The annual ARTnews collectors list is out, and there are no big surprises. Over half the major collectors featured are from the United States, followed by Germany, the UK, Switzerland and other Western European countries.Most focus on contemporary and modern art, though Impressionist, Post-Impressionist and Old Masters are also popular.
Jativa Master (also known as the Master of the Seven Sorrows of the Virgin), The Crucifixion, late 1400′soil on panel lined with fabric. Gift of Joey and Toby Tanenbaum to the AGO, 1995Four Canadians make the list: Continue reading →
Entries Tagged 'Montreal' ↓
News: Four Canadians Make List of Top 200 Art Collectors
July 8th, 2009 — Art News: Canada, Collecting, Montreal, Toronto and region
Montreal: In the Trees at Battat Contemporary
June 25th, 2009 — Montreal
In The Trees: Works from the Battat Collection
Battat Contemporary, Montreal
July 2 – August 15, 2009

Ed Pien, Night Gathering, 2005. All images courtesy Battat Contemporary.
Montreal’s newest collector-led art space, Battat Contemporary, run by the collector Joe Battat, opened in March 2009 and has quickly made a name for itself by mixing Battat’s interest in Old Master drawings with cutting edge contemporary pieces.
Report from Montreal
June 23rd, 2009 — Architecture, Montreal, Video/New Media
VoCA went to Montreal and by far the best thing we saw was Michal Rovner’s wonderful installation Particles of Reality, her first solo exhibition in Canada, at DHC Art Foundation. The exhibition, which opened in May and runs through September 27, begins with the same video works projected onto Petri dishes that the artist showed at the 2005 Venice biennale’s Israeli pavilion.

Michal Rovner, a close up shot of Datazone, 2003. Image: musesphere.com
We were struck by her work then, but this exhibition is even better. Rovner’s videos of tiny, abstracted human beings, swaying and dressed in black derive meaning from the way they are exhibited. The people are choreographed in patterns so that in Data Zone (2003), a group of long tables embedded with illuminated Petri dishes, they look like Chromosomes.
VoCA goes to Montreal!
June 17th, 2009 — Montreal

Thomas Kneubühler, installation view: ‘Brise Soleil’ éclairant ‘Mount Hortons’ & ‘The Mountain (Switch)’, “Electric #1″, 2009 and “Electric #3″ , 2009. Image: projex-mtl.com
News: Paulette Gagnon New Head of MACM, Montreal
June 15th, 2009 — Art News: Canada, Montreal
Paulette Gagnon, chief curator of the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal, has been given the top job at the gallery.

Paulette Gagnon. Image: newswire.ca
She will replace Mark Mayer, who left last year for the bigger top job at the National Gallery of Canada.
Paulette Gagnon is the 9th director general of the museum, and the third woman to occupy this post.
Gagnon has been as the MACM since 1992 and gets VoCA’s thumbs up for organizing exhibitions that included VoCA favorites Isaac Julien, Louise Bourgeois and Attila Richard Lukacs.
Two Summer Exhibitions: Quebec & Halifax
June 8th, 2009 — Halifax and Eastern Canada, Montreal, Photography, Sculpture/Installation
Confluences: Rencontre entre Montreal et le Bas-Saint-Laurent
June 14 – 13 September, 2009
Musee Regionale de Rimouski
Should you find yourself in Quebec this summer, this exhibition seeks to bring together a rencontre between Montreal and the lower St. Lawrence. The show looks promising!

Guillaume Lachapelle, Manege 16, 2004-06. Image: guillaumelachapelle.com
Featuring work by 13 artists (who you may not know of) including Magalie Comeau, Sylvie Moisan and Guillaume Lachapelle, whose miniature theatrical installations VoCA loves.
It’s All About Yoko (Ono)
June 1st, 2009 — Montreal
One of VoCA’s favorite artists, Yoko Ono, speaks with the FT on the eve of being awarded the prestigious
Golden Lion award for lifetime achievement – along with John Baldessari – at this year’s Venice Biennale, which opens this week.
Read the full article HERE.

John and Yoko. Image: mmfa.qc.ca
Her exhibition sounds well worth seeing, if you’re in Venice.
If you’re not, check out Imagine: The Peace Ballad of John & Yoko, on view through June 21 at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts.
Click HERE for the Montreal Museum website.
Click HERE to watch Yoko Ono’s famous Cut Piece from 1965.
On Art Schools
May 19th, 2009 — Articles by Andrea Carson, Calgary and region, Edmonton, Halifax and Eastern Canada, Montreal, Ottawa, Thoughts on art, Toronto and region, Vancouver and region, Winnipeg
How relevant are art schools today? Do artists really require education beyond basic technical training? Do art institutions hinder, rather than help the creative expression of artists today?

Bruce Nauman, The True Artist Helps the World by Revealing Mystic Truths (Window or Wall Sign), 1967.
Image: truthinart.wordpress.com
And what does Bruce Nauman think?
Read my opinion piece on the brand new news website, The Mark.
Click HERE.
Montreal: Kalup Linzy, Michal Rovner, The Wrong Corpse, Icelandic Love Corp.
May 12th, 2009 — Montreal, Performance art, Sculpture/Installation, Video/New Media
Kalup Linzy: Recessed Depressed… Child Just Tell Me…
May 8 – June 13, 2009
Parisian Laundry

Kalup Linzy. Image: artnews.org
One of the hottest names in video art, Linzy’s best known work is a series of video art pieces satirizing the tone and narrative approach of television soap opera. Linzy performs most of the characters himself, and was once described as ‘Part Richard Pryor, part RuPaul.‘
Click HERE for more info on Linzy, and some great videos.
Click HERE for Parisian Laundry’s website.
COMING UP!
Michal Rovner: Particles of Reality
DHC Art Foundation
May 21 – September 27, 2009
News: Sobey Art Prize 2009 Shortlist Announced
May 1st, 2009 — Art News: Canada, Halifax and Eastern Canada, Montreal, Toronto and region, Vancouver and region, Winnipeg
Well, it’s down to five.
Who will win the $70,000 Sobey Art Prize this year?
After last years win by Vancouver superstar Tim Lee (stolen, we think, from Winnipeg’s excellent Daniel Barrow) and won the year before by Montrealer Michel de Broin (who we interviewed HERE and whose pedal powered Buick we covered HERE), this year it’s down to this group:
WEST COAST AND YUKON: Luanne Martineau, whose fuzzy felted pieces we really like for their craft element and references to Minimal art and painters like Philip Guston.

Luanne Martineau, Dangler, 2008. Image: akimbo.ca
PRAIRIES AND THE NORTH: Marcel Dzama, he of the much-copied naive drawings that were so much in vogue several years ago. From Winnipeg, where he lived, Dzama seemingly influenced all of Brooklyn. Now he lives in New York and shows with David Zwirner Gallery, where he’s been making sort of awkward dioramas.
Andrea Carson writes on contemporary art, architecture and design...