Saturday, December 15, 2018

Centaur Theatre, Legacy Series: Schwartz's

SCHWARTZ’S: THE MUSICAL

Created by Rick Blue and George Bowser

Based on book by Bill Brownstein’s


December 14 -16, 2018


To the theatre goes delight, Centaur brought back its great success success Schwartz’s: the Musical that originally appeared on its stages in 2011. It portrays the famous Schwartz's Hebrew Delicatessen on St. Laurence street. It is the story of its history as portrayed in the popular Bill Brownstein’s book The Story of Schwartz's Hebrew Delicatessen about ‘the Main’ (as St. Laurence street was known mainly to the Montreal's English speaking population). The book was later popularised even more when made into a musical by Montreal’s kings of parody, Rick Blue and George Bowser. 


The hearty smoked meat sandwiches offered to their clients at the Schwartz's, became iconic to Montreal as one of its culinary achievements. It attracted not only locals and their friends, but huge number of tourists and even international celebrities, and often a very colourful clientèle.

The musical is a delight to watch. The parody style intermingled with some serious notes, makes this performance very entertaining and informative. A audience will be not only entertained but will also discover the Schwartz's unusual business model and what made them so successful. 


PRODUCTION TEAM

Script, music and lyrics: Rick Blue and George Bowser
Co-Directed: Eda Holmes and Jonathan Patterson
Musical Director: Chris Barillaro
Actors: Chris Barillaro, Rick Blue, George Bowser, Vito DeFilippo, Bruce Dinsmore, Holly Gauthier-Frankel, Dominic Lorange, Stephanie Martin, Gordon Masten and Felicia Shulman
Drummer: Parker Bert
Stage Manager: Melanie St-Jacques


SCHWARTZ’S: THE MUSICAL PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE
Fri. Dec. 14           8PM
Sat. Dec. 15          8PM
Sun. Dec. 16         2PM


SCHWARTZ’S: THE MUSICAL TICKETS
$30      Regular Adult Admission                                           
$25      Subscriber/Senior
$20      Students                                                                     
 
For more information about scheduling and program, visit the Centaur Theatre website.

Friday, November 16, 2018

Salon du livre 2018


Le Salon du livre de Montréal
Montreal Annual Book Show
41st Edition

November 14-19, 2018

Comme des géants 
Maison d'édition jeunesse

This Montreal's annual book faire, always held at Place Bonaventure, is extremely popular with Montrealers, especially with children. Loads of school buses bring children to the show, they crowed various kiosks, look through the books, and ask writers present at the show to sign the books they have just purchased.



I was gifted with a book by Nadine Robert, the editor of the publishing house Comme des géantsand I would like to bring it to your attention. The book Elsi was actually written by the editor herself, and it was skilfully illustrated by Maja Kastelich. Those are just the types of illustrations I remember in my own books when I was a child. It brought back the memories of my childhood and the delight I had to read and leaf through such books and to look at the attractive illustrations which made the book story come alive, bringing me right into the imaginary world created by the author.


The Christmas is fast approaching, so do not hesitate to visit this book show, and to purchase just the right book presents either for your child or any other children you might know and would like to bring some happiness to during the winter holidays.



The show presents a huge amount of books of any kind covering an immense array of subjects. One can find books not only for one's own reading pleasure but also for the friends and family.



Click on images to enlarge them.

You can read more about the show in my other article here.

Visit the Salon du livre  website.
Visit Comme des géants website.

Saturday, November 10, 2018

The Children


Centaur Theatre /50th Season
The Children

November 6 - 25, 2018

A 2018 Tony-nominated play
Written by Lucy Kirkwood
Directed by Eda Holmes
With Geordie Johnson, Laurie Paton and Fiona Reid

Centaur Theatre and Canadian Stage Co-production
Quebec Premier


The Children, written by a British playwright Lucy Kirkwood, earned two Tony Award nominations: the Best Play and the Outer Critics Circle Award. It also won the Writer’s Guild of Great Britain Award for Best Play in January 2018. It made its debut in November 2016 at the Royal Court (London, UK). A year later, it opened on Broadway, at the Manhattan Theatre Club. Last month, October 2018, it enjoyed a successful ran at Canadian Stage, the Performing Arts Theatre in Toronto. Now, it is enjoying the Quebec premieres at Montréal’s Centaur Theatre.


The play examines the forefront issues we now all face as a collective humanity – the safety of our energy sources, the toxic and nauseous pollution of our living environment, and the sense of responsibility, or the lack of it, as how to remedy the consequences of our mistakes.

