 3C4
    Tel: 416-364-4955
    E-mail:info@thompsonlandry.com
    www.thompsonlandry.com
    Hours: Tues – Sat 11-6, Sun 12-5

    This sensational new solo exhibition displayes 30 remarkable new works by Quebecois artist Étienne Gélinas. Étienne Gélinas’ pieces combine codes such as mechanical plans and clothing patterns to form a detailed backdrop, with splashes of spontaneous paint drippings.  Taking mundane images and arranging them into something astonishingly beautiful, he creates a space where the opposing visual codes of the scientific and the pictorial exist in harmony with one another.  His work exudes a vividly mesmerizing effect, created by his unique contrast between calculation and impulse. In his latest series, Gélinas’ signature artistic style, a blend of geometrical, scientific and numerical concepts, fused with an aesthetic flare, has been pushed to stunning new levels.

  • GORDON WIENSHY: BRIDS

     Grey Stone White Flower, 2011, acrylic on canvas, 48 x 48 inches

    July 9-23, 2011
    Opening : Saturday July 9, 2 – 4pm, artist in attendance
    BAU-XI GALLERY
    340 Dundas St. West
    Toronto, Ontario M5T 1G5
    T: 416.977.0600
    E: toronto@bau-xi.com
    www.bau-xiphoto.com
    Hours: Mon-Sat 10-5:30, Sun 11-5:30

    Gordon Wiens studied painting at St. Lawrence College where he subsequently taught drawing and painting. He creates contemporary abstract paintings in acrylic on canvas and paper. His works have been exhibited in Vancouver and Toronto, and can be found in many private collections. Wiens’s finely layered paintings reflect an interest in the transient, fragile nature of existence.

  • DREW BURNHAM: BRUSH


    Foliage Unraveled, 2011, oil & acrylic on canvas, 30 x 45 inches

    July 9 – 23, 2011
    Opening Reception and Book Launch:
    Saturday July 9, 2 – 4 pm artist in attendance
    BAU-XI GALLERY
    340 Dundas St. West
    Toronto, Ontario M5T 1G5
    T: 416.977.0600
    E: toronto@bau-xi.com
    www.bau-xiphoto.com
    Hours: Mon-Sat 10-5:30, Sun 11-5:30

    Firmly established in the Canadian art scene, Drew Burnham is well known for his stylized fluid lines and vivid colours portraying the natural environment. In his current show, images of rippling water, swaying trees, and sculptural vegetation become illuminated on the canvas. Drew Burnham trained with Don Jarvis and Toni Onley, and has exhibited since 1965.

    The opening reception will also serve as a book launch for Burnham’s first hardcover book of paintings.

  • ADAM MAKARENKO: GREEN REFUGES


    Swamp Tree, 2011, Edition of 10, chromogenic print, 22 x 32 inches

     

    JULY 9 – 23
    Opening: Saturday July 9, 2-4pm  artist in attendance 
    BAU-XI PHOTO
    324 Dundas St. West
    Toronto, Ontario M5T 1G5
    T: 416.977.0400
    E: info@bau-xiphoto.com
    www.bau-xiphoto.com
    Hours: Mon-Sat 10-5:30, Sun 11-5:30

    Adam Makarenko constructs each photograph as a diorama, sculpting each element by hand and photographing the set. He uses these constructed realities to tell a story, otherwise impossible through conventional photography, and has garnered incredible notoriety for an emerging photographer. In his new series, Makarenko focuses on the issue of preservation of our fragile environment.

  • Steve Rockwell:“Making Mince Meat Out of dArt Magazine”


    Steve Rockwell: Maurizio Catalan’s Cat and Mouse at Artpace in San Antonio,
    2011,  paper collage, 36.5″ x 30″

     

     July 7 – July 30, 2011
    Opening: Thursday, July 7, 6 – 10 p.m.
    DE LUCA FINE ARTS / GALLERY
    1153-A Queen Street West, Unit 203
    Toronto, Ontario M6J 1J4
    T: 416-537-499
    E: info@delucafinenart.com
    www.corrado@delucafinart.com
    Hours: Tuesday-Saturday 11-5

    We eat with our eyes as much as our stomachs. Food and visual art share a
    profound history throughout the ages. Ten years before launching dArt
    International Magazine, publisher Steve Rockwell served an actual sandwich
    as art at the Arnold Gottlieb Gallery in Toronto. Then as now, Steve
    exhibited collage works along with his food creation.

