Theo Pelmus (Romania), 'Art is so much fun here', Acrylic & Modeeling Clay on Canvas, 2005, 16 x 20 inches, Collection of La Petite Mort Gallery. Joyce Westrop (Ottawa, Canada), Abject to Abstract: Bronze, 2008, Bicycle tires, wire and bronze paint, Approx. 18 x 15 x 15 inches, $750. Represented by Gallery 3, Ottawa, Canada. Anonymous Street Sign. Acquired in New York (USA), Collection of La Petite Mort Gallery Archives. Joyce Westrop (on loan from Gallery 3, Ottawa, Canada), Tarnishing Lin 2008, Tire tread and silver foil. Approx. 84 x 6 x 3 inches, $1200. Karl Goertzen (Ottawa Canada), October 7, 1971 - November 12, 2012. 'I Will Make you A Believer', Oil on Canvas, 4 x 5 feet, Collection of La Petite Mort Gallery Archives. Joyce Westrop (Ottawa, Canada), Remnants of an Age, 2008, Tire remnant, plexiglas and wire, 24 x 24.25 x 13.5 inches. (Front View). Gift froom the Artist. Represented by Gallery 3, Ottawa, Canada. Joyce Westrop (Ottawa, Canada), Remnants of an Age, 2008, Tire remnant, plexiglas and wire, 24 x 24.25 x 13.5 inches. (Back View). Gift froom the Artist. Represented by Gallery 3, Ottawa, Canada. Anne Johnson (Ottawa, Canada), set of 5 individual sculptures, Mixed Media, Collection of La Petite Mort Archives. Herman Ruhland (Perth, Canada), 'The Tower Stands No More', Acrylic, Chalk, Nails & Wire on Found Wood, 2011. Private Collection. Rene Price (Ottawa, Canada), 'Jesus 2km', Cross with Found Objects, Mixed Media, 46 x 86 x 4 inches, 1997. Collection of La Petite Mort Gallery Archives. Anonymous Street Sign. Collection of La Petite Mort Gallery Archives. Anonymous Street Sign. Collection of La Petite Mort Gallery Archives. Anonymous Street Sign. Collection of La Petite Mort Gallery Archives. Anonymous Street Sign. Collection of La Petite Mort Gallery Archives. Anonymous Street Sign. Collection of La Petite Mort Gallery Archives. Crazzy Dave (Ottawa, Canada) Street Sign. Collection of La Petite Mort Gallery Archives. Anonymous Street Sign. Collection of La Petite Mort Gallery Archives. Anonymous Street Sign. Collection of La Petite Mort Gallery Archives. Pierre Molinier (April 13, 1900 – March 3, 1976), Agen, France. Color Photograph, 'Self-Portrait with Mannequin' (Agullo Archives #2). Edition 1/25. Acquired in Paris, France. Collection of La Petite Mort Gallery.

February 2015

La Petite Mort Gallery presents

I WILL MAKE YOU A BELIEVER
Curated by Adam Barbu

Work by Joyce Westrop (Represented by Gallery Three, Ottawa, Canada.), Herman Ruhland (Perth, Canada), Karl Goertzen (Ottawa Canada), Anne Johnson (Ottawa, Canada), Pierre Molinier (Bordeaux, France), Theo Pelmus (Romania), Crazzy Dave (Ottawa, Canada) & featuring a selection of Anonymous Street Signs from the Gallery Archives.

February 6 – 28, 2015

Vernissage Friday February 13 / 7 – 10pm

 

Work by Herman Ruhland (Perth, Canada), Karl Goertzen (Ottawa Canada), Anne Johnson (Ottawa, Canada), Pierre Molinier (Bordeaux, France), Theo Pelmus (Romania), Crazzy Dave (Ottawa, Canada) & featuring a selection of Anonymous Street Signs from the Gallery Archives.

I WILL MAKE YOU A BELIEVER marks the second part of a series of exhibitions featuring works and objects from La Petite Mort Gallery’s collections and archives. The exhibition brings together found objects, signs and never before exhibited works that reflect ideas of anonymity, disclosure and the authorization of speech.

Notably, the exhibition presents signs previously used on the street for panhandling. Exhibited in this way, they identify the unsettling potential for words and images to shift when confronted out of context. The question of where this “frame” begins ends allows us to consider the degree to which objects maintain their sense of belonging, and within which contexts they best speak the their truths. Accordingly, the works of Joyce Westrop and Rene Price consider the possibility of an aesthetic engagement with forms and materials from the street. In distinct ways, they ask: What does it mean to hold an ear to the ground? Perhaps it is Herman Ruhland who offers the strongest comment on the impossibility of a politically disengaged, formalist approach to curating in our contemporary social context: “The tower stands no more.”

The example of Pierre Molinier aptly expresses this tension between the named and the unnamed. Having produced a vast body of work throughout his youth and middle age, he would only be discovered and celebrated – as the “other” – very late in life. He is the art historical outsider par-excellence. Yet even with the inclusion of his work, none of the individuals in this exhibition should be thought of as “outsider artists”. Rather, they appear as teachers, standing on the inside looking out. Overall, these works ask us to be critically vigilant to the normative social hierarchies that become invisible in the practice of the writing of history, and of everyday life. They radiate an extreme, raw sense of emotionality and honesty, and it is in this unease we lean closer and learn to better recognize ourselves as disembodied passers-by.

These works tread at the symbolic threshold of communication between strangers, marked by a simultaneous folding, unfolding, opening and collapsing of smudged, inaccessible realties. The phrase “I will make you a believer” performs the wish to both transcend the materiality of the object and to bring the viewer inside, beyond the surface. This is a broken, imperfect wish marked by an inevitable failure to change the conditions of the existing social contract. “I cannot make you believer, but I will try, and fail and try again.” If it is written, listen to the one who is presently speaking.

 – Adam Barbu, 2015

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