Following a nuclear disaster in the plant where they used to work, two British nuclear engineers, a husband and wife, live just outside of the exclusion zone, near a seaside, where they moved after the accident. At their retirement age, when they should have enjoyed their lives after having contributed their long careers to the society, they are now facing not only the re-examination of their relationship but also consequences of their mistakes, both personal and professional. This is triggered by an unexpected visit of a former colleague whom they have not seen in 38 years. What at first appear as a simple reminiscing, escalates into an existential and moral dilemma with inevitable, grave and irreversible consequences to all three characters.


I highly recommend this play. It has an intricate plot where the real meaning revealed only at the end. The play raises important issues that could affect all of us, and suggest we are all responsible for our actions within our society. Though at first it appears to be light-hearted, it is in reality quite multifaceted. In addition, the actors’ performance is excellent.


PRODUCTION TEAM:

Set & Costume Designer Eo Sharp
Lighting Designer Bonnie Beecher
Sound Designer John Gzowski Assistant Director Christine Horne
Assistant Sound Designer Maddie Bautista
Stage Manager Maria Popoff
Apprentice Stage Manager Meghan Froebelius




Click on images to enlarge them.
Hover your mouse over images for description and credits.



For more information, visit the Centaur Theatre website.

ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES

Sunday Chat-Up:
Sunday November 11, 2018 at 12:30pm in the Gallery.
Join Gazette Editor-in-Chief, Lucinda Chodan, in conversation with Colleen Thorpe, Director of Sustainability Consulting at Equiterre. Together they will discuss possible solutions that can be done individually and collectively, to improve the fate of the planet.
Free public event with refreshments provided by Bonaparte Restaurant.

Post-Show Talkbacks:
Thursday November 15 and Sunday November 18.
Audience members are invited to stay after the performances for a Q&A with select members of the cast.

Saturday Salon:
Saturday November 24 after the matinée performance, at 3:30pm in the Gallery.
Join Eda Holmes, Centaur’s Artistic and Executive Director and also The Children Director, for an informal conversation about The Children, Season 50, and what is coming up at Centaur.


Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Château Ramezay : War Flowers


War Flowers - Fleurs D'ARMES
A Traveling Art Exhibition

October 24, 2019 - March 31, 2019

Presently at Château Ramezay in Montreal, Fleurs D'ARMES is an innovative multisensory exhibition exploring human nature in the landscape of war through floriography, sculpture and scents. It draws portraits and examines experiences of ten Canadians directly involved in the First World War.

During the First World War (1914-18) Canadian soldier Lieutenant-Colonel George Stephen Cantlie, a Montrealer, picked flowers from the fields and gardens of war-torn Europe, pressing and drying them within a book. Every day, he sent one flower home, along with a short, affectionate note to one of his children, including his one-year-old baby daughter Celia back home in Montreal, so that, as she grew up, she would have something to remember him by in the event he didn’t survive that war.

The exhibition is inspired by the pressed flowers picked by soldier George Stephen Cantlie in the gardens, fields and hedges of war-torn Europe and sent home to Montreal to his baby daughter, « wee Celia », as he called her.
These century-old flowers, some of them on display with the original letters, are used as floriography, a Victorian method of communicating meaning and emotion through flowers, to tell the story of human nature in the landscape of war. Each flower represents emotions associated with such attributes as “devotion”, “solitude”, “familial love”, “grace”, “innocence”, “memory” and others.

There are 10 stations at the exhibition, about Canadians at the World War One The war is portrayed through personal stories of John McCrae, Georges Vanier, Elsie Reford, Jean Brillant, Talbot Papineau, A.Y. Jackson, Percival Molson, Julia Drummond, Edward Savage and George Stephen Cantlie, offer diverse perspectives on the Canadian contribution to the war ending efforts.

For each station, optical crystal sculptures created by award-winning Toronto-based artist Mark Raynes Roberts portray scenes that illustrate different aspects of human nature, while scents at each station developed by Magog, Quebec, olfactory specialist and perfumer Alexandra Bachand evoke memory.

Visit the War Flowers website that complements the exhibition and features the profiles of artists who created various show elements. It explains the behind-the-scenes access design process.

For more information about the exhibition and other activities, visit the Château Ramezay website.

WAR FLOWERS - The team behind the WAR Flowers touring art exhibition


Tuesday, October 23, 2018

MAC 2018: Françoise Sullivan


Françoise Sullivan
Retrospective of Her Career

October 20, 2018 - January 20, 2019

The Montreal Museum of Contemporary Art - Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal (MAC), is presenting a retrospective of a leading figure of Québec’s avant-garde and signatory of the Refus global manifesto: Françoise Sullivan.


