Rick Leong at the PHI Foundation for Contemporary Art

Rick Leong is exhibited at the PHI Foundation for Contemporary Art as part of a group exhibition titled RELATIONS: la diaspora et la peinture.

This group show explores the complex and multiple meanings of diaspora, its condition, and its experiences as expressed through painting. “The questions and concepts of diaspora are of deep, personal interest to me as a person of colour born in Canada of mixed Asian heritage,” says curator and managing director Cheryl Sim. The wide spectrum of productive interpretations and relations that are generated by experiences of diaspora remain unfixed, providing endless engagement with the notions of kinship and identity in a world of advanced globalization and migration.

From July 8 until November 29, 2020

To consult the exhibition’s website, please click here.

Shaan Syed represented by Bradley Ertaskiran

Bradley Ertaskiran is delighted to announce representation of Shaan Syed.

Shaan Syed’s paintings are thorough investigations into simplified forms, texture and colour. He employs a distinctive palette repeatedly into often large-scale paintings that become ongoing series. His paintings are recognizable in their tension between the graphic lines of hard edge abstraction and gestural and personal mark making. Syed layers paint, saw-dust, and, at times, plaster onto the surface of the canvas in order to build up texture, while subsequently pulling it off and forcing it into neat and tightened up lines and sections. He often scrawls his name or words documented over time into the canvas in English and Arabic, literally inserting himself and his personal narrative into a tradition of modern abstraction. Shaan Syed was raised in Canada in a new immigrant family by a Protestant British mother and a Muslim Pakistani father, this upbringing provided insight into how the act of seeing is constantly in flux and dependant on context.  He recently began painting a repeated motif of a step, originating from a picture of the giant spiral staircase that forms the minaret of the Great Mosque of Samarra in Iraq.

“The use of the step initially came about from a desire to divide the canvas. By dividing, I set up a problem of configuring two sides back together. I was drawn to the minaret because it is a cultural signifier; a nod to my own personal upbringing, and one that I am using to explore the shifting nature of seeing.”

– Shaan Syed.

Shaan Syed was born in Toronto (1975), he lives and works in London, UK. Syed holds a master’s degree in Fine Arts from Goldsmiths College in London and a diploma in Fine Arts from OCAD in Toronto, ON. Recent solo exhibitions include Thank you India, Goodbye Pakistan, Hello England at FREEHOUSE, London UK, Maghrib at Parisian Laundry, Montreal, I & I at Kunsthalle Winterthur, Switzerland; Licking Forward Tangerine at noshowspace, London; and CAPITAL! at Michael Janssen Gallery, Berlin. He has participated in numerous group exhibitions including The Other Side at Power Plant, Toronto; Here at the Aga Khan Museum, Toronto; Sam Windett and Shaan Syed at Patrick De Brock, Knokke; Manuel Graf and Shaan Syed at Herrmann Germann Contemporary, Zurich and The Violet Crab at the David Roberts Art Foundation (DRAF), London. Syed has received awards and scholarships from the Pollock-Krasner Foundation, the Elephant Trust UK, Arts Council England, the Canada Council for the Arts, and Jerwood Contemporary Painters UK. In 2018/19, Syed founded and ran Aqbar, a temporary gallery space in East London where he invited his peers to show one painting per exhibition. Syed’s upcoming solo exhibitions include Nuno Centeno Gallery, Portugal.

Jessica Eaton meets with Chris Hampton, an article published by the National Gallery of Canada

Read the article “Mixing Light: The Abstract Photography of Jessica Eaton” written by Chris Hampton for the National Gallery of Canada’s website.

The Montreal-based artist is perhaps best known for her ongoing photo series Cubes for Albers and LeWitt, which spans more than a decade (the works’ titles, cfaal, are an acronym of the series name). Coloured in rich jewel tones, Eaton’s nested, knotted forms behave in ways 3D objects ought not to. Part of the joy in experiencing her work, indeed, is puzzling out just what you are looking at and how it came to be. Viewers might compare it to the geometric abstraction of Josef Albers and Sol LeWitt, the two artists the series salutes, or maybe the paintings of Frank Stella or 1960s Op Art. Eaton’s polychrome enigmas, however, are made purely photographically – the effects are produced entirely in-camera and through masking, filters and multiple exposures.

Chris Hampton

The National Gallery of Canada holds in its collection three works from this series: cfaal 306, cfaal 340 and cfaal 346.

To read the article on the NGC’s website, please click here.

To download the PDF, please click here.

The Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal acquires a work by Luce Meunier.

Bradley Ertaskiran is thrilled to announce that the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal has recently acquired the work Eau courante #4 (2018) by Luce Meunier.

The work is presented at the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal in an exhibition titled Des horizons d’attente, an exhibition that highlights the practices of twenty-one artists whose works, recently acquired by the Musée. They speak of political, feminist, social, aesthetic, material, conceptual, spiritual, ecological, poetic, linguistic and identity-related concerns specific to our time.

To consult the museum’s website, please click here.

To consult the artist’s profile, please click here.

Janet Werner in Border Crossings

In Border Crossings (Vol. 39, Issue 153), Ana Osterweil signs an article on Janet Werner’s retrospective exhibition presented at the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal from October 31, 2019 until January 5, 2020.

Showcasing her relentless anatomization of female subjectivity, this survey of the last decade sampled the painter’s consistent exploration of carnivalesque parody and female masquerade before culminating in a haunting suite of still lifes. Organized with a canny eye for visual and thematic correspondence by curator François LeTourneux, the retrospective demonstrated the keen intelligence that Werner brings to portraits of women negotiating the perils of exposure.

Ara Osterweil

To order Border Crossings’s full issue, please visit their website here.

To download the PDF please click here.

Joseph Tisiga – 2020 Sobey Art Award

Bradley Ertaskiran is happy to announce that Joseph Tisiga is a recipient of the 2020 Sobey Art Award.

Sobey Art Award – About

Presented annually, the Sobey Art Award celebrates some of our country’s most exciting young artists and provides them with significant financial support.

Since it was created in 2001, the Sobey Art Award has had an undeniable impact on the careers of young Canadian contemporary artists. Within little more than a decade, the award and its attendant publicity have also boosted awareness of contemporary art in Canada and further afield.

Conventionally, each year a panel of curatorial advisors consisting of a noted gallery representative in each of five different regions — the West Coast and the Yukon, the Prairies and the North, Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic Provinces — and an international juror, develops a longlist of 25 Canadian artists (five from each region). The panel then meets and chooses its shortlist, with one finalist from each region.

In 2020, these 25 exceptional Canadian artists will be awarded $25,000 (CAD) each. The National Gallery of Canada and the Sobey Art Foundation’s commitment is to return to a juried annual award as soon as public health guidelines enable us to do so, but for this year the shortlist artists exhibition at the National Gallery of Canada, the winners’ announcement gala, and the international residencies program have been suspended.

National Gallery of Canada

For more information, please consult the National Gallery of Canada’s website by clicking here.

The Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal acquires a work by Marie-Michelle Deschamps

Bradley Ertaskiran is thrilled to announce that the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal has recently acquired the work Occasional work (2019) by Marie-Michelle Deschamps.

The work is presented at the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal in an exhibition titled Des horizons d’attente, an exhibition that highlights the practices of twenty-one artists whose works, recently acquired by the Musée. They speak of political, feminist, social, aesthetic, material, conceptual, spiritual, ecological, poetic, linguistic and identity-related concerns specific to our time.

To consult the museum’s website, please click here.

To consult the artist’s profile, please click here.

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