Guide to Creative Montreal
Transcription
Guide to Creative Montreal
10 tours through the city’s cutting-edge arts scene Visual Arts - design - Performing Arts - music - Digital arts Extrait de la publication www.ulyssesguides.com Follow us on Facebook and Twitter @UlyssesGuides Extrait de la publication guide to creati v e montréal Research and Writing: Jérôme Delgado Text and Research Contributors: Emmanuelle Bouet, Marie-Eve Corbeil, Fabien Fauteux, Rémi Leroux, Nicolas Roy Translator: Matthew McLauchlin Editors: Pierre Ledoux, Claude Morneau Editorial Assistants: Annie Gilbert, Judy Tan Graphic Design and Layout: Philippe Thomas Cover Page Design: Pascal Biet, Philippe Thomas Cartography: Annie Gilbert, Philippe Thomas Iconographic Research: Julie Brodeur Cover Page Photo: Les Disciplines artistiques, work by the Département studio on the screen mosaic at the Espace Culturel Georges-Émile-Lapalme of Place des Arts. Photo: © MatteraJoly / Quartier des Spectacles Partnership This work was produced under the direction of Olivier Gougeon and Claude Morneau. Acknowledgements The author would like to thank Claude Morneau, Olivier Gougeon and the whole Ulysses team for their confidence and open-mindedness, as well as all those whose comments and suggestions helped improve each of this guide’s tours. The author also wishes to thank Mr. François-Marc Gagnon for his historical precisions, as well as all the people, artists and cultural workers who, week after week, month after month, stimulate and inspire us to shake up the monotony of our daily routines. Finally, warm thanks to Josée, Iris, Lucas and Manuel for tolerating my absences and anxieties. This guide is part of a larger initiative promoting Montréal’s contemporary art venues and events. Information on more than 200 venues and events is available on Tourisme Montréal’s Website (www.tourisme-montreal.org). This initiative was made possible in part by the financial support of Québec’s Ministère de la Culture et des Communications and the Ville de Montréal under the ‘‘Entente sur le développement culturel de Montréal’’ agreement. Tourisme Montréal, Tourisme Québec and the Conférence régionale des élus de Montréal also participated in this project. Ulysses Travel Guides acknowledges the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund (CBF) for this project. Ulysses Travel Guides would also like to thank the Government of Québec – Tax credit for book publishing – Administered by SODEC. Write to Us We value your comments, corrections and suggestions, as they allow us to keep each guide up to date. You can send your comments to us in writing at the following address; the best contributions will be rewarded with a free book from Ulysses Travel Guides (please indicate which title you would like to receive). Note to Readers The information contained in this guide was correct at press time. However, mistakes may slip by, omissions are always possible, establishments may close, etc. The authors and publisher hereby disclaim any liability for loss or damage resulting from omissions or errors. Ulysses Travel Guides 4176 St. Denis Street, Montréal, Québec, Canada H2W 2M5, www.ulyssesguides.com, [email protected] Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec and Library and Archives Canada cataloguing in publication Delgado, Jérôme Guide to creative Montréal Translation of: Guide du Montréal créatif. Includes index. ISBN 978-2-89464-600-7 1. Montréal (Québec) - Tours. 2. Heritage tourism - Québec (Province) - Montréal. 3. Tourism and art - Québec (Province) - Montréal. I. Title. FC2947.18.D4413 2013 917.4’28045 C2013-940201-2 No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means, including photocopying, without the written permission of the publisher. © April 2013, Ulysses Travel Guides All rights reserved Printed in Canada ISBN 978-2-89464-600-7 (Printed Version) ISBN 978-2-76580-295-2 (Digital PDF Version) 2 Extrait de la publication contents 12 34 56 7 89 10 Mile End, Outremont, Little Italy 9 Plateau-Mont-Royal31 Milton–Parc, McGill Ghetto, Mount Royal 59 Quartier des Spectacles, East End of Downtown75 Quartier Concordia, West End of Downtown 99 Sud–Ouest, Lachine 113 Quartier International, Old Montréal, the Islands 127 Quartier Latin, the Faubourgs, HoMa 155 Côte–des–Neiges, Notre–Dame–de–Grâce, Saint–Laurent181 Petite–Patrie, Rosemont, Saint–Michel, Villeray195 Calendar of Festivals and Events 210 Index222 Resources to Learn More and Stay Informed224 Extrait de la publication 3 How to use this guide This guide presents ten routes through Montréal’s neighbourhoods, highlighting the many faces of contemporary creativity in the city. Each tour begins with an introduction and an original photo diptych by Denis Farley to spur your curiosity. Next, a detailed map shows the route as well as the main artistic spaces and works of public art along the way. These locations are identified in an accompanying list and categorized with symbols. Digital arts Performing arts Public art Design Visual arts Music Each tour also has a table indicating the relative importance of the various categories of creativity in the area using the following scale: ««««« Very high concentration, including several important sites/events. Leading area. «««« High concentration or some important sites/events. Strong area. ««« Significant presence or an important site/event. Noteworthy area. «« Some presence or a significant site/event. Mentioned in the area. « Slight presence. Mentioned in passing in the area. — No presence. Absent in the area. The table will also tell you how much time you need to cover the whole tour, as well as offer suggestions for subsections of