    In this exhibition Steve Rockwell creates a subject for his collages that might be
    consumed by both eye and stomach. Here at De Luca Fine Art | Gallery, by making
    an art magazine the subject,Steve Rockwell links reading and eating, delivering a
    readers and eaters digest, if you will.

    As part of this exhibition De Luca Fine Art | Gallery features for the first
    time two art short films produced by Steve Rockwell & Ben Marshall and
    directed by award winning director James Cooper.

    The opening reception on July 7th will be filmed as part of a short
    documentary about the making and unveiling of the dArt Burger.

     

  • “REJECTS”

     

    July 7 – July 10, 2011
    Opening :Thursday, July 7, 7 – 10pm
    Propeller Centre for Visual Arts
    984 Queen St. W.
    T:416 504 7142
    www.propellerctr.com
    rejected@torontorejects.com
    Hours: Fri – Sun 10 – 7

    The shear number of applicants every year to the massive Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition at Nathan Phillips Square means that some of the most dynamic and expressive artists are necessarily rejected. For the last two years a group of these passionate artists have turned their disappointment to opportunity and participated in the Rejects show.

    Sixteen talented artists will be selling work that includes painting, drawing, encaustic, sculpture, and photography. The Rejects show is a must see event for anyone looking to see “the other side” of the Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition.

    As Napoleon III said: “Let the people judge”

  • Gallery 1313 Exhibitions

    Chris Shoust

    July 6-17, 2011
    Opening: Thursday July 7, 7-10pm
    GALLERY 1313
    1313 QUEEN STREET WEST,
    TORONTO, ON M6K 1K8
    T: 416 – 536-6778
    E mail: director@g1313.org
    www.gallery13131.org
    Hours: Wed – Sun 1- 6

    Main Gallery

    SHARING THE BURDEN: A Collective Photographic Experience collected by Stephan Briones

    Stephan Brioras was a drug addict and criminal for 16 years and isclean now for four years. He gave cameras to people he meets on the street and asks them to take pictures of what they see.
    Photographs have a way of telling a story that isoutside the realm of language. The overall purpose of this initiative is
    to collect a series of photographs that reflect the lives of those who live on the margins of our society.
    Special thanks to The Gerstein Crisis Centre , Toronto Image Works andVoices From The Streets.

    Process Gallery

    Chis Shoust: COMMUNICATING WITH THE MENTALLY ILL

    The black and white imagery speaks of the desperate times the illness causes. The imagery speaks of  the need for shelter, to be counted, to be veiled. Cursive gestures communicate a language that is incommunicable. Blocks of colour bring a light to the scenario, showing a potential of what these people can do. Shoust’s works try to bring the viewer into the environment, into the language of a person with the illness and throughthe language that allows a viewer to see just a glimpse of what is possible with them.
    See image above

    Cell Gallery

    Group exhibition -Works by Members of Gallery 1313

    Gerry Richards, Michelle Montague, Lesley Harries-Jones, Paul Brandjs, Joanne Maikawa and Diana Dixon

     Window Box Gallery

    Come Play with Us, Danny.  Tapestry by Brette Gabel curated by Xenia

    Brette Gabel is a not so recent graduate of the University of Regina. While avoiding schoolwork Brette began embroidering, quilting and watching horror movies. Following school, Brette moved to Toronto where she participated in the Toronto School of Art’s Independent Studio Program. After which she became a contributing member to the White House Studio. Currently Brette is researching farming accidents, taxidermy and organizing alternative community interventions. Brette’s work strives to connect love, fear, heartache and the grotesque with craft and social interventions.

     

     

     

  • SYLVIA LEFKOVITZ: A RETROSPECTIVE FEATURING PAINTINGS AND SCULPTURES

     
      
     

    June 18 – July 8, 2011
    Opening
    : Saturday, June 18, 10am – 6pm
    GALLERY GEVIK
    12 Hazelton Ave
    Toronto, ON M5R 2E2
    T: 416.968.0901
    Hours: Tues – Sat 10-6
    E-mail: natasha@gevik.com
    www.gevik.com

     

    It’s the first Toronto retrospective of Montreal-born Sylvia Lefkovitz (1924-1987).  She started her career in Canada, but then travelled to Italy in 1960 to learn the “lost wax” bronze sculpture casting proces.  The exhibition features paintings and sculptures from her time in Italy.