The Françoise Sullivan exhibition celebrates the artist’s wide-ranging artistic approaches with an impressive selection of works and archival pieces representing milestones from the artist’s career and celebrating Sullivan’s development from the 1940s to the present day.



A prominent figure in the history of Québec art, Sullivan began her career in the 1940s as a member of the emerging Automatist movement, and she never ceased reinventing herself. This major MAC retrospective is showcasing her wide-ranging, prolific artistic career that has left an important mark on contemporary art in Canada. Some fifty works are shown, including paintings, sculptures, and archival documentation, accompanied by a special program of unique performances.

“Already an accomplished painter, dancer and choreographer seventy years ago, Françoise Sullivan is now considered Québec’s first multidisciplinary artist,” notes John Zeppetelli, Director and Chief Curator of the MAC.





Exploring the sources of human nature


Françoise Sullivan’s involvement with the Automatists marked a watershed moment in the artist’s life and Québec art history. Yet her contribution to modern Québec runs much deeper. Over the course of a prolific career, Sullivan has explored the sources of human nature, posing a number of aesthetic questions that brought her into the fold of multiple avant-garde movements in Québec art. In the words of Mark Lanctôt, Curator at the MAC, Sullivan spent her career “searching for new ways of both being of her time and expressing a timeless interiority, a new universalism driven by the desire to reach beyond herself.”
 


Performances at the MAC

In addition to the artworks on display, the MAC will present a cycle of performances representative of Françoise Sullivan’s important work as a choreographer and contemporary dancer. To integrate these performances in the exhibition, the Museum commissioned performing artists to present new works in a specially designed performance space. Invited artists include Dana Michel (associate artist at Par B.L.eux), The Two Gullivers (Flutura & Besnik Haxhillari), Dorian Nuskind-Oder, Simon Grenier-Poirier, Catherine Lavoie-Marcus and Maryse Larivière. Performances will be presented beginning on October 23. The performance schedule is available on the MAC website: https://macm.org/en/activities/performances/



Françoise Sullivan Biography

Born in Montreal in 1923, Françoise Sullivan studied at Montreal’s École des beaux-arts in the 1940s, during which time she and a circle of artist friends headed by Paul-Émile Borduas established the movement known as “Les Automatistes.” A co-signatory of the group’s Refus global manifesto, she contributed a seminal essay on contemporary dance, “La Danse et l’espoir” (Dance and Hope). An accomplished painter, dancer and choreographer, she spent the years from 1945 to 1947 in New York studying modern dance under Franziska Boas, among others. Shortly after returning to Montreal, she created Danse dans la neige (Dance in the Snow) (1948), which marked a defining moment in her artistic career. In the 1960s, she turned her attention to sculpture, working notably with steel and Plexiglas. She made her first trips to Greece and Italy in the 1970s, and, as a member of the Véhicule Art artist-run centre, Sullivan experimented with performative and “immaterial” approaches associated with conceptual art. The 1980s marked a return to painting, with matierist tondos and later figurative works inspired by ancient mythology. During the second half of the 1990s, she embarked on a lengthy exploration of abstract painting, a passion she continues to pursue today.

Françoise Sullivan taught at Concordia University’s Faculty of Fine Arts from 1977 to 2009. Her works have been shown in Canada, the United States, France, Italy, Belgium, Germany, Denmark and Japan. She has received the Prix Paul-Émile Borduas and the Order of Canada and was named a knight of the Order of Québec. Retrospectives of her work have been mounted by the Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal and the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec. In 2005, Françoise Sullivan won the Governor General’s Award in the Visual and Media Arts, and in 2008, the Gershon Iskowitz Prize.




 Catalogue 


For the Françoise Sullivan retrospective, the MAC will publish a substantial catalogue (288 pages, 180 illustrations), featuring essays by Mark Lanctôt, exhibition curator, Vincent Bonin, Ray Ellenwood and Noémie Solomon. An illustrated chronology, written by Chantal Charbonneau, completes the publication. The catalogue is available for $39.95 at the MAC Boutique.




The Françoise Sullivan retrospective will embark on a multi-city Canadian tour organized in collaboration with two Ontario museums: the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg, and the Art Gallery of Windsor. It will then be shown in the Musée régional de Rimouski (Québec) and the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria (British Columbia). This travelling exhibition is funded in part by the Government of Canada.



