Jean Gaudreau
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Jean Gaudreau | |
---|---|
Born | |
Education | Georges Gogardi Michel Labbé |
Alma mater | Laval University |
Known for | Painter |
Movement | Automatisme Abstract Art |
Awards | Le Moulin à images Cirque du Soleil |
Jean Gaudreau (born May 27, 1964) is a Canadian artist, painter and engraver. He is considered an influential contemporary painter in the province's capital (Capitale-Nationale[1]).
In 2008, he was immortalized as one of the figures of Quebec's contemporary art scene by Robert Lepage during the celebrations for the 400th anniversary of the foundation of Quebec City. In his animated film Le Moulin à images[2],[3] Lepage projected images of artworks by Jean Gaudreau next to works from Jean-Paul Lemieux, Martin Bureau, Jean-Paul Riopelle et Alfred Pellan, among others, on grain silos located in Anse au Foulon, in Quebec City's old port.
Biography
Gaudreau was born in Quebec City on May 27, 1964. At 10 years old, his mother, Claudia Tremblay, a plastic art teacher, musician and painter, entrusted her son to Sister Alice Pruneau[4] to teach him the basics of drawing, at the Séminaire des Pères Maristes[5] in Quebec City. As a child, he learned the "old fashion way'’ the Mezzotint as well as the importance of geometry in drawing. Indeed, Pruneau teaches him the rules of perspective, the vanishing points as well as the Golden Triangle. The painter's mother also played a dominant role in the apprenticeship of her son's plastic practices. She herself would become multidisciplinary artist Jean Palardy's student.
Between Tradition and Modernity (1974–1985)
When he was 12 years old, Jean painted genre art scenes in Quebec's old port.[6] His first subjects were the stevedores, the boats, the docks, the river and in the background, the buildings perched on Quebec City's headland, the cap Diamant. He outlines, in the manner of the countryside landscape painters,[7] the contours of the old buildings. The Château Frontenac, the Séminaire de Québec, Price Building, are some favourite subjects of the teenager, and as such, premonitory subjects. For instance, this painting view of the Bassin Louise Les remorqueurs (The stevedores) precedes by some thirty years playwright and filmmaker Robert Lepage's Le Moulin à images. In 2008, the Jean Gaudreau's artworks are to be projected on some huge grain silos at the Anse au Foulon among those of other painters in the history of Quebec City.
Isle-aux-Coudres
Until 1985, the paintings or rural landscapes in Charlevoix are a curiosity for denizens and tourists of L'Isle-aux-Coudres. The summers of the artist's youth, are spent painting landscapes, up to one to two hundred a year. His paintings are sold outside a famous hotel of the island. "Jean Gaudreau paints using oil, acrylic and oil pastels which he masters and harmonizes with both fervour and subtlety." It is a significant period for the teenager, who regularly visits the artist painter Jean Paul Lemieux. The older man was always ready to underline to young Jean Gaudreau the importance of the drawings in the practice of painting. "At 17 years old, Jean Gaudreau presents his first solo exhibition in an art gallery, and he has since been seen regularly in solo or group exhibitions. Hundreds of his paintings were acquired by private or public collections, and several mural painting experiments will give way to more important commissions.[8]"
The Artist's Approach
Painter, sculptor and engraver, the artist explores several technical means and approaches them not separately like so many individuated vehicles of expression, but rather like a gathering of manners, a single whole body. The artist borrows his iconography from the circus's syntax, the grammatical codes of dance and the plastic arts' vocabulary.
"Chance encounters and the very spirit of his artistic production have led Gaudreau to associate, for many years, dance and performance art to his painting. Both by the themes he tackles and in the conception of the many events he put together, the body has become a central element of his work. In his compositions, the artist plays with elaborate staging, where characters borrowed from the circus and the dance world, sometimes moving other times remaining still, blend into various forms to create an open and animated space. Colour, thus far confined to a supporting role, becomes in this series, an essential foundation of the ensemble, without, however, falling into a purely decorative dimension. A particularly effective accomplice, it acts as a trigger."[9]
The use of the epithet multidisciplinary to introduce this creator, merges with the appropriate cross-disciplinary one. Gaudreau sculpts the raw matter in a diligent manner, a rigour born of a workshop experience, bending his back, kneading the surfaces and twisting the supports. This labour demonstrates his mastering of colour combinations, impressionist gesture and, above all, his careful attention towards the planarity of the canvas. The artist cannot stand the lightness of emptiness, or the mundane of everyday life. The large canvases shown in 2003 in the [[Cirque du Soleil]'s headquarters bear witness to this; loaded surfaces, busy, choked, bruised and nervously piled.
