Patrick Bernatchez
Les Temps inachevés
17 Oct 2015 - 10 Jan 2016
Patrick Bernatchez
Lost In Time, 2014
Colour film transferred to digital support, 46 min, sound (still)
Coproduction Musée d’art contemporain and Casino Luxembourg
With the support of Conseil des arts et des lettres and Canada Council for the Arts
Private collection, Montréal
Lost In Time, 2014
Colour film transferred to digital support, 46 min, sound (still)
Coproduction Musée d’art contemporain and Casino Luxembourg
With the support of Conseil des arts et des lettres and Canada Council for the Arts
Private collection, Montréal
Patrick Bernatchez
Lost In Time, 2014
Film couleur transféré sur support numérique, 46 min, son (still)
Coproduction Musée d’art contemporain et Casino Luxembourg
Avec le soutien du Conseil des arts et des lettres, Conseil des arts du Canada
Collection privée, Montréal
Lost In Time, 2014
Film couleur transféré sur support numérique, 46 min, son (still)
Coproduction Musée d’art contemporain et Casino Luxembourg
Avec le soutien du Conseil des arts et des lettres, Conseil des arts du Canada
Collection privée, Montréal
Patrick Bernatchez
Lost In Time, 2014
Colour film transferred to digital support, 46 min, sound (still)
Coproduction Musée d’art contemporain and Casino Luxembourg
With the support of Conseil des arts et des lettres and Canada Council for the Arts
Private collection, Montréal
Lost In Time, 2014
Colour film transferred to digital support, 46 min, sound (still)
Coproduction Musée d’art contemporain and Casino Luxembourg
With the support of Conseil des arts et des lettres and Canada Council for the Arts
Private collection, Montréal
Patrick Bernatchez
Lost In Time, 2014
Colour film transferred to digital support, 46 min, sound (still)
Coproduction Musée d’art contemporain and Casino Luxembourg
With the support of Conseil des arts et des lettres and Canada Council for the Arts
Private collection, Montréal
Lost In Time, 2014
Colour film transferred to digital support, 46 min, sound (still)
Coproduction Musée d’art contemporain and Casino Luxembourg
With the support of Conseil des arts et des lettres and Canada Council for the Arts
Private collection, Montréal
Patrick Bernatchez
BW, 2009-2011
Installation
Wrist-watch that measures millennia
27 x 5 x 1,5 cm (Diameter of watch: 4 cm), edition of 10
Podium, tinted glass and stainless steel, microphone, speakers
130,5 x 34,5 x 34,5 cm
In collaboration with Roman Winiger, watch maker
Collection of the artist
BW, 2009-2011
Installation
Wrist-watch that measures millennia
27 x 5 x 1,5 cm (Diameter of watch: 4 cm), edition of 10
Podium, tinted glass and stainless steel, microphone, speakers
130,5 x 34,5 x 34,5 cm
In collaboration with Roman Winiger, watch maker
Collection of the artist
Patrick Bernatchez
180°, 2011
35 mm colour film transferred to digital support
9 min 55 s, sound, 3/5
Collection Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal
180°, 2011
35 mm colour film transferred to digital support
9 min 55 s, sound, 3/5
Collection Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal
Patrick Bernatchez
I Feel Cold Today, 2007
16mm colour film transferred to digital support, 12 min 50 s, sound
Private collection, Montréal
I Feel Cold Today, 2007
16mm colour film transferred to digital support, 12 min 50 s, sound
Private collection, Montréal
Patrick Bernatchez
Untitled (Protagonist 1), 2011
Tinted Plexiglas, inkjet print
220 x 122 cm
Private collection, Montréal
Untitled (Protagonist 1), 2011
Tinted Plexiglas, inkjet print
220 x 122 cm
Private collection, Montréal
Patrick Bernatchez
Chrysalide 6, 2006
Graphite on paper
28 x 21,5 cm
33,7 x 27,5 x 4.1 cm (framed)
Collection Nathalie de Blois, Montréal
Chrysalide 6, 2006
Graphite on paper
28 x 21,5 cm
33,7 x 27,5 x 4.1 cm (framed)
Collection Nathalie de Blois, Montréal
Patrick Bernatchez
Chrysalide 7, 2006
Graphite, ink, acrylic and perforations on paper on metallic foil, frosted mirror
28 x 21,5 cm
33,7 x 27,5 x 4.1 cm (framed)
Collection Alain Tremblay, Montréal
Chrysalide 7, 2006
Graphite, ink, acrylic and perforations on paper on metallic foil, frosted mirror
28 x 21,5 cm
33,7 x 27,5 x 4.1 cm (framed)
Collection Alain Tremblay, Montréal
PATRICK BERNATCHEZ
Les Temps inachevés
17 October 2015 – 10 January 2016
Summary
The exhibition presents a significant body of works taken from two major projects: Chrysalides (2006-2013) and Lost in Time (2009-2015). Bernatchez’s artistic process involves creating distinct pieces – drawings, photographs, films, sound pieces, installations – that form part of a larger conceptual project. Lost in Time examines the multiple facets of the dimension of time: space-time, cosmic time, performative time, imaginary time, time travel, temporal distortion. The works in Chrysalides revolve around questions of life and death, decomposition and entropy, as well as the cycle of the seasons, and the passing of time over a day, a month, a year.