the tour you can take if you have less time; it also lists public transit routes in the area. At the end of each tour, a creative directory gives the full address and contact information for each cultural site along the tour. The directory also features cafés, restaurants, boutiques, and bars that are favoured by local artists or give a taste of life à la montréalaise. At the end of the book, you’ll find a calendar listing the many annual creative events that showcase Montréal’s diverse forms of artistic expression, as well as a list of cultural organizations in the city. 4 Jérôme Delgado © Jean-François Rollinger Journalist Jérôme Delgado developed this guide’s 10 tours of Montréal’s contemporary arts scene. An art and film critic for the daily newspaper Le Devoir and the film magazine Séquences, in 2010 he was the “reflection and writing” artist-in-residence at 3e Impérial, a contemporary art research centre in Granby, Québec. A graduate of the art history program at the Université de Montréal, he has been a member of the Association québécoise de critiques de cinéma since 2004. He is also a translator, working chiefly with museums, galleries, and art magazines. Denis Farley www.denisfarleyphoto.com Denis Farley contributed many of the photographs in this guide, including the original diptychs at the beginning of each chapter. With a master’s of fine arts from Concordia University, Denis has been working as an artist and a visual arts, design, and architecture photographer since the 1980s. His works, particularly his photographs, have been shown in Québec, across Canada, and abroad, and are held by several important public and private collections such as those of the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal, the Montréal Museum of Fine Arts, the Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography in Ottawa, the Musée de la photographie de Charleroi in Belgium, and the Fonds national d’art contemporain in Paris. © Denis Farley Extrait de la publication 5 M ontréal on foot, by bike, by metro. Montréal underground or out of doors. Montréal dining, shopping, living. So why not Montréal through your eyes, your ears, all your senses? That’s what this guide gives you: the city’s thousand facets, sparkling and singing with creativity. Whether hung on a wall or sung from a stage, in a concert hall or on the street, solid and enduring as concrete or ethereal and ephemeral as light. Montréal is a city of art. Of the arts, plural. A capital of dance and circus, home to countless festivals all year round, from wintry Montréal en Lumière to the sultry sounds of the Jazz Festival. Home to dozens of theatres and four universities swarming with tomorrow’s artists. A technological hotbed at the cutting edge of video game design and digital arts. The city’s architecture, whether religious, industrial, or vernacular, cherishes the past even as it races towards an innovative future. It’s had its Place des Arts for decades, has just inaugurated its Maison Symphonique, and will soon host a brand-new centre for new music. 6 And beyond these major complexes, it’s home to one of the most energetic indie music scenes in the world. Montréal is firmly established as Canada’s most artistic city. Its indefinable spirit seeps into its artists’ songs, stories, and designs. Its neighbourhoods are dotted with museums of history and art, galleries both august and offbeat. Its public spaces are embellished with acclaimed public artworks and extravagant graffiti murals. Montréal’s kaleidoscopic cultural menu is a match for the world’s great metropolises. The author has kept that in mind, including the sort of things he’d like to be shown when visiting other cities: the best places to see, the liveliest neighbourhoods to visit, the most interesting spots to hang out. You don’t have to see everything, you just have to know where to look. Ten different tours are offered, making their way through one or more of the city’s neighbourhoods. You can use your own creativity and decide what you want to discover. 7 Cada gotita cuenta, mural produced by the MU organization in partnership with ONE DROP, realised by Julio Cesar Moreno. © Photo: MU 8 Art and Vitality Mile End, Outremont, Little Italy Atelier Circulaire and Centre Clark. © Denis Farley W hen you visit Mile End, probably only one thing is certain: you won’t be bored. Considered “Canada’s most artistic neighbourhood,” this part of town packs in a dizzying diversity of cultural life. In terms of contemporary art alone, Mile End is home to five of the city’s most renowned artists’ centres and one of its most successful private galleries. And you’ll probably bump into some of the artists as well, as many of them live and work, eat and play right in the neighbourhood. One of the best examples is Mordecai Richler, a towering figure in English Québec literature (The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz, 1959), for whom Mile End was both his childhood stomping grounds and the fertile soil for his artistic maturity. Neighbouring Outremont and Little Italy have their own identities, but they’re inevitably marked by the closeness of Mile End’s creative spirit. However, 10 Extrait de la publication Outremont keeps its own contrasting colours, with well-to-do French speakers interspersed with a highly visible Hassidic Jewish community. It’s easier to feel the relaxed, inventive influence of Mile End in the Italian neighbourhood. While its old-country identity still shows through in its shops and restaurants and the conversations you’ll hear in its streets, Little Italy has been changing, moving towards a blending of communities like that of Mile End. And artists are an important part of that mix. By day, Mile End’s galleries and artists’ centres are an important destination for art lovers; at night, music buffs flock to the neighbourhood’s bars. More than one of Montréal’s legendary festivals has been born here, and more than one theatre has drawn cultured crowds. But the main attraction here is that there’s something to see, hear, or taste in practically every street: Mile End is rich with public and urban art, as well as great places to eat and drink. 