"Through M-515, Jean Gaudreau has etched the profile of a chalky face marred by the end of the day glowing tears on the crimson hue of a quivering sea. A long line stretched between two moribund abandoned in a vacuum, toggles this head in the nocturnal strangeness of the world.[10]
The thick strokes of blue, red or yellow are childhood memories, landscape from within, pieces of history, in short, Quebec City-specific colours. "If, like says artist Leng Hong, "painting the body's landscapes or painting the skin of dreams is always sketching our interior landscape," then Gaudreau's interior landscape is rather fascinating. The elements of his work, parts taken from the universal subconscious, assemble deftly on the canvas like a puzzle."[11]
He constantly revisits, almost with obstinacy, this welcoming and volcanic maelstrom, by stacking up material layers, painting gestures, delicate sketches, violent strokes, controlled soft hedges, visual oxymorons characterized by fine droplets or by harsh movements, articulated by a swift arm.
"He is without a doubt, a singular figure of the Quebec visual arts world. Firstly, because he has a lot of grits and boldness. Also and especially because he earns a living with his painting, which is in itself quite exceptional. He has surrounded himself with patrons, collectors and art enthusiasts. His artwork travels to Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal and New York galleries. He earns a living with his art, but let us be clear. He has chosen this frugal and precarious way of life like so many other creators. Jean Gaudreau defines his painting as intuitive. His approach favours emotion, subjectivity, even the expression of the 'unconscious.' He is also inspired by dance and movement; his painting is therefore very gestural."[12]
In the stubborn, fallible and lyrical painter's vivacious historiography, the will power, elation of the artist, this uncompromising mistress is the all mighty goddess. The young painter inspired by Riopelle or Lemieux, whom he frequented from the first hour, worships more than he dares pretend. A universe inhabited by dance, theatre, painting, history, sculpture and performance, feeds the creations and he drinks it up tirelessly, as an inexhaustible source of inspiration. Indeed, Jean Gaudreau takes advantage of fragments of love, as so many imprints of the past infringing on the present. He leaves traces in his artwork as fragmented sediments, mandatory rites of passage rituals for him, seeking endlessly to reinvent himself, like a stubborn and unfailing Sisyphus.
"The brush strokes recall Riopelle, Pollock, Stella, Klimt and Ferron ; some traces evoke the Automatists and the flights dear to the lyrical abstracts. Admittedly, the artist avails himself of a postmodernism that tends to integrate all streams as bare witnesses the presence of figurative and non-figurative elements, women with lascivious faces, sinuous lines and the juxtaposition of vibrant hues and gilding. The predominant gestural as well as the intentionally less than finished and more primary aspect of his painting constitute trials at forging a personal style."[13]
Second life
Jean Gaudreau started his exploration of copper with the help of remains of the South turret of the Château Frontenac.[14][15][16][17][18][19] After mastering the transformation technic of these pieces, that artist embedded them in his paintings thus giving them a second life.
"By using a material out of the past—the copper—transforming it into a contemporary character, the artist explores what could be described as the point of metamorphosis of the medium, trying to answer questions such as 'What happens when these remains begin a new life?' ‘What happens when the past and the present become one and the same?' Asked about his choice of the iconography of the heart as subjects in his recent creation, Jean Gaudreau states : 'I have chosen the shape of the heart, timeless symbol of love, to express this transition between past and present. Past and presents are the two beats of a same heart.[20]'"
Video Documents
- Belco, J : Jean Gaudreau – Environnement de création, 2010
- Lacerte, Louis : Jean Gaudreau – Moulin à images, 2014
- Roberge, Josiane : Balise du Temps, 2015
- Roberge, Josiane : Court métrage – Tambours flambeaux, 201
Private and Public Collections
- Musée du Bas-Saint-Laurent
- Cirque du Soleil
- Québécor Média
- Loto Québec
- Feel Europe Group
- Quebec City
- Laval University
- Sherbrooke University
- Groupe TVA
- Alcan Canada
- TD Bank
- Premier Tech
- Laurier Museum
References
- ^ Bernier 2002, p. 218–219
- ^ ICI.Radio-Canada.ca, Zone Arts-. "Le Moulin à images : un rendez-vous spectaculaire avec l'histoire". Radio-Canada.ca (in Canadian French). Retrieved September 3, 2022.
- ^ Perron, Alexandra (September 9, 2009). "La couleur de Jean Gaudreau sur les silos de la Bunge". La Presse.