Click on images to enlarge them.
All images in this article:  Photo © Nadia Slejskova

For more information about MAC, visit the museum's website.
 

Also see my article about Françoise Sullivan exhibition at the Montreal Museum of Fine arts that opened in November 2023 and celebrated her 100th birthday here.


Monday, October 22, 2018

Choir Boy


Centaur Theatre /50th Season
CHOIR BOY

Written by Tarell Alvin McCraney
Directed by Mike Payette
Musical Director & Arranger Floydd Ricketts

October 9 - 28, 2018

The play is about the Drew Prep School for Boys that is dedicated to the formation of strong, ethical Black men. Some students accomplish this by participating in the school's choir.

The actors singing performances are quite impressive as they vocally harmonize several well known and more lesser known songs. Their acting skills are also noteworthy, though it might appear that some over-acting was intentionally used to portray the main character Pharus. He was born to sing and wants nothing less than to be a leader of his school’s legendary choir, while the school faces the challenge to accept him as a gay choirmaster. Choir Boy is a portrayal of young Black men who aspire to fulfil their dreams, and who are finding their way to adulthood.

A bit of a weak aspect of the play is the actors' clarity of diction especially since they are portraying a southern US accent. For those who are not native English speakers, it might be difficult to understand some dialogue or monologue passages.

For more information, visit the Centaur Theatre website.



Friday, September 28, 2018

MMFA 2018: ITHQ Educational Partnership


MMFA and ITHQ
Interdisciplinary Educational Partnership 

September 27, 2018 

The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (MMFA) and the Institut de tourisme et d’hôtellerie du Québec (ITHQ) announce a new interdisciplinary educational partnership, stemming from a common desire to promote learning and creativity. Its goal is to sensitize ITHQ students to different forms of art, through opportunities to meet with artists and connect with artworks from the Museum’s collection.



Beginning this semester, ITHQ students in the Formation supérieure en cuisine [Advanced Culinary Training] program will have the opportunity to visit the MMFA's collections free of charge and to exercise their culinary creativity after encounters with artists exhibiting at the Museum. These experiences will help raise the students’ awareness about various forms of cultural expression and enrich the artistic and emotional content of their training.

Guided tours of the collection will be provided to the student, with the intention to spark their imagination and inspire new creative techniques. The meetings with artists will be an opportunity to learn more about the artistic process and its creative source. Back at the ITHQ kitchens, the students will be asked to create dishes inspired by their emotional response to the works: and the artist whom they had met will be invited to sample their culinary works and listen to the narratives behind their creative process.


Nathalie Bondil, Director General and Chief Curator of the MMFA stated:

"Cooking is an art. Food-related occupations are increasingly popular among our younger generations, almost to the point of becoming a 21st-century religion! Quebec is known for its creativity, and that includes its culinary talent." 


Click on images to enlarge them.
Hover you mouse over images for description  and credits.

For more information about the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts exhibitions and activities, visit the museum's website.

Monday, September 24, 2018

MMFA 2018: Alexander Calder


ALEXANDER CALDER: RADICAL INVENTOR
First Canadian retrospective of a modern art giant

September 21, 2018 - February 24, 2019

The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (MMFA) presents the first Canadian retrospective of an American artist Alexander Calder (1898-1976). This major exhibition is a result of in-depth research. It sheds new light on Calder’s work, as seen through the perspective of his innovative artistic concepts. It showcases the full scope of his career, especially how he set art in motion.


The exhibition was developed and organized by the MMFA. It brings together over 150 works: paintings, sculptures, jewellery and Calder's other graphic works, thus highlighting the true extent of his remarkable, innovative and multidisciplinary career. The works most prominently displayed include his paintings, his wire in-space portraits that are actually small scale sculptures, his monumental sculptures, and his sculptural mobiles. The exhibition examines Calder's artistic path and the progressive development of his artistic concepts.

The exhibition also highlights Calder's international career that spanned half a century. He exhibited on five continents and worked in many fields, including drawing, sculpture, painting, design and performance, especially circus acrobats and animal tricks. A video projection at the exhiobition shows Calder performing circus tricks with his miniature  wire sculptures.


