Play Recent

Paradise Now

L Con with Miel and Tenses, Marché des Possibles, 24 August 2024

Miel performs at Marché des Possibles, 24 August 2024. Photographed for NicheMTL.

In Paradise Now, the Oscar-nominated 2005 Palestinian film directed by Hany Abu-Assad, two lifelong friends, Said and Khaled, are recruited to carry out a suicide bombing mission in Tel Aviv.

At the time, the film was criticized for humanizing terrorism, potentially eliciting sympathy for radical acts of religious and political extremism, and concurrently praised for realistically characterizing the circumstances that lead to such desperate ends.

In the film, Jamal, the operation’s mastermind who represents a nameless guerrilla organization, convinces Said by telling him that a man who is unafraid of death is in true control of his life. Though the pair require little convincing, believing that martyrdom will imbue their ostensibly meaningless existence with a sense of higher purpose, this is the twisted logic that seals the deal.

19 years ago, when the film made its North American premiere at the Telluride Film Festival, the United States was still reeling from the September 11th attacks. Acts of terror were considered rare and isolated incidents. Today, we in the West are living under a climate of ambient terror in which the threat of localized destruction is low, but the mediation of war is ever-present.

The realities of combat — and the carnal horrors of violent death — are things that happen elsewhere, but never too far, dematerialized and yet ubiquitous. Their impressions upon us are both visceral and virtual. We cannot help but be traumatized and anaesthetized at once.

Luke Painter, Moving Images, Patel Brown, 29 August – 5 October 2024

Luke Painter gallery view at Patel Brown. Photographed for NicheMTL.

Following 9/11, the footage of the airplane striking the second tower played and replayed on an apparently endless loop via 24-hour news channels, producing what I call the “consensus image.” This establishing master shot became something like a brand, or better yet, a logo, immediately recognizable, transmissible, consumable.

Even eyewitnesses who were present that day in Manhattan described what they saw as like a scene from a disaster movie. The event itself was somehow less real than its replication, its proliferation, like the sting of a stubbed toe that’s only painful when the brain finally receives and decodes the message.

‘Ah yes, this is supposed to hurt,’ our nerves inform us, well after the initial shock of impact. This temporal interval is what creates the sensation of progression.

Cinema was composed of a series of still images that flickered like a flip book to life in real-time. Television is composed of a series of moving pictures, dancing electronic images that in their simultaneity and overabundance produce the impression of stasis.

Panorama: I’m Feeling Lucky, Timothy Thomasson & Tatum Wilson, SAT, 27 August 2024

In Slavoj Žižek’s extended 2002 essay on the September 11th attacks, entitled Welcome to the Desert of the Real, he predicts, alarmingly accurately in retrospect, what 21st Century warfare would come to look like.

“We are entering a new era of paranoiac warfare,” Žižek writes, “in which the greatest task will be to identify the enemy and his weapons. In this new warfare, the agents assume their acts less and less publicly … forming an ideal breeding-ground for conspiracy theories and generalized social paranoia.”

Jean-François Lauda, Eli Kerr, Vernissage, 13 September 2024

Jean-François Lauda gallery view at Eli Kerr. Photographed for NicheMTL.

The horse is prepared against the day of battle: but safety is of the Lord. —Proverbs 21:31

“Now what’s going to happen to us without barbarians? Those people were a kind of solution.” —C.P. Cavafy

The purpose of war in every century previous to our own seemed to be a paradoxical one: to prevent an even worse conflict.

The Second World War, for example, was justified to put a halt to the Holocaust and Hitler’s ruthless expansion into Eastern Europe. The Cold War was viewed as a deterrent to a larger and possibly nuclear war — surely a far harsher fate. As the old ideological axiom went, to secure peace, we must prepare for war.

However, war in the 21st Century appears to have only one goal: to perpetuate conflict, while guaranteeing its manageability at a purely bureaucratic level.

Just keep the temperature up while ensuring the water never boils out of the pot. As long as the explosions continue on the accepted field of battle — i.e. Ukraine, Gaza — war poses no problems and indeed yields dividends to the political and capital powers that reign today.

Particularly in the U.S., it won’t matter whether Donald Trump or Kamala Harris wins the presidency. Either one would benefit from a permanent state of war abroad.

The battles that rage now are designed not to end. Otherwise, they never would have begun.

