Memorable Exhibitions 2015

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As we reach the end of 2015, M-KOS again invited a selection of art professionals for our fifth annual survey to share their most memorable exhibitions, art works, performances, events and other moments of this past year. All these were memorable from the perspectives of our invited reviewers, yet surely some entries can be debated by our readers joining us in the comments section below. All are welcome to suggest any other must see art moment in this year’s art listings.

This year’s participants include: Jonathan Shaughnessy (Associate curator, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa); Cheryl Sim (Curator, DHC/ART, Montreal); Thomas Kneubühler (Artist, Montreal/Switzerland); Dominique Fontaine (Independent curator/Founding director of aPOSteRIORI, Montreal); Guy Sangster Adams (Editor, Plectrum – The Cultural Pick, London, UK); Maria Ezcurra (Artist/Art educator, Montreal/Mexico); Romeo Gongora (Artist, Montreal); Karen Tam (Artist, Montreal); Stephen Connolly (Film maker, London, UK); Oli Sorenson (Artist/Editor, M-KOS, Montreal); Miwa Kojima (Managing editor, M-KOS, Montreal)
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Memorable Exhibitions 2014 [Updated!]

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For the occasion of our fourth annual survey, M-KOS again invited a telling selection of art professionals to share their most Memorable Exhibitions: art works, performance, events and other moments of this past year. Since this fascinating diversity of choices resonated differently with each individual, there are no ‘Best’ rankings on this list, or other particular order. Hopefully some entries will be debatable, so you may join us in debating this year’s listings, refute the listed as forgettable, or suggest any other must see art in the comment section below. Continue reading “Memorable Exhibitions 2014 [Updated!]”

Memorable Exhibitions 2013

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M-KOS once more invited a telling selection of art professionals for the 2013 installment of its annual survey, to generously share some of their most memorable exhibition and art performance moments of this past year. Surely some choices will be debatable, some will demand a remark by our contributors, some not, albeit all were memorable for those very reason. M-KOS invites its readers to join in the discussion on this year’s listings, or suggest any other must see entry from the comment section below. Continue reading “Memorable Exhibitions 2013”

The Memorable Exhibitions 2012

As we did last year, M-KOS invited several art professionals to list their most memorable exhibitions of 2012. Although, to mix it up a bit, we approached a different lot of experts as last year, each one selecting up to five shows and an optional bit of comments. Do you agree with their selection? Did they miss out on any really great show? Share with us what your memorable exhibition was for 2012.
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The Memorable Exhibitions 2011

Having nearly reached the end of this long chain of events that constituted 2011, M-KOS took a moment to review the past 12 months with a few invited art professionals, to reveal some of their most memorable exhibitions. Do you agree with their choice or have more to suggest? Come share with us which exhibitions have captured your thoughts the year.

Happy Holidays!
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M-KOS List The Top 100 Canadian Artist

People love to find out about our world in a vertical order: Who’s richest, who’s the best and worst dressed, which is the greatest city to live in, and so on. Art is no exception. Art Review, for example, publishes its ‘Power 100’ list every November since 2002, to give us insight of whom we should be rubbing shoulders with at the next private view.

 

We all agree that art in its purest form can only be subjective, and therefore a hierarchical ordering will seem to some as misleading. But the politics and practicalities of art as commodity inevitably demand an objective value for artworks in the real world, creating tensions between what the market determines as valid and what art professionals acknowledge as credible. M_KOS actually find this tension healthy, and as opposed to over-protecting itself by isolation, art needs to come to terms with its own commodification, which is nowadays the condition for art to circulate and be seen. The later rings particularly true with Canadian art. Inversely, the total absence of artist accomplishment guidelines would probably allow more relativity than subjectivity, leaving us stranded in an unchartered constellation of self-proclaimed stars.

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