Let’s build a giant room-sized theremin with 16 antennas!

by Julien on August 13th, 2009

We would like to invite the tag-team of artist/engineers David Beaulieu and Christian Pelletier to this year’s Pop Montreal International Music Festival (September 30 - October 4) and see them build a Theremin room in our special Art Pop and POP Symposium headquarters.

The duo was last seen breaking musical boundaries with their loud-speaker suits worn by Patrick Watson and his musicians at this year’s Festival de Jazz de Montréal.

The installation of massive proportions we want them to build will invite festival-goers to participate (alone, or in groups!) in the creation of on-site, mind-blowing, improvised music as they interact in a room with 16 antennas suspended above and around them. As they are activated, the antennas trigger psychedelic sounds that are bound to excite and solicit interest from all sorts of human beings

It’s gonna be spontaneous, it’s gonna be an immediate and visceral experience, it’s gonna be communally created art instantly diffused, IT’S GONNA BE SO COOL! We’re asking all lovers of theremins, lovers of art, lovers of interactive experiences, lovers of electricity, lovers of music and lovers of the world everywhere to help us make this project happen. Your money will be used to pay for David & Christian’s hard work and the equipment they will need to make this happen.

Check out our kickstarter page, where you’ll see all the amazing REWARDS we’re offering to people that back this project. Among those, you’ll find:

  • a limited edition DVD of animations made by local animators
  • a DIY theremin kit
  • a hand silk-screened limited edition t-shirt with a theremin on it
  • an mp3 of an exclusive track from Gentleman Reg or Dishwasher
  • a FULL PAGE photo of you in the Pop Montreal segment program
  • a VIP Festival Pass to the Pop Montreal International Music Festival
  • a personal festival friend and a cozy bed to sleep in
  • a musical about you and 3 of your friends, written and performed by us. we will tape it in Montreal in front of a live audience, and send it to you.
  • a custom-made Loudspeaker Suit built by Beaulieu and Pelletier

I <3 Giant Animals

by amy on July 26th, 2009

I just had to share this giant wooden bunny that I saw on the DesignSponge blog. It’s by artist Florentijn Hofman, who is most well known for the giant rubber duckie (2007) pictured below. I hope you enjoy over sized animals as much as I do.

Biennale Madness

by kit on May 16th, 2009

Ok folks, so the Montreal Biennale is half-over, but there is still plenty, plenty, plenty to check out. So much so that my head is spinning a little over here in my dark, damp corner of the world, and I just might need to put a plastic bag on my head to help breathe. That helps, right….?

The majority of what the Biennale has to offer runs throughout the month, so fear not, people, you haven’t missed much if you haven’t gone to see its diverse programming yet. General notes of interest for those wishing to embark on the Discover-MTL-BNL-09 train;

1. The festival has many locations, but the central one is L’Ecole Bourget, which is down, down, downtown. Its exact address, unlike my hairdressers, is not a mystery, and is 1230 de la Montagne, (coin Ste Catherine) which is close to Guy-Concordia and Peel Metro stations. 

2. The admission fee will set you back $5, or the price of a very good latte, unless you can prove you’re 12 or under, so I suggest dressing way, way down. Think beanie and giant lollipop. 

3. For other Biennale locations and a map of where things are at, check this link out. To download the full program, click here

At any and all rates, here, in a randomly assorted listing, are some of the things that I suggest you go and do, wrestle down, cajole, chomp on, etc….

1. The interactive exhibition at the Maison de la Culture Marie-Uguay (6052 Boulevard Monk, Metro Monk)

This exhibition, which runs all month long, is located in and focused on the fabulous South West of Montreal and its boroughs (St.Henri, Ville Emard, Verdun, Point St Charles, Little Burgundy, Etc) The idea behind the show, thought up by by the Educational Services of la Biennale de Montréal 2009 and artists Alexandre Castonguay and Michel Seta is to offer different communities in the neighbourhoods a chance to help create a soci-artistic project together through the use of various mediums and mechanisms. 

It sounds like it will be an interesting thing to check out, particularly in regards to how well it integrates the festival’s Open Culture mandate. There are guided tours every day for those interested in learning more about the project/contributing to its narrative, and the hours are listed here, at the very bottom of the page.

2. Saturday, May 16th (today!) + Sunday, May 17th (tomorrow!) from 12-5pm - last chance to see TAG in action - L’Ecole Bourget 

Who are TAG? and what do they do? These folks are a community of peeps interested in creative gaming in all its diverse forms. TAG (Technoculture, Art and Games) seems to be comprised of academics through Hexagram at Concordia and lots of creative partners. 