11 1 Mile End, Outremont, Little Italy How long? Segments For the whole tour: 1 day How to get around Mile End: 3hrs 30min On foot Outremont: 1hr Optional bus ride (line 161–Van Horne) Little Italy: 3hrs 1 Digital arts: ««« Performing arts: «« Public art: «« Design: «« Visual arts: ««««« Music: ««««« c Twilight Sculpture Garden e Centre Clark e Atelier Circulaire e Diagonale e Dazibao e Optica 3 a Le Cagibi 4 e Monastiraki 5 e Galerie Simon Blais 6 afBain Saint-Michel 7 c Écritures 2 12 8 Articule 17e Bigué Art Contemporain 9 Cabaret du Mile-End 18e Yves Laroche Galerie d’Art e a 10e Occurrence – Espace d’art et d’essais contemporains 11e Galerie Mile-End AMEART 12c Lac/Fontaine 13afThéâtre Rialto 14afThéâtre Outremont 15e Galerie d’art d’Outremont 16c Espace vert Extrait de la publication 19e Lacerte Art Contemporain 20a L’Hémisphère gauche 21e Battat Contemporary 22e Projet Beaumont 23a Il Motore 24d Eastern Bloc 25e Espace projet, art contemporain + design 25 nis int-De rue Sa av. Christophe-Colomb ain boul. S nt t-Laure cher ro rue Du l’Épée erbes av. Qu av. de lon rue Clark rue Bélanger rue Alexandra i arcon rue M cadie rue Saint-Zotique rue Saint-André rue Saint-Hubert av. de Châteaubriand rue De Saint-Vallier rue Drolet rue Saint-Denis av. Henri-Julien rue Alma av. Casgrain av. De Gaspé rue Saint-Dominique boul. Saint-Laurent n Va av. Ho r rue Waverly ne rue Jeanne-Mance av. du Parc rue Saint-Urbain rue Clark av. De Gaspé rue des Carri è re s av. Champagneur rue Saint-Hubert rue Rivard rue Berri . ch de la rue Drolet boul. Saint-Joseph rue Gilford av. de l’Esplanade rue Saint-Urbain rue Clark boul. Saint-Laurent av. de l’Hôtel-de-Ville av. Henri-Julien ai -S te Cô e rin the Ca ent av. du Parc rue Saint-Denis av. Durocher rue Hutchison av. Querbes av. Bloomfield av. Outremont rue Villeneuve 13 Extrait de la publication LAURIER boul. Saint-Joseph rue Saint-Grégoire 5 av. Laurier LAURIER av. Laurier 3 4 rue De Bellechasse 17,18,19 av. McEachran od wo ple Ma av. Marché Jean-Talon Parc Laurier 7 8 av. Fairmount 9 6 10 2 rue Saint-Viateur 12 av. Saint-Viateur 11 ROSEMONT 15 av. Saint-Just e Cas rue D de l’A av. Lajoie boul. Rosemont rue Bernard 13 av. Bernard 14 1 av. Van Horne BEAUBIEN rue Beaubien illon e ma n av. Wis art av. Stu boul. OUTREMONT rue Beaubien 20 av. Ducharme 16 telnau DE CASTELNAU PARC N av. Beaumont 22 ACADIE rue Fa an-Ta JEAN-TALON 23 n-Talon leray Parc Jarry rue Je rue Jea 24 21 rue Vil Mile End, Outremont, Little Italy 1 1 Mile End [intense cultural activity, contemporary art, urban art] ÔÔ The tour starts at the corner of Rue Saint-Urbain and Avenue Van Horne. (Take Bus 161 from Rosemont metro station.) Mile End is bounded to the north by a railway line, but it developed over the 20th century by turning its back on the rails following the closure of its train station in the 1930s. Despite the dilapidated condition of some of the lands surrounding the tracks, some locals have taken advantage of them, in particular artist Glenn Le Mesurier, whose workshop (135 Avenue Van Horne) is almost always open to the public. In the vacant lot near his studio, he has created a remarkable sculpture garden all his own: the Twilight Sculpture Garden (1 c) (next to 101 Avenue Van Horne). An unofficial symbol of Mile 14 End, this set of artworks made from scrap metal and industrial debris is the perfect spot to kick off a tour of the neighbourhood. The Twilight Sculpture Garden began to sprout up around the year 2000. The open-air gallery—the sculptures are for sale—exemplifies the creativity and resourcefulness of Mile End, not to mention its freewheeling, bohemian atmosphere. But above all, the dozen freestanding sculptures are the perfect example of how, with a bit of initiative, an abandoned, desolate lot can reveal its potential as an inviting urban space. After strolling among Glenn Le Mesurier’s sculptures, take a step back: the garden is worth taking in as a whole, as well. Extrait de la publication 2 1. Dieu pourvoit (2010) mural by Monk-e off Boulevard Saint-Laurent, with a mural by Zek in the background. © Photo: Denis Farley 2. Twilight Sculpture Garden by artist Glenn Le Mesurier. © Photo: Denis Farley ÔÔ Walk east along the viaduct toward Boulevard Saint-Laurent, until you get to the corner of Rue de l’Arcade and Boulevard Saint-Laurent. Raised viaducts here don’t just speed up car traffic; they also stimulate creativity. Under this stretch of roadway over Boulevard Saint-Laurent are several beautiful examples. A series of murals on the pillars enliven this grey concrete environment even as they draw on it for inspiration. Despite being done clandestinely, several of them show excellent technique and intricate detail. Wait for a break in the traffic to cross Boulevard Saint-Laurent for a closer view. While you’re at it, climb the staircase onto the viaduct for an excellent view of the neighbourhood. Notice the flatiron-shaped building to your northeast. This vestige of the area’s industrial past, known as Entrepôt Saint-Laurent or Van Horne Warehouse Incorporated, features a huge, conspicuous cistern on its roof. ÔÔ Continue south along Boulevard Saint-Laurent to Rue Bernard, where you will turn left. Before turning onto Rue Bernard, consider a stop at Style Labo (5765 Boulevard Saint-Laurent), half antique dealership and half interior design boutique, where you run a good chance of finding something fascinating. Rue Bernard Est runs along the railway, offering a view of industrial remnants such as the vacant lot still crowned with a large rusting sign promising “Textiles.” Rue Bernard leads onto Avenue De Gaspé, once the heart of Montréal’s garment industry; and a former factory, at 5455 De Gaspé, now serves as a hub for the artistic production in the neighbourhood. As you make your way there, you’ll pass a recently opened bistro, Le Falco (5605 Avenue De Gaspé), where design, espresso, and Japanese food go together wonderfully. 