Both series of works were developed over several years and neither has a clearly defined ending, since the artist has left openings that allow him to take them a step further at any time. Each new exhibition is thus an opportunity to take stock of his constantly evolving cycles, as much in terms of newly added productions as of the ways in which earlier works are presented. The artist does not view an exhibition as the conclusion or completion of the creative process surrounding a group of works but as an intermediary step, an initial presentation that allows the works in question to evolve.
A co-production of the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal and the Casino Luxembourg – Forum d’art contemporain, in partnership with Argos – Centre for Art and Media, Brussels, and The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, Toronto
Noteworthy
The aim of this exhibition by one of Quebec’s most striking artists is to offer an extended view of his interdisciplinary process. Bernatchez’s work is fascinating in the way that his films, sculptures, photographs and others enter into dialogue, creating a conceptually coherent and meaningful whole. The exhibition will provide the Montreal public an opportunity make an incursion deep into the unusual universe of this artist.
Biography
Born in 1972, Patrick Bernatchez lives and works in Montreal. After acclaim for his films I Feel Cold Today and Chrysalide: Emperor at the 2008 Quebec Triennial at the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal, he was selected as Québec finalist for the 2010 Sobey Art Award. His work has been featured in solo exhibitions at the Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin (2010); Galerie Bertrand Grimont, Paris (2009 and 2012); Galerie West, The Hague (2009 and 2012); and Galerie de l’UQAM, Montréal (2011).
He has also participated in numerous group exhibitions, events and contemporary art fairs, such as Oh, Canada at MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA, USA (2012); the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec City (2008, 2010); Carriageworks, Sydney, Australia (2010); and Les Rencontres internationales: New Cinema and Contemporary Art, Paris/Berlin/Madrid (2008, 2009).
His works can be found in many private collections and in the collections of the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal, the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, and Télé-Québec.
The artist’s website: www.patrickbernatchez.org
Les Temps inachevés
17 October 2015 – 10 January 2016
Summary
The exhibition presents a significant body of works taken from two major projects: Chrysalides (2006-2013) and Lost in Time (2009-2015). Bernatchez’s artistic process involves creating distinct pieces – drawings, photographs, films, sound pieces, installations – that form part of a larger conceptual project. Lost in Time examines the multiple facets of the dimension of time: space-time, cosmic time, performative time, imaginary time, time travel, temporal distortion. The works in Chrysalides revolve around questions of life and death, decomposition and entropy, as well as the cycle of the seasons, and the passing of time over a day, a month, a year.
Both series of works were developed over several years and neither has a clearly defined ending, since the artist has left openings that allow him to take them a step further at any time. Each new exhibition is thus an opportunity to take stock of his constantly evolving cycles, as much in terms of newly added productions as of the ways in which earlier works are presented. The artist does not view an exhibition as the conclusion or completion of the creative process surrounding a group of works but as an intermediary step, an initial presentation that allows the works in question to evolve.
A co-production of the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal and the Casino Luxembourg – Forum d’art contemporain, in partnership with Argos – Centre for Art and Media, Brussels, and The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, Toronto
Noteworthy
The aim of this exhibition by one of Quebec’s most striking artists is to offer an extended view of his interdisciplinary process. Bernatchez’s work is fascinating in the way that his films, sculptures, photographs and others enter into dialogue, creating a conceptually coherent and meaningful whole. The exhibition will provide the Montreal public an opportunity make an incursion deep into the unusual universe of this artist.
Biography
Born in 1972, Patrick Bernatchez lives and works in Montreal. After acclaim for his films I Feel Cold Today and Chrysalide: Emperor at the 2008 Quebec Triennial at the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal, he was selected as Québec finalist for the 2010 Sobey Art Award. His work has been featured in solo exhibitions at the Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin (2010); Galerie Bertrand Grimont, Paris (2009 and 2012); Galerie West, The Hague (2009 and 2012); and Galerie de l’UQAM, Montréal (2011).
He has also participated in numerous group exhibitions, events and contemporary art fairs, such as Oh, Canada at MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA, USA (2012); the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec City (2008, 2010); Carriageworks, Sydney, Australia (2010); and Les Rencontres internationales: New Cinema and Contemporary Art, Paris/Berlin/Madrid (2008, 2009).
His works can be found in many private collections and in the collections of the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal, the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, and Télé-Québec.
The artist’s website: www.patrickbernatchez.org