Lyne Lapointe: Selected Works/ Oeuvres choisies
14 Jan - 03 Mar 2012
Selected Works by Lyne Lapointe is a collection of recent works on glass and works with acupuncture needles, as well as seven large paintings from the series La Pierre Patiente (The Patient Stone).
The works with acupuncture needles echo the devastating link humans maintain with the environment and other living species. The work is rooted in a certain "healing art" intended to re-establish an energizing balance. By virtue of their flexibility and their tendency to vibrate at the slightest movement, the large number of needles used cannot fail to evoke the phenomenon of magnetic fields, opposing forces that attract and agitate, allowing for a myriad of possible effects.
The works on glass express yet again Lyne Lapointe's fascination with the complexity of visual perception and its potential distortions.
[A] term in Persian, 'the patient stone' ... used in times of anxiety and turbulence. Supposedly, a person pours out all his troubles and woes into the stone. It will listen and absorb his pains and secrets, and this way he will be cured. Sometimes the stone can no longer endure its burdens and then it bursts.
- Azar Nafisi
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/11/21/1069027320754.html
The seven paintings of La Pierre Patiente (The Patient Stone), inspired by the ideas of darkness, light and memory, led Lyne Lapointe to revisit the use of phosphorescent pigments, a technique she used when first starting out as an artist. Subjected to alternating darkness and light, a process that disrupts static perception and "changes day into night", a startling sequence of evanescent impressions emerges revealing in a single work two different and unexpected types of images.
Selected Works by Lyne Lapointe reveals states of breakage, fragility and disembodiment grounded in a cherished idea: metamorphosis.
The works with acupuncture needles echo the devastating link humans maintain with the environment and other living species. The work is rooted in a certain "healing art" intended to re-establish an energizing balance. By virtue of their flexibility and their tendency to vibrate at the slightest movement, the large number of needles used cannot fail to evoke the phenomenon of magnetic fields, opposing forces that attract and agitate, allowing for a myriad of possible effects.
The works on glass express yet again Lyne Lapointe's fascination with the complexity of visual perception and its potential distortions.
[A] term in Persian, 'the patient stone' ... used in times of anxiety and turbulence. Supposedly, a person pours out all his troubles and woes into the stone. It will listen and absorb his pains and secrets, and this way he will be cured. Sometimes the stone can no longer endure its burdens and then it bursts.
- Azar Nafisi
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/11/21/1069027320754.html
The seven paintings of La Pierre Patiente (The Patient Stone), inspired by the ideas of darkness, light and memory, led Lyne Lapointe to revisit the use of phosphorescent pigments, a technique she used when first starting out as an artist. Subjected to alternating darkness and light, a process that disrupts static perception and "changes day into night", a startling sequence of evanescent impressions emerges revealing in a single work two different and unexpected types of images.
Selected Works by Lyne Lapointe reveals states of breakage, fragility and disembodiment grounded in a cherished idea: metamorphosis.