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Reviews

Rothko/Giotto

Rothko/Giotto

Housed in a modest room in the Gemäldegalerie, this small exhibition nonetheless came equipped with a big catalogue, wall texts and a videoguide. It was substantial support for an exhibition made of only three works—Mark Rothko’s Reds No. 5 (1961) and Giotto di Bondone’s Death of the Virgin (ca. 1310) and Crucifixion (ca. 1315).

Francis Alÿs

Francis Alÿs

Fifteen years ago, Francis Alÿs began shopping at flea markets, bazaars and jumble sales for discarded paintings with which he could build an art collection. Unsurprisingly for an artist whose practice consists of open-ended, exploratory projects, he had no idea what the outcome would be.

Piero Manzoni

Piero Manzoni

Piero Manzoni, the puckish, baby-faced Italian, has long been beloved by art students everywhere for his Merda d’artista (1961), 90 small cans of what was purportedly his own shit, sold at the time for the price of their weight in gold.

Nicolas Baier

Nicolas Baier

Human beings have an uncanny ability to seek out images where none exist. That’s why we can while away hours finding shapes in the clouds and can all see a man in the moon. It’s this notion that informs this exhibition of recent work by the Montreal-based artist Nicolas Baier.

Anthony Hernandez

Anthony Hernandez

The Anthony Hernandez show at the Vancouver Art Gallery has been unexpected in a number of ways.

Ed Pien: Drawing in Many Forms

Ed Pien: Drawing in Many Forms

The Canadian artist Ed Pien has long been known as a virtuoso in the medium of drawing. In her review of “Treacherous Lines,” Pien’s summer exhibition in Montreal, Zoë Chan explains how Pien brings his drawing-sensitive touch to a suite of works in a range of media that track the ineffable movements of the human mind and imagination.

Sometimes Always: Sound Effects

Sometimes Always: Sound Effects

Obsolete and on-the-way-out audio technologies find new life as contemporary art in a clever, playful group exhibition at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia. As Sue Carter-Flinn observes, 8-tracks, CDs and good old vinyl all get their due.

Yam Lau: A House Divided, and United Again

Yam Lau: A House Divided, and United Again

Toronto-based artist Yam Lau is known for remarkable digital artworks that bind the poetic and prosaic sides of life. His latest show “Hutong House” opens soon in Beijing, and as David Court observes, Lau’s images of architecture are most certainly high art.

Universal Code: Solar System Symphony

Universal Code: Solar System Symphony

Universes—those both within and without—are given the art treatment in “Universal Code,” a substantial summer exhibition at the Power Plant in Toronto. From cosmic drama to heavenly music, Justin Mah finds the art impresses.

David Wisdom: Retro Vancouver Views

David Wisdom: Retro Vancouver Views

Though he’s best known for hosting radio programs, David Wisdom showed photographs alongside Rodney Graham and Jeff Wall back in the day. Now, a retrospective of Wisdom’s 1970s imagery is shifting focus back to his vis-arts chops.