15 1 2 3 Centre Clark [artist-run centre, contemporary art, cultural complex] Mile End, Outremont, Little Italy 1 Rather than going in the main door of Le Plaza (5455 Avenue De Gaspé), continue about 15 metres on, past the yellow stairs. To your right, on the west side of the street, notice the brick building covered in graffiti. This “decoration,” featuring a variety of exotic monsters, is a microcosm of the neighbourhood: built on industrial foundations, its face turned toward the imaginary. Head back to the yellow stairs which mark the entrance to Centre Clark (2 e) (5455 Avenue De Gaspé, suite 114), one of the leading exemplars of Québec’s unique centres d’artistes autogérés (self-managed arts centres). The Clark, as it’s commonly called, is often listed as one of Montréal’s top attractions. It’s known as much for its rich arts programming as for its midDecember auction, a celebrated holiday season event. Born downtown on the street that gave it its name, the Clark has been a leader in the arts world for more than 20 years. In that time, it’s hosted numerous seminal shows, such as Les Bricolos in 1998. Leading lights of the 1990s’ generation of artists, such as David Altmejd, Nicolas Baier, Mathieu Beauséjour, Valérie Blass, and many others, spent their early years at the Clark. In 2001, Centre Clark innovated by moving into this building on Avenue de Gaspé, where they 16 were followed shortly thereafter by the Atelier Circulaire (2 e), an arts centre specializing in printed media, and by Diagonale (2 e), a unique site dedicated to artistic practices using textiles. Today, the building is a hive of artists’ workshops and a wellspring of creativity in the neighbourhood. In 2013, two of Montréal’s most renowned artists’ centres also moved into the Plaza: Dazibao (2 e), devoted to the photographic arts but also branching out into film and contemporary art, and Optica (2 e), open to all artistic pursuits. As this guide was going to press, the building’s new configuration had not yet been permanently established, but it was obvious that Avenue de Gaspé was well on its way to becoming one of the city’s creative hotspots. ÔÔ Backtrack to Rue Saint-Viateur, and follow it back to Boulevard Saint-Laurent. This area hosts a wide variety of popular cafés and shops, such as Le Cagibi (3 a) (5490 Boulevard Saint-Laurent), a friendly hippie-style café/restaurant, the delicious Asian cuisine of Soy (5258 Boulevard Saint-Laurent), the eclectic bazaar and art gallery Monastiraki (4 e) (5478 Boulevard Saint-Laurent), and the retro fashions of Citizen Vintage (5330 Boulevard SaintLaurent). Extrait de la publication 4 1. Centre Clark: Sophie Jodoin / De peine et de misère, 2010. © Photo: Bettina Hoffmann 2. Centre Clark: Pierre Bourgault / JENESAISPASVRAIMENTOUJEVAISMAISJEMENVAIS, 2012. © Photo: Sébastien Lapointe 3. Dazibao: images from mécaniques affectives, Manon Labrecque, 2009. © Photo: Dazibao 4. Centre Clark: Dominique Pétrin / POMPÉII MMXII, 2011. © Photo: Sébastien Lapointe 17 Galerie Simon Blais [private gallery, contemporary art, great masters] Mile End, Outremont, Little Italy 1 Galerie Simon Blais (5 e) (5420 Boulevard Saint-Laurent), a leader in the Québec art market, is in the heart of Mile End. It built its reputation on the quality and diversity of the works it offers, representing both contemporary and historical artistic currents, as well as African art. church is best known for its richly baroque facade and its interior decoration. Most visitors come for the paintings around the dome and in the chapel, created between 1917 and 1919 by Ozias Leduc, a forerunner of the modernist movement in Québec and mentor to the great artistic reformer Paul-Émile Borduas. Its temporary exhibits showcase many of the key figures of today’s Québec art world, such as painters Marc Séguin and Françoise Sullivan, photographers Michel Campeau and Éliane Excoffier, and engravers François-Xavier Marange and Catherine Farish. ÔÔ To return westward to the heart of Mile End, you can choose between Avenue Laurier, famous for its stylish boutiques, and Avenue Fairmount further to the north. Fans of the great modernist masters will also find something to enjoy here. The gallery’s stock includes works by the likes of Piet Mondrian and Antoni Tàpies, as well as Québec masters such as Jean Paul Riopelle, Alfred Pellan, and Guido Molinari. ÔÔ Take Rue Maguire to Rue Saint-Dominique. Since the late 1990s, Bain Saint-Michel (6 af) (5300 Rue Saint-Dominique) has played host to a plethora of artistic events of all kinds. This former public bath, with its huge, striking circular window, is the home stage of Infinithéâtre, at the cutting edge of English-language Québec theatre; it also presents events in the madcap FRINGE Festival, performances of the VIVA! Art action festival, and contemporary and electronic music concerts. ÔÔ Continue south on Rue Saint-Dominique to Avenue Laurier. Next to