Brooklyn/Montréal goes stateside


 

From October to November 2012, Montreal hosted the first installment of “Montreal/Brooklyn”, initiating an exchange in visual art events between the two titled cities, thus capturing important media and audience attention towards the art scene of the Quebecois metropolis. In an interview with M-KOS, Montreal coordinators Claudine Khelil and Yann Pocreau mention their delight at all the positive feedback received in Montreal, but remain alert for the final chapter of the project that is yet to come, over to the state side of the border. As it is now Brooklyn’s turn to host the next part of this event, indicated by the reversed title (Brooklyn/Montreal), the categorical test for Montreal artists will be about how they are received by New Yorkers, their critics as much as their art enthusiasts. Will there be any buzz?
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Olivia Boudreau “Intérieur” at Darling Foundry, Montréal


Olivia Boudreau, Intérieur, 2012. Courtesy the artist. Photo by Guy l’Heureux

Olivia Boudreau
Intérieur

3 October – 2 December 2012
at Darling Foundry, Montréal

[…] Intérieur is a videographic installation involving projection on two screens, set almost in front of each other, to reproduce, in a close, static shot, two windows as seen from inside an apartment. Randomly blown open by the wind in turn, they are then promptly closed by a figure who enters and then leaves the visual field to perform his action. That of Intérieur consists in capturing the opening of the windows, each veiled by a white curtain, as well as the motion of the fabric caught in the draught.

By “magnifying what is terribly ordinary”, Olivia Boudreau turns this startlingly banal scene – two windows, two curtains, one figure – into a paradoxically captivating situation that simultaneously involves several features of our perception. With its two screens facing each other and an arrangement of volumes that plays on transparency and superimposition, the installation prompts the viewer to mentally reconstitute the apartment’s room and to appropriate its inner space. Long moments of stillness, framed by closed windows, put us in a state of expectation and steep us in a new temporality, one in which we are forced to remain passive. The opening of one of the windows and the movement of the curtain that is then caught in the wind turn this action into a genuine event. [read the full text here]

Darling Foundry
745 Ottawa Street
Montréal, Quebec
H3C 1R8
fonderiedarling.org

Opening hours:
Wednesday, Friday – Sunday: 12h00 – 19h00
Thursday: 12h00 – 22h00

Entry: $5
Free on Thursday.