- ^ named the "nun-artist" unique in the History of art in Quebec and maybe even in Canada, Sister Alice Pruneau Archived October 12, 2016, at the Wayback Machine (Sister Sainte-Alice-de-Blois), follows the teachings of Jean Paul Lemieux at l'École des beaux-arts de Québec (School for Fine Arts) between 1940 and 1945. The paintings she created until the end of the 1960s, her "Modern Arts " period, are the witness of her natural virtuosity. Sister Alice uses art as a language and cannot help but draw. Her artworks are spiritual exercises, eloquent witnesses of her intellectual and spiritual approach. Amélie Leclerc, Responsable du patrimoine, Maison généralice[dead link ]
- ^ "Séminaire des Pères Maristes" Archived September 26, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Jean Gaudreau, interview with Michaël Lachance, 2016
- ^ Domon, Gérard; Ruiz, Julie (2015). Paysages ruraux (in French). Montréal, Québec: PUM. ISBN 9782760634817.
- ^ Robert, Guy (1990). Jean Gaudreau : expressivité dans un nouveau monde (in French). Québec: Éditions Malibu. p. 9.
- ^ Bernier, Robert (October 2002). La peinture au Québec depuis les années 1960 (in French). Montréal, Québec: Les éditions de l'homme. pp. 218–219. ISBN 2-7619-1566-6.
- ^ Normand Biron, President Emeritus of the International Association of Art Critics."
- ^ Bussières, Isabelle (Summer 2000). "Jean Gaudreau, Concilier l'Inconciliable". Vie des Arts (in French). 179.
- ^ Côté, Nathalie (September 19, 1998). "La Transcendance des taches : Coup de fougue". Voir (in French).
- ^ Laurent, Juliette (1995). "Jean Gaudreau ou la fougue de peindre" (PDF). Vie des Arts. 39. 161: 52–53 – via érudit.
- ^ Champagne, Marjorie (July 2, 2014). "Jean Gaudreau : confidences en atelier". lafabriqueculturelle.tv. Retrieved January 14, 2017.
- ^ Goutier, Claire (September 16, 2016). "L'ancienne toiture du Château Frontenac comme offrande artistique". Bazzart.
- ^ Genest, Catherine (June 19, 2014). "ERVUIC : La deuxième vie du cuivre verdi". Voir.
- ^ Martin, Johanne (February 9, 2016). "Jean Gaudreau, artiste multidisciplinaire". Prestige. ISSN 1205-6707.
- ^ Desloges, Josiane (June 27, 2014). "Jean Gaudreau : de pigments et de cuivre". Le Soleil.
- ^ Nadeau, Pierre O. (September 22, 2012). "Le cuivre du Château Frontenac sur les toiles de Jean Gaudreau". Journal de Québec.
- ^ Zÿlbeck (2015). Jean Gaudreau, Au cœur de nos vies. Québec: MC Communication. pp. 3–4.
Bibliography
- Robert, Guy (1990). Jean Gaudreau : expressivité dans un nouveau monde. Catalogue on the 1979–1990 retrospective (in French). Quebec: Éditions Malibu. p. 9.
- Bélanger, Jacques (2009). Le pied au plancher / Feet on the Floor (in French and English). Translated by Ratcliffe, Abigail. Photography, Simon Clark. Quebec: MC Communications. ISBN 978-2-9806728-1-1.
- Zÿlbeck (2015). Jean Gaudreau, au coeur de nos vies (in French and English). Translated by Millar, Christine. MC Communications.
- Motulsky-Falardeau, Alexandre (2014). Jean Gaudreau, ERVIUC (in French and English). Translated by Ratcliffe, Abigail. MC Communications. ISBN 978-2-9806728-2-8.
- Côté, Nathalie (2007). Jean Gaudreau : cycle de vie / Life Cycle. Cycle de vie, Parcours 1995–2007 (in French and English). Translated by Hamilton, Grant. Photography, Pierre Soulard. Quebec.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Bernier, Robert (2002). La peinture au Québec depuis les années 1960. Montreal: Les éditions de l'homme. pp. 218–219. ISBN 2-7619-1566-6.
- 1964 births
- Living people
- 20th-century Canadian artists
- 21st-century Canadian artists
- Artists from Quebec City
- Canadian engravers
- Canadian painters
- Canadian photographers
- Canadian sculptors
- Canadian male sculptors
- French Quebecers
- Université Laval alumni
- 20th-century Canadian male artists
- 21st-century Canadian male artists