If you go to the Ecole Bourget today or tomorrow, you’ll get a chance to see their Biennale incarnation, Porous Lab, do its thing, or to participate in the creation of their games. To be honest, I only kindof get it, but that’s always where things get interesting, so go and find out how to become your own personal avatar in the Unicorn Candy Land Simulation I’ve been dreaming of for so long.

3. Every Saturday of the month at 2-3pm - Daniel Jolliffe’s Performance Mobile En Velo

This looks really cool - Daniel Jolliffe, an artist who combines sculpture practices and electronic technologies, is inviting everyone of us to call his hotline, at 1-888-500-1011 and record whatever message comes to mind, has been pre-planned for months, is a big fat lie, is the gorgeous, secret truth. Think Biennale Rant Line or some such. Then he takes his homemade megaphone, pictured above, and tours the city with your words and mumbles. 

Every Saturday for the duration of the fest, Jolliffe will be ready at 2pm at L’Ecole Bourget for you to come with your bike and chocolate croissant snaxs to tour around with his handmade sculpture to proudly (or sheepishly) declare to the world the recordings of each person that left him a message. 

Meanwhile, it’s almost 2pm, and it’s raining raining raining, so if you feel strong enough to go today, wear something plastic and yellow and red, (like his scultpure!) to keep the droplets at bay.

4. Thursday, May 21st from 5-8pm - Conference with Daniel Jolliffe and Alexandre Castonguay, L’Ecole Bourget

For descriptions of each artists work, please see individual write-ups. I couldn’t find any description of what this is going to be on the festival’s website, which could easily be due to over-saturation at this point with so many clicks and links and rain and music and coffee and. All this to say they will likely be talking about the use of electronics and technology in their works, as they both use digital medias in interactive and interesting ways, so if this sounds like your type of thing, then leave all the others behind in their nests and go. 

5. Saturday, May 23rd - Soundscapes/Paysages Sonores - La Sala Rossa, 4848 St Laurent

One of the only Biennale events off the Ecole Bourget map, this evening at the Sala will render live the music composed by David Ryshpan and inspired by the work of Rick Leong, one of Montreal’s youngest painterly stars. You can also go and check out both Leong and Ryshypan’s creations at the Ecole Bourget itself. 

6. Everday Exhibitions going on at L’Ecole Bourget 

There are many artists and exhibitions going on at L’Ecole Bourget for the Biennale, and for $5, you get the flexibility of going during whatever day of the week you like, as it’s open the entire month without fail daily. 

If you missed the documentary on the innovative and inspiring Roadsworth, you can still check his work out in and around L’Ecole Bourget when you go. He’s been commissioned to do work around the metro stations of the school, so walk slowly on de la Montagne so as not to miss his breathtaking creations. 

Once you’re in the bowels of the site,  (yes, yes, I used the word bowels, folks. Get over it) you can see Brazilian artist Cao Guimaraes‘ photo series Gambiarras (2002-2007) showing how São Paulo citizens rework their surroundings to make them more functional.

If you’re feeling the need to get your hands metaphorically dirty a bit more, then dive into Read + Write,  an interactive installation conceived of by artist Alexandre Castonguay in collaboration with Mathieu Bouchard, a digital arts engineer. The work invites participants to engrave texts, sounds and images on the wall and to control their appearance. This artwork is a drawing machine as well as a software interface. 

In a less directly-interactive vein, but no less engaging, is one of the program’s most exciting presentations from the perspective of my little bean-head, which is that of Richard Wentworth’s amazingly poetic and understated photo series, Making Do and Getting By (1973-2008). Wentworth’s humour and unique vision has produced a body of work that engages with the direct environment of everyday living in ways both immediately recognizable and unashamedly playful and touching. 

Also not to be missed is 8 Courts 1 Collectifan open source cinema initiative curated and coordinated by Michèle Gauthier and Claudine Tissier. They chose 8 up-and-coming Montreal filmmakers: Michèle Gauthier, Benjamin Gueguen, Ahn Minh Truong, Yan Giroux, Sophie Goyette, Alexandre Gibault, Abeille Tard and Guy Édouin to direct a series of 8 short films based on content provided by the public via a website over the course of one year. Their website explains the process in greater detail. 

Phew. I feel overwhelmed already. In a good way, like when I am laying outside, in farm country, eyes closed and sunny, with a sudden onslaught of 10 kittens coming at me from all directions. Grinning-from-ear-to-ear-overwhelmed.

In fact, I feel so exhausted already that I think I am just going to get drunk alone in this dark, damp corner of mine, from now until the closing party on the 31st of May at, where else? L’Ecole Bourget. It’s a 5 a 7, so go early and then stay late, while you drool on all the napkins and leftover cheese plates as yet again, security has to be called, and you must be physically thrown out.