Parc Lahaie, once considered the gateway to the neighbourhood, stands the Église Saint-Enfant-Jésus du Mile-End (5039 Rue Saint-Dominique). This 19th-century 18 Those who want to take in the multicultural feel of the neighbourhood should choose Avenue Fairmount. One after another, you’ll pass Au papier japonais (24 Avenue Fairmount Ouest), an origami studio; Wilensky (34 Avenue Fairmount Ouest), a celebrated Polish restaurant of bygone days; Caffè Grazie Mille (58 Avenue Fairmount Ouest), a quintessentially Italian café; the legendary Fairmount Bagel (74 Avenue Fairmount Ouest); Barros Luco (5201 Rue Saint-Urbain), home of authentic Chilean empanadas; a variety of kosher and halal food stores; and just over the border into Outremont, the famed Middle Eastern restaurant Rumi (5198 Rue Hutchison). Amid this panoply of businesses, Avenue Fairmount also has its little secrets. A littleknown sculpture by modern master Armand Vaillancourt, Écritures (7 c), is suspended from one of the buildings of the Collège Français (162 Avenue Fairmount Ouest) at the corner of Avenue de l’Esplanade. This private school’s other building, across the street (172 Avenue Fairmount Ouest), conceals a majestic former synagogue behind an unfortunate facade that was added when the building changed hands in the 1960s. Calendar of Festivals and Events Calendar of Festivals and Events © Conception photo 1. The main stage at Igloofest. © Photo: Miguel Legault 2. Les Sœurs Boulay performing during the Francouvertes. © Photo: Michel Pinault 210 1 January Wildside Theatre Festival www.centaurtheatre.com/wildsidefestival.php Two weeks of audacious, avant-garde and emergent English-language theatre to discover. Igloofest www.igloofest.ca/en Electronic music festival under the snow covering the last three weekends of January and early February. February Francouvertes www.francouvertes.com A singer-songwriter festival and a competition where 21 artists perform their work in one of seven weekly shows (February to May). 2 211 March Edgy Women Festival www.edgywomen.ca/en Feminist festival featuring performances by remarkable artists, video screenings, launches for out-of-the-ordinary books, lectures by artists and popular parties. SAT Fest www.sat.qc.ca Lying down on couches set in the middle of the Satosphere, spectators are treated to a dozen short films projected 360 degrees around them (MarchApril). Calendar of Festivals and Events 1 2 1. Edgy Women Festival. © Photo: Heather Cassils and Robin Black, courtesy Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, New York 2. International Digital Arts Biennial (BIAN): Ulf Langheinrich [DE/CN] – Hemisphere. Society for Arts and Technology [SAT] / BIAN 2012. Production: Epidemic, Paris | Muffathalle Munich. With grants from Kulturstiftung des Bundes, Germany. © Photo: Conception photo 212 Art Matters www.artmattersfestival.org A showcase for new talent at Concordia University, in visual arts, dance, music, film, theatre, and video art. Art Souterrain www.artsouterrain.com/en/home During this art show event, several kilometres of the downtown underground city are filled with works of art. International Festival of Films on Art (FIFA) www.artfifa.com/en A competitive event and the world’s biggest art film festival, with round tables, openings, performances, and installations. Nuit blanche à Montréal www.montrealenlumiere.com/nuit-blanche-en During the Nuit blanche event, the metro stays open all night and no fewer than 170 activities—most of them free—showcase every branch of culture. Under the snow / Sous la neige www.underthesnow.ca This five day festival for all budgets promotes and supports up-and-coming musicians in all genres. D’un œil différent www.exeko.org/en/dod This event explores the creativity of artists with an intellectual disability through a series of visual arts exhibits, forums, workshops, and artistic performances. April International Digital Arts Biennial (BIAN) http://bianmontreal.ca/en Biennial event focusing on installation pieces that combine art with multimedia (April-June). Dérapage www.derapage.ca Screenings of short films lasting less than three minutes each at the UQAM’s Centre de design. Festival temps d’images www.usine-c.com A hybrid festival at the intersection of the arts of the stage and the screen. Papier – Contemporary Art Fair of Works on Paper www.papiermontreal.com/welcome-to-the-papier12-art-fair Held under a huge white tent near Place des Festivals, Québec’s only art fair aims to democratize the collection of works on paper. Extrait de la publication 213 May Festival TransAmériques (FTA) www.fta.qc.ca/en Some thirty shows in contemporary dance and theatre, as well as workshops, debates, round tables and film screenings (May-June). MUTEK www.mutek.org/en Digital music and visual arts festival offering some 100 concerts and other events in various venues and galleries over five days (May-June). OFFTA www.offta.com/en Festival showcasing dance, performance art, and theatre revisited by audacious emerging artists (MayJune). Sight & Sound http://sightandsoundfestival.ca Technological, digital and multimedia art festival featuring innovative audiovisual performances and installations. Elektra www.elektramontreal.ca/?l=en Live performances in robotics, video, dance and digital technology, blended with electronic and electroacoustic music. Design Montréal Open House www.portesouvertesdesignmontreal.com/en This biennial event helps visitors understand the creative processes behind designers’, developers’, and artists’ creations trough exhibitions, video clips, and interactive installations. Calendar of Festivals and Events 1 2 1. International Digital Arts