     Lefkovitz is renowned for her murals, graphics, oils, drawings, lithos and sculpture rendered in bronze, silver and marble. Lefkovitz was described by one critic as “having an affinity with the earth.”  Another termed her work “profoundly humane.” She mastered mural technique while living in Mexico, and applied it to her series of murals on the “Life of Louis Riel” (on permanent exhibition in North Battleford, Saskatchewan), and “The Acadians,” now housed at Ste-Anne’s University in Nova Scotia.

    Lefkovitz moved to Italy in 1960, and soon won Florence’s Porcellino Award as Best Resident Foreign Artist; critical acclaim throughout the country quickly followed. After a long series of Italian exhibits and retrospectives and two decades of awards and commissions in both Europe and North America, Lefkovitz returned to Montreal in 1981. She died there in 1987.

    Sylvia Lefkovitz’s life and work in both Italy and Canada were profiled in the National Film Board of Canada’s documentary “In Search of Medea.”

     

  • This is Paradise | Place as state of mind:The Cameron Public House and 1980s Toronto

    Barbara Cole, Tomorrow, 1984. Appliqued c-print. Courtesy of the artist. © Barbara Cole

     Upon opening its doors under the new ownership in October 1981, the Cameron became a magnet for the most talented and ambitious in the ‘hood. It came together as a kind of social experiment in the form of a hotel, similar to hotels like the Chelsea in New York, but fundamentally different in that it’s reason d’etre from the beginning wasn’t to sell beer and collect rent, but to provide a place for Culture.

    As the “rag” trade receded from the area, large industrial spaces became vacant and the inevitable happened; the artists moved in and dominated the cultural ecology of the neighbourhood until the last years of the eighties, when AIDS and heroin shook the community and gentrification tipped the delicate balance.

    1981. Painters Gordon Rayner, Gershon Iskowitz, Graham Coughtry, Robert Markle and Gwartzmans Art Supplies were already long time residents of the Spadina and College area. Almost overnight the Queen West and Spadina neighbourhood became dominated by artists of all stripes – dressed in the Queen West signature black leather. “We have more black leather than Queen Street West”, declared an ad on a streetcar shelter. The boundaries of this new art territory could be roughly mapped out as a string of bars starting at College and Spadina with the Silver Dollar  where clientele could see naked performance artists at work. Down the street the El Mocambo, Grossman’s Tavern to King Street and the Spadina Hotel”s “Cabana Room”. Include Kensintgon Market and Fort Goof. Westward to the Horseshoe, the Cameron, to the Holiday Tavern at Bathurst and Queen and South again to King and Bathurst, the Wheat Sheaf.

            Anne Marie  and Paul Sannella Photo: Biserka Livaja

    There were many bars and clubs programming cutting edge music at the time, but the Cameron was the first andarguably the only one to see the possibilities of inviting all cultural and social manifestations of the moment into its edifice. During its first years,  siblings Ann Marie and Paul Sannella, and their friend Herb Tookey, took hold of the visual art programming – a term which sounds too formal in the context of the era.  Art was everywhere – on the exterior walls, the front and back rooms, bathrooms, hallways, ceilings. Interesting new musicians and singers were given a venue where they could develop their craft. The Cameron hosted a non-stop stream of fundraising events for the newly formed neighbourhood arts collectives. Given this melting pot environment, it is not surprising a long list of Canadian cultural icons can be linked to the Cameron.  The close proximity of everyone, the availability of a public venue to perform or show work and the necessity of collaboration, brought to fruition ambitious projects like Chromaliving 83, involving over 150 artists representing every conceivable kind of cultural production.  The Cameron was the nerve centre, where Chromazone kept its office.

    Molly Johnson and Aaron Davis did a Blue Monday set at the Cameron as part of the celebrations of the show on June27, 2011 Photo: Biserka Livaja

    A typical Scenario at the Cameron would have looked something like this: Molly Johnson singing her first Billie Holiday tunes on “Blue Monday”; Molly Johnson as chambermaid and resident: Handsome Ned singing “Put the Blame on Me” spine chilling; the Parachute Club raising the roof; Mohjah who brought Reggae directly from the Islands; loud ‘art’ bands; and ART.