Lalie Douglas is going to take your fears away….

by kit on April 20th, 2009

In time for the season of spring-cleaning type activities comes a spring-cleaning-of-the-mind based in performative and interactive art, in the form of an articule Special Project run by local artist Lalie Douglas. Take your fears away  is a project that, similar to a side-of-the-road gas station that simply declares, “PETROL”, fulfills exactly what it suggests it will. Nothing coquettish here, folks, just plain and simple fear-ridding-techniques.

The basics: you email Lalie (takeyourfearsaway@gmail.com) with whatever fears you might wish to be no longer, and Douglas will then go to Calgary with those fears to, “be transformed into site specific installations, performances and other interventions designed to symbolically overcome, diminish and otherwise seek to remove the power these fears may hold over you.”

How cool does that sound? How appropriate that Montrealers and Calgarians (Is that right? are you people Calgarians? It’s not like you’re called Rodeogonians or something….?) SWAP fears? Douglas is almost re-enacting what happens on a psychic level daily.

Our Quebec-infused versions of psychoses and terrors will be collected in the month of April and May, and then Douglas will travel with them to Calgary, to return to us in June to present, expel, and rid Rodeogonians of their fears here. I expect to see clear suitcases of grade A beef strewn across St.Laurent with a few papier-mache oil rigs here and there…but just as one’s treasurer is another’s junk, so too is one’s nightmare another’s dream. I guess we’ll find out.

Fun stuff at the CCA

by amy on March 14th, 2009

There’s been an exposition on at the Canadian Center for Architecture for some time that I’ve been meaning to go to called Actions: What You Can Do With the City.  Here’s what the CCA has to say about it;

An exploration of how everyday human actions can animate and influence the perception and experience of contemporary cities. Seemingly common activities such as gardening, recycling, playing, and walking are pushed beyond their usual definition by the international architects, artists, and collectives featured in the exhibition. Their experimental interactions with the urban environment show the potential of a new level of participation by city residents.

You should have a look at the exposition’s website as it will give you a better idea of what to expect. I was drawn to these kids from Toronto calling themselves the Urban Repair Squad who are creating DIY bike lanes dressed as city workers. They’ve painted over 6 kilometers over the past few years (most of which gets undone by the city) in an attempt to make Toronto’s streets safer for bike riders. Here’s a nerdy but sweet video they made about their project.

This show runs until April 19th.

Canadian Centre for Architecture
1920, rue Baile

What’s Your Take On This?

by amy on February 11th, 2009

So Shepard Fairey, the well known street artist notorious for his OBEY posters and most recently his Obama poster is in some hot water and I’m wondering what your take is on the situation. In case you haven’t heard about this here’s the down low: The Associated Press is suing Shepard for basing his drawing on a shot taken by one of their photographers and he’s not denying it. However there’s a little thing called Fair Use, which is a legal term that basically means that an image can be used without permission if it is significantly altered.

It sounds like money grubbing on the part of the Associated Press to me, considering Shepard Fairey donated all his profits . Can’t we all just be happy that these posters ended up being the visual image of Obama’s campaign? They caught the eye of all those American youngsters resulting in more voters.

You don’t see Shepard Fairey suing Jack Dylan for his Fairey-Obama inspired POP Montreal posters now do you?

I say chill out Associate Press, don’t be haters just because your photograph wasn’t as popular as the resulting posters. What do you think?

Joshua Allen Harris

by amy on January 23rd, 2009

Maybe you’ve seen Joshua Allen Harris’ inflatable street art before, but if not it’s worth seeing. I saw a video of his first piece, a bear made of shopping bags, last summer but never heard anything else about the artist. I recently found some more videos of his pieces in action and though I would share them with you. Joshua makes sculptures out of shopping and garbage bags and attaches them to subway air vents. When the subway passes underneath the wooshing air turns what looks like a pile of garbage into an animated creature and as the subway leaves it deflates and blends into its surroundings again. To see more visit his youtube channel.

Street Style

by Julien on December 23rd, 2008

Here’s a quick photo dump to show you some sweet local street style; not of the fashiony kind, but of the actual-streets-that-look-cool kind. Street art is still art, y’alls! Especially when it’s cute, colorful and it involves drawing faces on walls and things.

I caught this sleepy/upset heart somewhere on St Viateur, between St Laurent and De Gaspe.

This is the hotness that is the back of Billy Mavreas’ Galerie Monastiraki (close to the St Laurent/St Viateur corner).

This giant TI-83 plus calculator is located further down the same alleyway. I love how it became an ideal location for naughty messages.

I forget where this friendly face was hanging out, but it’s adorable AND practical. DO WANT!


Paper and Pine




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