Yves Charuest, out into, Interzone Editions (2024)

“In the history of art, late works are the catastrophes.” —Theodor Adorno

As he approached his final years, David Bowie’s compositions became evermore chaotic, wilder, influenced increasingly by disrupters and experimenters.

Bowie was always known as something of a vampire, feeding off and making palatable the avant-garde zeitgeist. In the late 1960s it was Syd Barrett and Marc Bolan. In the late 1990s it was Goldie and Trent Reznor.

However, in 2002, Bowie released arguably his most confounding album, Heathen. Superficially, the record sounded like an artist shifting into a more adult contemporary phase, adopting the vernacular of acolytes like Dave Grohl and The Pixies, whom he covered on the recording. But beneath the surface, it was apparent that Bowie was wrestling with something more profound, spiritual, and in doing so, discovering his own original voice, perhaps for the first time.

On his ultimate album, entitled Blackstar, Bowie consciously conjures the mythical archetype of Beethoven in late life — deaf, isolated, insane — abandoning any airs of pleasant or acceptable pop music.

The Palestinian-American philosopher Edward Said wrote in his 2006 book On Late Style: “Beethoven’s immobilized and socially resistant final works are at the core of what is new in modern music of our own time.”

Bowie’s final works are at the heart of what is postmodern in ours.◼︎

Thank you for inviting NicheMTL to your thing. Please get in touch at the about page.

NicheMTL is Montreal’s independent not-for-profit source for this city’s most niche arts and culture. If you love what you’re reading, please consider subscribing.

Cover image: Michael Dumontier & Neil Farber, Animal Shapes (2021) Acrylic and ink on MDF, 24 x 24 in. Patel Brown. Photographed for NicheMTL.

Standard
Play Recent

Ignoring van Gogh

Heith with Orchestroll and Audréanne Fillion, Espace SAT, 12 July 2024

Orchestroll perform at SAT, 12 July 2024. Photographed for NicheMTL.

I know a lot of people who want to quit doing the things that they know are bad for them. Smoking, drinking, eating crap food, taking drugs, toxic relationships — these kinds of things.

For some reason, many of these people come to me as if I have answers for them. Maybe it’s because I have stopped doing all of these things myself, and they believe that I can magically ladle them out of that thick soup of addiction.

Sorry, I can’t. Nobody can.

These people think that there is some light that will switch on, or off, when someone like me shows them the secret, or some useful doctor prescribes the right antidote, or recommends replacing one compulsion with another. They try to change their friends, or their work, or move house. They think that by rearranging everything around them, something inside them will be altered, too.

People ask me if I feel better now.

No. But I feel. My sense of feeling has improved, both pleasure and pain, happiness and sorrow.

So yes, I suppose that technically speaking, I do feel better now. And yet I still don’t know how to feel.

Learning to feel again is the opposite of riding a bike. Once you learn, you immediately forget. It’s like being a goldfish, swimming forever around the castle in the feelings fishbowl.

There is no sage advice, no magic formula. The sole equation that exists, which is rather quotidian, is Life + Time = X.

The only advice I can offer for people who want to stop, for instance, smoking, is just to stop smoking. Stop putting combustible sticks in your mouth and lighting them. And keep stopping doing that. Stop lighting combustible sticks in your mouth until you don’t feel like lighting combustible sticks in your mouth anymore.

And even after that, keep stopping. Never go back. Just stop for good.

The worst thing anyone can do who wants to stop doing something is to start doing that thing again. You cannot reward yourself for an extended period of abstinence with short bursts of indulgence.

If there is one weird trick to quitting anything, it’s to learn to enjoy not wanting, say, cigarettes, or alcohol, or smack, or your crazy ex, or whatever it is that you so badly want. Learn to love unconsummated longing, and suddenly, you will find fulfillment in absolutely everything. And nothing.

The less you need to satisfy yourself, the freer you will feel.

What then? Then you die. Full-stop.

Music & Nature, Private home of Nabil Fawaz, 13 July 2024

Yuki Isami and Nabil Fawaz perform impromptu at Mr. Fawaz’s private residence, 13 July 2024. Photographed for NicheMTL.

Among the first films ever made is a short by the Lumière brothers called “Feeding the Baby.”

It depicts in documentary form precisely that: Auguste Lumière and his wife, Marguerite, feeding their infant daughter, Andrée.

Still, the subtext of this film is noteworthy. Cinema feeds its audiences the images that form our consensus.