    David Buchan, On the Rocks, 1984 Cibachrome transparency in fluorescent light box NGC Collection. © David Buchan

    Jenny Holzer’s lists upstairs as décor; I Brain Eater’s painted piano; Napoleon Brousseau ants on the sides of the building; the exterior murals; Sybil Goldstein’s baroque punk ceiling; constantly changing art on the walls; poetry readings; Video Cabaret’s Hummer Sisters running for mayor with their campaign slogan Art vs Art, (coming in second to Mayor Art Eggelton). Actors, writers and directors from Theatre Passe Muraille down the street, meeting and drinking; artists drinking after openings at the new galleries  – YYZ, Chromazone, Mercer Union, A.C.T., A Space, ARC. The hot and famous – Billy Idol and his entourage dropping in after hours to hang out.


    Hummer For Mayor (The Hummer Sisters left to right — Jenny Dean, Deanne Taylor, Janet Burke) Photo by David Hlynsky, Poster by David Hylnsky, John Ormsby, Coach House Press

    The old guys from the Second World War who still came to drink draft every afternoon. Rosedale art connoisseurs looking for art with their newspaper reviews tucked under their arms.

    The first visual art commissioned by the Cameron received good reviews and brought it to the attention of  the press and the arts community. In the back room were my paintings, commissioned by Herb for the Cameron. In the front room Eldon Garnet’s Privacy Show.  On opening night Carmen Lamanna sat with Joseph Kosuth both wearing dark Italian suits, smoking cigars under my Halloween paintings in the back room, bringing the world of high art definitively to the Cameron.

      1987.  The project which probably best underlines the result of this cultural blending was a play titled Tragedy of Manners, commissioned by TPM artistic director, Clarke Rogers. The author was writer and art critic, Donna Lypchuk, best known for her long running column Necrophile in Eye Weekly,  who really rattled the cage when she based characters in her play on actual people in the art scene including herself. The setting: Halloween night at the Paradise Hotel (the Cameron Public House). The cast: 42 characters, played by mostly non- actors who were known personalities in their own right, piled on even more irony.

    Tragedy of Manners.L to R: Mark Harman, Meryn Cadell, Petra, Donnie Cartwright, Keven Stables, Sharmaine Beddoes, Mindy Heflin, The Bitch Diva, Sahara Spracklin, Billy Bob.Photo: Biserka Livaja

     Tragedy of Manners was a Queen West family affair. As Sheila Gostick famously proclaimed “Where there’s culture there’s bacteria.” The cast, designers and crew were actually the “people in your neighbourhood”, our neighbourhood Queen Street West. Actor Graham Greene built the set with Stephan Droege, and on stage Richard Minichiello, Runt, Maryn Cadell, Robert Stewart, Mark Harman, Whitfield Slip, Robert Nasmith, Paul Sannella, Edward Mowbray, and thirty-three more.

     Tragedy of Manners.L to R: Nia Vardalos, Richard Minicello, Adley Gawad, Meryn Cadell, Suzie Sevensma, Duncan Buchanan
      Photo: Biserka Livaja

    Looking back now there was a prescience about this play.  Amid its grandiosity and ambition real tragedy was lurking. The characters personified death and decay and the corruption of body and spirit.

      

     L to R Clarke Rogers, Rae Johnson and Donna Lypchuk, Billy Bob(?). Photo: Biserka Livaja

    Love is unrequited, and gossip and pettiness rule.  There is no redemption, only purgatory waiting for Hell. In the space of a year, Ned died accidently of an overdose, and many were becoming addicted to heroin. AIDS cruelly took the gracious and remarkable Tim Jocelyn from us. And many of our friends were becoming ill.  As the mythology of Queen West grew, so did the rents. Artists began migrating farther West, some even left town or just disappeared.


    Tom Dean, THIS IS PARADISE, inside the Cameron House. Image Credit: Peter McCallum, 1983. © Tom Dean

    Clarke Rogers hired me to design the set. True to the script, I created a surreal version of the actual Cameron including within it Tom Dean’s hand painted THIS IS PARADISE on the walls of the bar, but in reverse because the audience was in fact looking into a mirror at themselves. Art imitating Art imitating Life imitating Art. Donna Lypchuk’s ironic and scathing dissection of the Queen Street West art scene could not have been possible unless the halcyon days of Queen West and the Cameron were suddenly, over.

    Rae Johnson Toronto, June 2011
    Courtesy of Rae Johnson and Mocca