Biennial (BIAN): Bill Vorn [QC-CA] – DSM-VI. Black Box Hexagram-Concordia / BIAN 2012. © Photo: Conception photo 2. Elektra: Yan Beuleux [QC-CA] – TEMPÊTES, 2012. © Photo: Gridspace 3. Festival TransAmériques: Alexis, Una tragedia greca. © Photo: Pierre Borasci 214 SIDIM www.sidim.com/en.html A major showcase for industrial and interior design, showing off the best of the field in Canada and around the world. Piknic Electronik www.piknicelectronik.com/en In Parc Jean-Drapeau on Île Sainte-Hélène, the Piknic Électronik is a Sunday ritual for electronic music lovers and picnickers with hungry ears (May-September). Kinetik Festival www.festival-kinetik.net This electro-industrial-noise-hardcore happening promotes the electro-industrial scene in Montréal and encourages cultural exchange between countries. La Biennale de Montréal www.biennalemontreal.org/en This biennial festival with no fixed address finds a space and transforms it into an exhibition hall with art of all kinds, from painting to multimedia, from immersive installations to delicate drawings. 3 215 June Festival de théâtre de rue de Lachine www.theatrederue.com Multidisciplinary arts performances in the streets of the borough of Lachine. The St-Ambroise Montreal FRINGE Festival www.montrealfringe.ca/en/home In the Plateau and Mile End areas, this bilingual festival presents a stunning kaleidoscope of music, dance, theatre and comedy. L’Écho d’un fleuve www.peristylenomade.org/fr/realisations/lecho-dunfleuve Performance art, outdoor dance, installations, alley gatherings, collective sculptures and music shows in the public spaces of the Faubourgs neighbourhood. Festival international de Montréal en arts (FIMA) www.festivaldesarts.org/index_eng.htm A section of Sainte-Catherine Street is closed to traffic and transformed into a large open-air art gallery that also offers multimedia performances, short film screenings, and live creation. Nuit blanche sur tableau noir www.tableaunoir.com Popular night festival on Mont-Royal Avenue with free concerts, poetry readings, and other creative and original activities. Suoni Per Il Popolo www.casadelpopolo.com/suoniperilpopolo The latest discoveries of the Montréal music scene with established big names in modern music, including jazz, underground rock, noise, and electronica. Calendar of Festivals and Events Festival International de Jazz de Montréal www.montrealjazzfest.com Indoor and outdoor concerts by local up-and-comers and the biggest names in jazz (June-July). 4 1. Suoni Per Il Popolo. © Photo: Eddie Rodgers 2. L’Écho d’un fleuve: Nicolas Bonnet, Antéfacts performance, 2011. © Photo: L’Écho d’un fleuve 3. L’Écho d’un fleuve: Pénélope St-Cyr Robitaille, Responsive bodies in situ dance project, 2012. © Photo: L’Écho d’un fleuve 4. Montréal Complètement Cirque. © Photo: Rénald Laurin 216 Extrait de la publication 1 2 3 July Montréal Complètement Cirque http://montrealcompletementcirque.com/en A celebration of the circus arts with a host of ticketed and free events throughout the city. MEG (Montréal Électronique Groove) www.megmontreal.com/en Urban music festival showcasing Canadian (chiefly Montrealers) electronic, pop, rock, and hip-hop musicians (July-August). 217 Calendar of Festivals and Events 1 September Les Escales improbables www.escalesimprobables.com Various venues host numerous installations, shows, and performances, including theatre, dance, music, puppetry and live creation of works of art. Transatlantique Montréal / Festival Quartiers Danses www.transatlantiquemontreal.com Contemporary dance festival held in both indoor and outdoor locations. 218 Le Mois de la Photo à Montréal www.moisdelaphoto.com Biennial contemporary photography festival presenting still images, videos and films in a variety of genres, from traditional documentary photography to abstraction (September-October). POP Montréal http://popmontreal.com In five days, this music festival presents nearly 600 artists as well as events like FilmPop, ArtPop, and KidsPop. August Under Pressure Festival www.underpressure.ca In the Latin Quarter, this street art festival has multitalented artists working on collective or individual projects, with the public looking on. Montréal Fashion & Design Festival www.festivalmodedesign.com/homepage Numerous outdoor runway shows accompanied by amazing music and other wild events like a high heels race. Osheaga www.osheaga.com A huge music and art festival with an enviable international reputation, this three day outdoor event attracts more than 80,000 festival-goers to Parc Jean-Drapeau, on Île SainteHélène. 2 3 1. Montréal Fashion & Design Festival. © Photo: Jimmy Hamelin 2. Plants and Animals performing at Osheaga in 2012. © Photo: Patrick Beaudry 3. Le Mois de la Photo à Montréal: installation view of Arrangements From Life by Alain Paiement, Darling Foundry, 2009. © Photo: Véronique Lépine 219 Calendar of Festivals and Events 1 October Phénomena www.festivalphenomena.com/phenomena/en A celebration of alternative culture and new techniques for artistic expression, with an eclectic mix of hands-on artistic techniques: cabaret, magic, tableaux vivants, theatre of objects, and shadow plays. Festival du nouveau cinéma www.nouveaucinema.ca/en An innovative film festival offering an audacious programme of international films, exploring longs and shorts, videos, animation, installations, performances, and interactive works. Viva! Art Action http://vivamontreal.org/en This event is devoted to performance art and all its recent variations (manoeuvre, public intervention, and participatory art), where action’s main medium of expression is the human body. 1. VIVA! Art Action: performance by Martine Viale, 2011. © Photo: Guy L’Heureux 2. M for Montréal. © Photo: Alexandre Bédard 3. Danse Danse: Louise Lecavalier / “I” Is Memory. © Photo: Angelo Barsetti 220 Extrait de la publication November Coup de cœur francophone www.coupdecoeur.ca A showcase for French-language song with a fine blend of established and emergent artists. 