September 2021
Writer Joanna Fox meets Janet Werner in her studio for a feature about her art practice published in ELLE Canada for their September 2021 issue.
September 2021
Writer Joanna Fox meets Janet Werner in her studio for a feature about her art practice published in ELLE Canada for their September 2021 issue.
August 2021
In Border Crossings (Vol. 40, Issue 157), Anaïs Castro signs an article on Marie-Michelle Deschamps‘ exhibition Oasis presented at Bradley Ertaskiran from February 11 to March 13, 2021.
To read the full article on Border Crossings’ website, please click here.
Bradley Ertaskiran is thrilled to announce that Julia Dault will be taking part in the first edition of Greater Toronto Art, a triennial survey organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art. This exhibition, curated by Daisy Desrosiers, Rui Mateus Amaral and November Paynter, features twenty-one of the most energizing artists and art collectives working in relation to the city today.
The exhibition will open on September 29, 2021.
For the inaugural edition of Gallery Weekend Montreal, Bradley Ertaskiran is delighted to announce that Janet Werner will be present at the gallery for the last day of her exhibition, Sunday, June 13 to meet with visitors.
To celebrate this event, Baluchon Food Truck will be on site from 1pm to 4pm.
In order to meet the standards of the sanitary measures in place, our courtyard will be open to the public in the event that visitors must wait to enter the gallery.
Published in the Montreal Gazette, T’Cha Dunlevy writes about the work of three Montreal artists currently exhibiting in the city. Janet Werner discusses her exhibition There There, shown at the gallery until June 13, 2021.
To read the article online, please click here, or you can download a PDF version here.
To consult the artist’s profile, please click here.
Bradley Ertaskiran is delighted to announce the representation of Preston Pavlis. His first solo exhibition, titled Still ready to curse and rage, will take place from June 23 to July 31, 2021, in the bunker space.
Preston Pavlis’ work on canvas and fabric represents his interest in the fusion of painting and textiles as a means to explore narrative, form and color. Focused on poetic association and metaphor, the resulting works in oil, embroidery, and collage are personal charts for time and memory. The works situate solitary figures on often non-descript grounds, their gazes shift between the viewer and somewhere beyond the space of the spectator. Whether their expressions are pensive, contemplative, ebullient, or intent – there is an interiority that is palpable. Pavlis’ figures convey a subtle energy and a deep sense of presence that is enhanced by their imposing scale.
Pavlis was born in Loma Linda, California, and currently lives and works in Edmonton, Alberta. He was Alberta’s regional winner of the BMO 1st Art Competition in 2019 and was recently shortlisted to the 2021 Eldon + Anne Foote Edmonton Visual Arts Prize. He has presented his work in group exhibitions at Bradley Ertaskiran, Montreal, at Half Gallery, NYC, and at the John & Maggie Mitchell Gallery, Edmonton. His work has also been included in recent art fair presentations including Frieze New York and NADA Miami.
To consult the artist’s profile, please click here.
Border Crossings (Vol. 40, Issue 156) published an interview led by Robert Enright with Shaan Syed.
Your palette is quite intriguing. What determines your colour choices?
Colour is really important to me. I want the colour to point to something that you may not be expecting. I realized this a couple of years ago after a trip to Marrakesh. The whole city is painted this pale, dirty pink colour. I remember asking a cab driver why everything was painted that colour. I was expecting a deep historical answer. All I got was, “Oh, it’s Marrakesh; that’s the Marrakesh colour.” It made me think about colour being intrinsic to a place. Of course, upon further research you learn that the dirty pink came from the earth at some point, but now they just paint all the buildings this colour because it’s “Marrakesh pink.” It made me start thinking about colour in a very specific way: How can colour point to a different time, or a different place, or a period?
Extract from the interview with Robert Enright
To order a copy of Issue #156 of Border Crossings, please click here.
Published in La Presse, Éric Clément reviews Janet Werner’s exhibition There There, presented at the gallery until June 13, 2021.
To read the article online, please click here, or you can download a PDF version here.
To consult the artist’s profile, please click here.
Jean-Michel Quirion reviews Marie-Michelle Deschamps’ solo exhibition presented in the Bunker space of the gallery, in early 2021.
To read the full article online on Vie des Arts’ website, please click here.
Bradley Ertaskiran is delighted to announce the representation of Stephanie Temma Hier.
Stephanie Temma Hier’s work emerges at the intersection of oil painting and ceramic sculpture. She creates meticulous figurative paintings, many featuring scenes of fruit and other consumables which then nestle within hand-built ceramic sculptures. Working mostly from found imagery and scouring the internet for content, Hier fixes the ephemeral stream of fleeting digital imagery into slow, hand-wrought processes and earthly materials. Her paintings interact with their sculptural pairings to create new narratives both rich in the use of art historical references and feather-light by the means of pop-cultural ephemera. The vision put forward in her work reminds us that no image, context, or framework exists in a vacuum.
Stephanie Temma Hier (b. 1992, Toronto, Canada) lives and works in New York. She holds a BFA from the Ontario College of Art and Design University, Toronto, and studied at the Academy of Art Canada, Toronto. Recent solo exhibitions include Gallery Vacancy (Shanghai), David Dale (Glasgow), Franz Kaka (Toronto), Y2K Group (New York), Downs and Ross (New York), Neochrome Gallery (Turin). Recent group shows include Nino Meir Gallery (Los Angeles & Brussels), Arsenal Contemporary Art (New York), Fisher Parrish (Brooklyn), Three Four Three Four (Brooklyn), Galerie Antoine Ertaskiran (Montreal), Thierry Goldberg (New York), Galerie Plus One (Anvers), Anonymous Gallery (Mexico), Bureau (New York), The Kitchen (New York), Museo della Frutta (Turin), The Power Plant (Toronto), Art Gallery of Ontario (Toronto), and Johannes Vogt (New York). Hier was a finalist for the RBC Painting competition in 2016 and 2018 and is the recipient of multiple grants from the Canada Council for the Arts, the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation, and has participated in residencies at Hospitalfield (Scotland) and Shandaken: Stormking (New York).
To consult the artist’s profile, please click here.