Loans from prestigious institutions

Among the 150 objects on display are numerous works and documents that have rarely or never been presented and have been specially restored for the exhibition: the sculptures The Brass Family (1929), on loan from the Whitney Museum of American Art; Kiki de Montparnasse (II) (1930), on loan from the Centre Pompidou, Paris; White Panel (1936), on loan from the Calder Foundation; and the mobile Red Gongs (1950), on loan from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, to name but a few. Alexander Calder: Radical Inventor also reveals little-known sculptures made by the artist in his childhood

Other than those from the Calder Foundation, the exhibition has benefitted from major loans from museums in the United States and France, including the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (New York), the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York), the Centre Pompidou (Paris), the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), the Smithsonian American Art Museum (Washington), the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden (Washington), the National Gallery of Art (Washington) and the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago; as well as from loans from American, Canadian and French private collectors.



Alexander Calder: Radical Inventor

The exhibition presents an original reading of the uniqueness of the artist’s work and contribution to art history. A radical inventor, Calder not only introduced a new dimension to sculpture but changed the way we experience art in the modern world, based on a series of novel concepts. Beyond the actual objects on display, the exhibition draws attention to the space they occupy.


Montreal, a Calder city

The last section of the exhibition is devoted to the sculpture Trois disques, commonly called Calder’s Man, a monumental work that has become an icon of Canadian heritage. This 22-metre stainless steel stabile installed on the Île Sainte-Hélène belvedere in Parc Jean-Drapeau (currently under reconstruction), is Calder’s second-tallest stabile, after that in Mexico. It was commissioned for Montreal’s Expo 67 and was gifted to the city at the end of the exhibition. This is the first time that the two original maquettes of the work have been brought together in the same location – one of them being the maquette that is installed front of the Michal and Renata Hornstein Pavilion, on loan from York University, in Toronto, which was recently  restored. This retrospective will give the public a chance to discover the artist behind this masterpiece of public art.


Nathalie Bondil, Director General and Chief Curator, MMFA, stated:
Montreal is home to the most important work of public art in Canada: the monumental sculpture Trois disques, or as Montrealers affectionately call it, Man, remembering ‘Man and His World.’ Evoking humanism as did Expo 67 – an exhibition that looked toward the future – this sculpture alludes to humanity’s technical progress and efforts, and its aspiration toward a collective harmony. And yet, the life and work of this modern art giant remain underappreciated in Canada. That is why I initiated this retrospective... Calder moved in the cosmopolitan modernist avant-garde circles with figures such as Arp, Cocteau, Le Corbusier, Léger, Miró, Mondrian, Man Ray, Prévert and many others. His art, joyful and serious at the same time, attracted crowds from the very start of his career in the Paris of the Roaring Twenties, with his miniature circus. Today, in Montreal, world capital of the circus arts, Calder’s talents as a storyteller, inventor, painter and sculptor are revealed, thanks to this fresh perspective and research done by the curators, with the support of the Calder Foundation.”  


Alexander Calder Biographical Notes

Calder was born into a family of artists, and his probing mind, love of materials and penchant for invention equipped him from his early career to discard the conventional parameters of art. During the 1920s in Paris, Alexander Calder developed his art among the artistic and intellectual circles of the day, forging friendships with Cocteau, Duchamp, Le Corbusier, Léger, Mondrian, Miró, Prévert, Varèse and other prominent figures of the international avant-garde. Around this time, he presented a miniature circus, which is today considered a precursor of performance art, and invented wire sculpture, tracing the silhouette of his subjects, including acrobats and well-known personalities like Kiki de Montparnasse and Josephine Baker. He was a protean creator whose practice continues to amaze us for both for the diversity and the unique experiences his works offer.

Calder revolutionized the art world by adding the dimensions of movement and time to sculpture. In so doing, he created a new way for art to be experienced in the modern world, which itself was in a state of flux in an era of rapid industrialization and great social change. It was in the early 1930s that he invented what Marcel Duchamp termed “mobiles,” to describe the kinetic sculptures in which the various components in precarious equilibrium generate a unique series of movements, transforming the way in which objects can animate space. At the same time, he created immobile abstract works, which Jean Arp, in 1932, labelled “stabiles.” Later, global commissions for Calder’s distinctive monumental stabiles earned him international renown, and he progressively redefined the urban space through his public art.


Momentum: the public activation of 10 mobiles

A rare opportunity to see Calder’s mobiles in action, the Momentum presentations will allow visitors to observe the works being set in motion by a MMFA restorer. These activations of the mobiles offer a truer representation of the artist’s vision for these kinetic works. These events promise a unique experience and will be held Tuesdays through Fridays at 2 p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.



Click on images to enlarge them.
Hover you mouse over images for description  and credits.

This exhibition is located the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts' Michal and Renata Hornstein Pavilion – Level 2.

For more information about the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts exhibitions and activities, visit the museum's website.