2 The HTMlles www.htmlles.net This biennial event presents an eclectic portrait of feminine artistic innovation through multimedia and technological artworks in multiple forms. Souk@SAT http://souk.sat.qc.ca/english A lively bazaar with local artisans and creators selling their latest wares at affordable prices (NovemberDecember). M for Montréal www.mpourmontreal.com/en.html M for Montréal shows off Montréal’s up-and-coming musical acts with 40 performances in just three days. Year-round Danse Danse www.dansedanse.net This organization works to spread contemporary dance and encourage its development by presenting new choreographic voices from abroad, linked only by their well-deserved success in their home country and around the world. Les Ballets Jazz de Montréal www.bjmdanse.ca/?lg=en Choreographies brought to life by contagiously energetic dancers from a variety of artistic backgrounds. 3 221 index Design Bonsecours Market 148 Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA) 109 Centre de design de l’UQAM 163 Espace Verre 145 Galerie Créa 148 Le Chat des artistes 172 Maison de l’architecture du Québec 139 Montreal Centre for Contemporary Textiles 200 Ruelle Land 172 Zone Orange 142 Digital Arts DHC/ART Foundation for Contemporary Art 141 Eastern Bloc 28 Oboro 41 Perte de Signal 173 SAT 82 Société des arts technologiques 82 Studio XX 41 Usine C 169 William Notman House 66 Music Bain Mathieu 173 Bain Saint-Michel 18 Bibliothèque Saint-Sulpice 164 Bourgie Hall 105 Cabaret du Mile-End 19 Café Chaos 165 Casa Del Popolo 48 Centre Pierre-Charbonneau 177 Centre Pierre-Péladeau 161 Centre St-Ambroise 123 Chapelle historique du Bon-Pasteur 160 Club Lambi 50 Club Soda 82 Coop Les Katacombes 80 Corona Theatre 118 Divan Orange 51 Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste 42 Île Sainte-Hélène 150 Il Motore 27 Inspecteur Épingle 41 L’Astral 90 La Tulipe 46 Le Cagibi 16 Le Gesù 90 Le National 167 L’Entrepôt 125 Le Petit Medley 202 Le Savoy 81 L’Escalier 166 L’Esco 44 Les Foufounes Électriques 81 Le Vivier 160 L’Hémisphère Gauche 24 222 Lion d’Or 170 L’Olympia 167 Maison de la culture Frontenac 171 Maison de la culture Maisonneuve 176 Maison de la culture Marie-Uguay 123 Maison du Festival Rio Tinto Alcan 90 Maison symphonique de Montréal 86 Métropolis 81 New Music Building 68 O Patro Výš 42 Place des Arts 86 Place des Festivals 89 Pollack Hall 68 Quai des brumes 44 Redpath Hall 68 Sala Rossa 48 Salle Claude-Champagne 188 Salle Émile-Legault 193 Théâtre Outremont 23 Théâtre Plaza 202 Théâtre Rialto 20 Théâtre Saint-Denis 164 Théâtre Sainte-Catherine 163 Théâtre St-James 140 Performing Arts Agora de la danse 36 Bain Mathieu 173 Bain Saint-Michel 18 Centaur Theatre 140 Centre Pierre-Péladeau 161 Cirque du Soleil 205 Corona Theatre 118 Édifice Jean-Pierre-Perreault 172 Espace La Risée 207 Espace Libre 172 Grande Bibliothèque 165 La Licorne 46 Le National 167 L’Entrepôt 125 L’Illusion 46 L’Olympia 167 MAI - Montréal arts interculturels 65 MainLine Theatre 52 Maison de la culture Frontenac 171 Maison Théâtre 160 Montréal Science Centre 147 Monument-National 84 National Circus Schoo 205 Parc La Fontaine 37 PHI Centre 141 Place des Arts 86 Place des Festivals 89 Segal Centre 188 Théâtre Aux Écuries 206 Théâtre d’Aujourd’hui 39 Théâtre Denise-Pelletier 176 Théâtre de Quat’Sous 54 Théâtre du Nouveau Monde 85 Théâtre du Rideau Vert 47 Extrait de la publication Théâtre Espace Go 49 Théâtre La Chapelle 52 Théâtre Outremont 23 Théâtre Plaza 202 Théâtre Prospero 170 Théâtre Rialto 20 Théâtre Saint-Denis 164 Théâtre Sainte-Catherine 163 TOHU 205 Usine C 169 Public Art 21 balançoires 85 Acer Concordiae 106 After Babel, a Civic Square 85 À la croisée des mots 118 Allegrocube 147 Autoportrait 95 Bonsecours Market 148 Botanical Garden 177 Bouillon de culture 206 Boulevard Monk 123 Cailloudo 193 Carrés gris 166 CCA Garden 109 Centre CDP Capital 133 C’est sûrement des Québécois qui ont fait ça 86 Champ-de-Mars 149 Comme si le temps... de la rue 86 Comme un poisson dans la ville 44, 161 Cultiver l’imaginaire 186 Diorama 134 Écho 90 Éclosion – Une autre journée au paradis 176 Écritures 18 Engineering, Computer Science and Visual Arts Integrated Complex 106 Entre nous 146 Espace fractal 165 Espace vert 23 Give Peace a Chance 70 Grande Bibliothèque 165 Gratte-ciel, cascades d’eau/rues, ruisseaux... une construction 166 Habitations Jeanne-Mance 160 Île Notre-Dame 151 Île Sainte-Hélène 150 Isocèle 207 Laboratoire-échantillon 47 La Bourrasque 191 Lac/Fontaine 20 La Fermière 176 La Joute 137 La (Les) Leçon(s) plurielle(s) 176 La Montagne des jours 71 La Peur 142 La Puerta de la Amistad 151 L’Arc 151 La Voie lactée 89 Le 2.22 82 Le Malheureux magnifique 55 Le Mélomane 204 Les Allusifs 120 Les conteurs 47 Les Enjeux 39 Les grandes formes qui dansent 149 Les Leçons singulières 38 Les Lieux communs 192 Les Moments magiques 68 L’homme est un roseau pensant II 54 L’homo urbanus 191 L’Île des commencements 146 Lipstick Forest (Nature Légère) 138 Lumière et mouvement dans la couleur 85 Machine consciente 36 Man, Three Disks (L’Homme) 151 Mélangez le Tout 173 Mémoire ardente 148 Miroirs 192 Montréal Eaton Centre 94 Monument à la Pointe 121 Mouvements 86 Murals 124 Musée de Lachine 124 Neuf couleurs au vent 37 Ondes 68 Our Lady of Grace 190 Palais de justice 147 Palais des congrès 137 Parallélépipède 188 