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Reviews

Valérie Blass

Valérie Blass

Parisian Laundry, an expansive three-storey gallery in the alternately dilapidated and gentrified Montreal district of St-Henri, is a strangely suitable venue for the work of the Montreal sculptor Valérie Blass.

Rafael Lozano-Hemmer

Rafael Lozano-Hemmer

Blaring music, a crowded dance floor, countless margaritas and tall women dressed in PVC pants and motorcycle helmets serving canapés out of pizza boxes can only mean one thing: the private-view party at Haunch of Venison for the Mexican-Canadian multimedia artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer's first commercial show in London.

Kai Althoff

Kai Althoff

Kai Althoff is a 42-year-old German artist who works
with an exceptionally wide range of practices and
media: his activities include traditional image-making,
collaboration, relational aesthetics and the plumbing of
the deepest recesses of childhood memory and experience.

Matthew Eskuche in Review: Fast Food Aesthetics

Matthew Eskuche in Review: Fast Food Aesthetics

In “Dollar Menu: A Fast Food Aesthetic,” Pittsburgh-based glass artist Matthew Eskuche elevates glasswork—a medium traditionally considered as craft—to a platform for consumerist critique.

Jin-me Yoon: Passages through Phantasmagoria

Jin-me Yoon: Passages through Phantasmagoria

Where is home in an increasingly global world? Do we have to choose one home, or can there be many? Vancouver-based artist Jin-me Yoon investigates pressing questions of nationhood and belonging in her latest series of performance and video works at the Canadian Cultural Centre in Paris.

Deborah Margo: Sweet Stuff

Deborah Margo: Sweet Stuff

The results of the most recent RBC Painting Competition seem to signal a return to process painting, and particularly the kind associated with 1970s Post-Minimalism. Ottawa-based artist Deborah Margo’s work is among the more interesting branches of this vein, and her solo exhibition at Patrick Mikhail Gallery takes a provocative new direction.

Actions in Review: Re-Humanizing the City

Actions in Review: Re-Humanizing the City

With their current group show “Actions: What You Can Do With the City,” the Canadian Centre for Architecture shifts its focus from major building projects to architectural interventions on a human scale, exploring how ordinary people can reclaim their communities.

Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster: Back to the Future, or A Cautionary Tale

Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster: Back to the Future, or A Cautionary Tale

Last week Tate announced that Polish sculptor Miroslaw Balka will be the next artist using the massive Turbine Hall. Whether he’ll be able to outdo the current, sci-fi flavoured installation by French artist Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster is an open question.

Lyndal Osborne: Delectable Decay

Lyndal Osborne: Delectable Decay

“Ornamenta” is Lyndal Osborne’s magnificent cross-Canada compost pile. Travelling this year to Penticton, Edmonton, Moose Jaw and Medicine Hat, Osborne’s vegetative installation is both playful and thought-provoking.

Thomas Demand: Mom, Apple Pie and the Oval Office

Thomas Demand: Mom, Apple Pie and the Oval Office

From JFK at his desk in Life Magazine to blog speculation over Barack Obama’s decorative tastes, there are few better representations of a conflicted sense of history, power and celebrity than the Oval Office. A new UK exhibition by German artist Thomas Demand deconstructs the meaning of this cultural monolith.