There is a reason why our timelines are called “feeds” — and the text at the bottom of a newscast is coined “the crawl.”

A Nearly Tangible Fiction, Patel Brown, Until 17 August 2024

Malik McKoy, when can we start using emojis as titles?, 2023, acrylic and yarn on canvas. Photographed for NicheMTL.

A fundamental difference exists between galleries and museums.

Generally, curators run art galleries with a passion for art. Galleries have to make money, too, because operating a gallery is labour, like any other kind of labour. And labourers deserve to be paid. Art labourers work hard finding art.

Art museums, on the other hand, are far more monetarily concerned. We mistakenly believe that curators run art museums, too. This is false.

Art museums are run by PR and marketing teams who work two days a week and meet over Zoom, or Zoom over Teams. Art museums are run by risk management departments and accountants who devise and revise ever-shrinking budgets on ever-expanding Excel spreadsheets. Players more than workers run museums.

If ever there was an artist as original and talented today as a van Gogh, even if he or she or they crawled into the museum bloodied and overdosing and earless, the players who run them would never take notice.

They’d be too busy counting Instagram followers like sheep and unconsciously refreshing their newsfeeds, looking everywhere except in front of their faces for the next big thing.

Museums are where great art gets lost. Art galleries are where great art is found.

Vagabond Shoes, McBride Contemporain, Until 17 August 2024

Eun-Ha Paek, Mongmong Lassies Double, 2024, Glazed stoneware with luster, 16.5 x 21.6 x 8.3 cm. McBride Contemporain.

We are taught to forgive those who trespass against us, for they know not what they do. Most people, when they do us harm, feel a sense of remorse. So, it’s easy to forgive. If someone apologizes for their trespasses, it inclines exoneration.

But what happens when people who trespass against us aren’t sorry, when they don’t feel a sense of remorse, when they know precisely what they do?

There’s less teaching for that.

Jessica Moss with Radwan Ghazi Moumneh and Frédéric D. Oberland, Hotel2Tango, 20 July 2024

Jessica Moss performs at Hotel2Tango, 20 July 2024. Photographed for NicheMTL.

I do set my bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a token of a covenant between me and the earth. And it shall come to pass, when I bring cloud over the earth, that the bow shall be seen in the cloud: And I will remember my covenant, which is between me and you and every living creature of all flesh; and the waters shall no more become a flood to destroy all flesh. —Genesis 9:13-15

There are no coincidences.

Not because everything happens for a reason. But rather, because we alone manufacture the often-arcane meanings we ascribe to concurrent or successive events.

These meanings are only meaningful insofar as they are collectively felt, or whether we are capable of communicating and convincing others of their circumstantial, synchronous significance.

Take, for example, the full-horizon double rainbow that occurred over the Van Horne underpass about an hour before Radwan Ghazi Moumneh, Frédéric D. Oberland, and Jessica Moss were set to perform at Hotel2Tango.

There is nothing inherently meaningful in a deluge of summer rain and the natural prismatic phenomenon that occurs just afterwards. There is no symbolic significance to rainbows taking place before a gig — or for that matter at any given time. There is only scientific significance to light refracting through water.

Nonetheless, it was a coincidence. Know what I mean?◼︎

Thank you for inviting NicheMTL to your thing. Please get in touch at the about page.

NicheMTL is Montreal’s independent not-for-profit source for this city’s most niche arts and culture. If you love what you’re reading, please consider subscribing.

Standard
Play Recent

What, Me Worry?

Lung, Adrianne Munden-Dixon, Lung (Self-released / Bandcamp)

My 16th birthday was spent unlike most kids’ 16th birthdays. That is, I hope it was, anyway.

I hope to God that most people on their sweet sixteenth don’t take massive doses of LSD and devote the night with friends to watching David Cronenberg’s Naked Lunch, listening to Cabaret Voltaire 45’s on 33RPM, and laughing uncontrollably at pretty much everything.

It was a more innocent time back then — 1993, to be exact — and there was much less in the world to be truly worried about. The Soviet Union had recently dissolved; Ukraine was an independent nation again. There was no real internet to speak of. There were no cell phones, no social media.

U.S. President Bill Clinton hadn’t yet stained any blue dresses. O.J. Simpson was still a former running back and a second-rate actor. Donald Trump was just an embittered blowhard billionaire. Ok, maybe some things don’t change.