Parc La Fontaine 37 Parvis et portail # 22 192 Patro Le Prévost 207 Peel station 104 Phare du Cosmos 151 Place Émilie-Gamelin 166 Place Jean-Paul-Riopelle 137 Porte du jour 149 Révolutions 170 Signatures 147 Solstice 104 Sommeil (ou les séjours sous terre) 135 Source 190 Square Cabot 110 Stratifications pariétales 133 Système 191 Tables 135 Tango de Montréal 44 Temps d’arrêt 203 Temps présents 192 The artist is the one who unveils the other side of things 86 The Eye 105 Together 207 Topographie/Topologie 188 Twilight Sculpture Garden 14 Un jardin à soi 177 Untitled 108 Vanités 3. Les miroirs du temps 146 Ventis et soupiraux, turbulences et essoufflements 188 Voix sans bruit 165 Visual Arts Ancienne-Douane 146 Arprim 93 Arsenal 118 Art 45 93 Artexte 82 Articule 19 Art Mûr 201 Atelier Circulaire 16 Bain Mathieu 173 Banque Nationale 132 Battat Contemporary 26 Belgo 92 Bigué Art Contemporain 24 Centre Clark 16 Centre Dare-Dare 80 Centre de diffusion et d’expérimentation 163 Centre d’exposition de l’Université de Montréal 188 Centre d’histoire de Montréal 142 Centre St-Ambroise 123 Centre Vox 82 Château Dufresne 177 Cinéma Beaubien 203 Cinéma du Parc 66 Cinémathèque québécoise 161 Circa 92 Contemporary Art Galleries Association 93 Coopérative Lézarts 172 Darling Foundry 143 Dazibao 16 Diagonale 16 Division Gallery 118 Écomusée du fier monde 168 Engineering, Computer Science and Visual Arts Integrated Complex 106 Espace Cercle Carré 144 Espace projet, art contemporain + design 28 Espacio México 104 Excentris 52 FoFA 107 Fondation Molinari 174 Fresh Paint! 163 Galerie Antoine Ertaskiran 118 Galerie B-312 92 Galerie Bernard 39 Galerie Christian Lambert 92 Galerie Crystal Racine 46 Galerie D 168 Galerie d’art d’Outremont 23 Galerie de Bellefeuille 111 Galerie de l’UQAM 164 Galerie d’Este 111 Galerie Dominique Bouffard 167 Galerie Donald Browne 92 Galerie Espace 50 Galerie Hugues Charbonneau 93 Galerie Laroche/Joncas 93 Galerie Lilian Rodriguez 93 Galerie Mile-End AME-ART 20 Galerie MX 137 Galerie Nicolas Robert 92 Galerie Nuances 146 Galerie René Blouin 145 Galerie Roger Bellemare 92 Galerie Simon Blais 18 Gallery Gora 67 Graff 42 Grover building 172 Hôtel des Encans 122 Joyce Yahouda 92 La Centrale Galerie Powerhouse 51 Lacerte Art Contemporain 24 L’Endroit indiqué 42 L’Entrepôt 125 Le 2.22 82 Leonard and Bina Ellen Gallery 106 Le repaire des 100 talents 202 Les Ateliers Jean-Brillant 121 Les Impatients 160 Les Territoires 92 MAI - Montréal arts interculturels 65 Maison de la culture Côte-des-Neiges 186 Maison de la culture du Plateau-Mont-Royal 45 Maison de la culture Frontenac 171 Maison de la culture Marie-Uguay 123 Maison de la culture Notre-Dame-de-Grâce 190 Maison de la culture Rosemont–La Petite-Patrie 202 Maison Kasini 93 McClure Gallery 123 McCord Museum 68 Monastiraki 16 Montréal Museum of Fine Arts (MMFA) 105 Montréal Science Centre 147 Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal (MACM) 88 Musée des maîtres et artisans du Québec 193 Occurrence – Espace d’art et d’essai contemporains 20 Optica 16, 92 Parisian Laundry 122 Pavillon J.-A.-DeSève 188 PHI Centre 141 Pierre-François Ouellette art contemporain 93 Pointe-à-Callière, Montréal Museum of Archaeology and History 146 Projet Beaumont 27 Quartier Latin 164 [sas] 93 SBC 92 Skol 93 Studio 303 93 Trois Points 92 Usine 106U 54 VAV Gallery 108 Visual Voice Art Gallery 93 William Notman House 66 Yves Laroche Galerie d’art 24 Zéphyr, lieu d’art 168 223 Resources to Learn More and Stay Informed To learn more and to keep on top of what’s happening in Montréal’s dynamic arts scene, here’s a non-exhaustive list of the city’s cultural initiatives, associations and organizations: ÔÔ Accès culture Montréal www.accesculture.com ÔÔ MAP // Make Art Public makeartpublic.wordpress.com ÔÔ ArtsScène Montréal en.artsscenemontreal.com ÔÔ MASSIVart massivart.ca ÔÔ Conseil des arts de Montréal (CAM) www.artsmontreal.org/en ÔÔ Montreal Arts-Business portal montrealartsaffaires.org/en ÔÔ Contemporary Art Galleries Association (AGAC) new.agac.qc.ca ÔÔ Montréal Créative (CRÉ de Montréal) montrealcreative.org ÔÔ Culture Montréal www.culturemontreal.ca/en ÔÔ Culture pour tous www.culturepourtous.ca/index_en.htm 224 ÔÔ Montréal, Cultural Metropolis montrealmetropoleculturelle.org ÔÔ Montreal Galleries galeriesmontreal.ca/?lang=en ÔÔ District Montréal www.districtmontreal.com/en ÔÔ Pied carré (PI2) – Regroupement des créateurs du secteur Saint-Viateur Est www.regroupementpi2.org ÔÔ Diversité artistique Montréal (DAM) www.diversiteartistique.org ÔÔ Quartier des Spectacles Partnership www.quartierdesspectacles.com/en ÔÔ English-Language Arts Network (ELAN) www.quebec-elan.org ÔÔ Réseau Art Actuel (an initiative of RCAAQ) www.rcaaq.org/index_en.php ÔÔ La Ligne Bleue www.lalignebleue.ca ÔÔ Voies culturelles des faubourgs voiesculturelles.qc.ca ÔÔ La Vitrine www.lavitrine.com ÔÔ The Montréal Buzz (Tourisme Montréal blog) www.tourisme-montreal.org/blog Extrait de la publication creati v e montréal 10 tours through the city’s cutting-edge arts scene Immerse yourself in Montréal’s cutting-edge creative community with this unique guidebook, which takes you along 10 walking tours through the city’s buzzing arts scene. Get a taste for the art of living à la montréalaise: visit galleries and concert halls; meet artists in their favourite cafés, restaurants and shops; and make all kinds of unexpected discoveries in neighbourhoods and public spaces teeming with art in all its forms. Experience and discover the true creative face of Montréal! www.ulyssesguides.com Follow us on Facebook and Twitter @UlyssesGuides ISBN : 978-2-76580-295-2 (digital format) Extrait de la publication