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Cinq à Six
with Jeanette Kelly

Art by women in 2012

valerieblass.jpgThere are three conconcurent exhbitions on right now at the Montreal Museum of Contemporary Art: Valerie Blass, Ghada Amer, and Wangechi Mutu.

Three powerful female voices, all dealing with issues of the female body, sexuality, and even pornography.

You might be tempted to call it a feminist exhibtion.

Not so fast.

We invited three other prominent women of the Quebec art world into the Cinq à Six studio, to tackle the question of what is the place of l'art au feminin in 2012.

Lesley Johnstone is a curator at the Montreal Museum of Contemporary Art. She curated the Valerie Blass exhibition.

Bettina Forget is a multimedia artist, blogger, and author of The Belgo Report.

And Line Ouellet is the director of the Musee national des beaux arts in Quebec City

Listen to their conversation: 

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Click here for more information about "In Wonderland: The Surrealist Adventures of Women Artists in Mexico and the United States," an exhibition coming to the Musée national des beaux arts du Quebec June 7 to September 3, 2012.

(Photo: Artwork by Valerie Blass, photo courtesy of Montreal Museum of Fine Arts)


Wesli Louissaint takes on the culture quiz

wesli 003.jpgWesli Louissaint is one of this year's laureats for Black History Month.

February is Black History Month.

He was also winner of the 2009/2010 Radio-Canada Musique prize for "Revelation of the Year" and Canadian Folk Music Award nominee for "Best Solo World Music Album".

Wesli Louissaint "flexes his muscles" to take our Cinq à Six Culture Quiz.

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Should we have more World Heritage sites in Quebec?

christinacameron.jpgOld Quebec and Miguasha National Park are the two World Heritage sites in Quebec.  

World Heritage sites are designated by UNESCO. They are places that are given special protection to preserve their natural or cultural attributes.

This year is the 40th anniversary of the World Heritage Convention -- the organization that makes that list.

So how well is it working? Are there other areas in this province that should be added to the list?

Christina Cameron is a Professor in the School of Architecture at the University of Montreal. She is the Canada Research Chair on Built Heritage, and the vice president of the Canadian Commission for UNESCO. She's also working on a book about the origins of the heritage convention.

Listen to Jeanette's conversation with Christina Cameron:  

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Can Quebec learn from Soviet-era architecture?

Originally from Kirkland, Jason Tsironis is a graduate of the School of Architecture at McGill. He's presently working in London at the firm Caruso St John.

Tsironis has just been awarded the Canada Council Prix de Rome for emerging architects.

He will be studying the evolution of Soviet architecture, and he says his work will also apply to Quebec and Canada, when it comes to finding new uses for empty churches. 

(Note: If you cannot view the photo gallery on your browser, you can also view photos for this story on our Facebook page. Photos by Richard Paré and Frederic Chaubin.)

Listen to his conversation with Jeanette.

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Uprooted/Déraciné

UPROOTED from Isabelle Hayeur on Vimeo.


The Institut de la statistique du Québec came out with some new statistics this week.

For the sixth year in a row, the city of Montreal is losing population -- more than 22-thousand people in 2010/2011. 

Overwhelmingly, people are moving to the suburbs -- the South shore, the North shore, and the Laurentians. 

Filmmaker Isabelle Hayeur would like all those people who are fleeing the city to think a little more carefully about who and what they may be displacing when they move out of the city. 

She recently released a video called Uprooted (Déraciné) that documents the transformation of the landscape as suburban developers push ever further into rural areas.

Listen to her conversation with Jeanette:  

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Wangechi Mutu at the Montreal Museum of Contemporary Art

mothgirls2.jpgNairobi-born sculptor and collage artist Wangechi Mutu is one of three women artists featured in a new show at the Montreal Museum of Contemporary Art.

The museum has just purchased a major piece by the artist, called Moth Girls.

In this Cinq à Six Web Exclusive, Jeanette speaks with curator Josée Belisle about Wangechi Mutu and her work.

(Photo: Montreal Museum of Contemporary Art)

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I am Leah, I am LilyBear

week of jan 28 006.jpgMeet Leah Delisle.

Most of the time, she's Leah-- a young woman with curly red hair, someone who dresses modestly, and teaches kindergarten at a French school.

But for around 25 hours a week, she's LilyBear--  a buxom redhead who scales the buildings of ancient cities and works as an assasin.

Leah has competed in international-level videogame competitions, she playtests games for Ubisoft, and and she works for a team of female gamers.

All this... and Leah is completely deaf.

(Photos: Top left, Jeanette interviewing Leah at her house, bottom left, Leah recreating a scene from Assasin's Creed during a recent visit to Jerusalem.)

leah2.JPG 

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"Art-house" arcade

If you are old enough, you might remember going to an arcade to play video games.

But then consoles like Sega and Nintendo turned gaming into something most people do at home, often alone.

saleem.jpgThe Mount Royal Games Society and Concordia's TAG research center are aiming to get gamers out of their dark basements and back in public space.

They're planning a public arcade

And at this arcade, gamers and non-gamers alike will have a chance to discover something other than what the multi-million dollar gaming companies are offering.

Saleem Dabbous describes it as a sort of "art-house" game culture, where independent game makers push the boundaries of the sensations and emotions that can be experienced while playing a video game.

Listen to Jeanette's conversation with Saleem.  

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Super Mario at a Rave!

XC3N-8static.jpgChiptune music is a fairly new and underground genre of music that uses sounds from old-school video game consoles.

Francis Rodrig is the founder of a Chiptune collective here in Montreal called Toy Company.

He's planning a two-day Chiptune festival in Montreal on February 10 & 11, 2012.

Listen to some of his music (not copyrighted) and hear his conversation with Jeanette:

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The next step for the Olympic Park

lise bissonnette.jpgA commission has been looking into the future of the Olympic Park area in Montreal.

Before Christmas, they were hearing from members of the public.

We were also brainstorming here on Cinq à Six. Click here to listen to our panel "Reimagining the Olympic Park".

Now, the commission has issued its first report. (Available on the Website, in French.)

Listen to Jeanette's interview with Lise Bissonnette, the President of the Advisory Committee on the future of the Olympic Park. 

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