Nonetheless, in 1993, we were merely a bunch of wacky suburban youths experimenting with our own brain chemistry. No big deal.

Among the things that had us in stitches that night was one of Matt Groening’s pre-Simpsons-era Life in Hell comic books, which we leafed through at the peak of our collective trip. The drawing in question was a rendering of a phony magazine cover with outrageously absurd headlines — flatly stupid articles that Groening must have considered that no one would write, much less want to read.

I remember the headline that floored us that particular night was, “Thinking about string.” I recall that we laughed so hard that our faces hurt, and our sides were sore. We were literally bursting. I had never before found anything as funny as the idea of thinking about string. The ridiculousness, the preposterousness of it. What about string was there to really think about, we thought?

But then, we really thought about string. And the more we thought about it, the more we realized that there was actually lots about string to think about. Rather deeply, in fact. String contained multitudes of fascination and mystery and enigmatic attraction.

We held no notions in 1993 of theoretical physics, or Schrödinger’s cat, or probability — probably. And yet, in that moment, we did. String suddenly pulled into sharp focus the alpha and the omega, the be-all and the end-all of the entire universe.

The acid wore off long ago, thankfully. But I’m not sure if I have ever completely stopped thinking about string. To this day, my mind unravels like a ball of yarn at its mere mention.

Jeremy Shaw, Phase Shifting Index, Fonderie Darling

Was the entirety of the Darling Foundry carpeted for Jeremy Shaw’s stunning video installation just so that audiences, if necessary, could cut a rug?

Rafael Payare and Bruckner’s Fourth Symphony, Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal, 29 February 2024

The Canadian composer Zosha Di Castri’s In the half-light, which serves as the opening act for the OSM, is apropos for the moment. We are only half-awake. We are only half-aware. Half of us are always sleeping, and half of us don’t even know it.

It seems as if the world is split in half. As many advancements as we have made, we have also lost ground, spinning our wheels, making no progress. The last thing the world wanted was another war, and now we have two.

We could stay in the half-light forever. Or we could break through this wall of darkness. In God, there is no darkness at all.

Adrian Norvid, Best Friends For Never, with Marcela Szwarc, McBride Contemporain

On the surface, it might seem difficult to draw any link between the works of Adrian Norvid and his partner, the painter Janet Werner. Werner’s art renders solemn depictions of juxtaposed fashion photography, whereas Norvid’s is more pedestrian, cartoonish, and jokey. Werner’s paintings are exclusively visual, whereas Norvid frequently incorporates text, puns, and plays on words. Werner’s art is collected in the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, whereas Norvid’s is more at home in edgier collections like the Montreal Museum of Contemporary Art.

But dive a little deeper and we see that the two intersect at Al Jaffee, the American illustrator who for over half a decade skewered pop culture in Mad Magazine. Norvid’s technique unmistakably echoes Jaffee’s own — sitting somewhere amongst Heavy Metal and Robert Crumb, with a wry gothic wit. And Werner’s works, to me, have always recalled the magazine’s back pages, the iconic Jaffee-innovated fold-in that reveals another message when the page is creased in on itself.

Here we go with another ridiculous theory.

Shary Boyle, Vesselling, Patel Brown, until 20 April 2024

“Put all your love into everything you do,” instructs Shary Boyle at her artist’s talk on March 2nd at Patel Brown in the Belgo Building.

A large group is assembled to listen to Boyle speak about a collection of new and, even though they appear highly accomplished, apparently experimental works that encompass multimedia paintings, drawing on paper, and fired ceramics — works that are at once tactile and untouchable, fantastical and real, beautiful and terrifying.

Boyle says a number of insightful things during her lecture. She doesn’t believe in evil or purity, but she does believe in fury and insistence. To be sure, there is much right now to be furious about, and even more upon which to insist.

I worry in the future that certain cultures — what we call “delicate ecosystems” — will simply die out. Ukrainian, and Palestinian, and perhaps even Quebecois culture in 100 years will be subsumed by their bigger, louder, and more violent neighbours. When generations to come look back to piece together what happened, they will look to these culture’s artworks to make sense of our hopes and fears, morals and values, and ultimately, what went wrong.

Unlike Boyle, I do believe in both evil and purity — the purity of stupidity. As Margaret Atwood once said, “Stupidity is the same as evil if you judge by the results.”◼︎

Cover image: Shary Boyle‘s Grafters series.

Standard