Affichage de 3 résultats

Notice d'autorité
General Idea
GI1 · Personne · 1969-1994

The artist collective General Idea was formed in Toronto in 1969 by three Canadian artists known as Jorge Zontal, Feliz Partz, and AA Bronson, pseudonyms they adopted to better reflect their identities within the group. What began as an artistic collaboration between friends, lasted for 25 years until the death of two members in 1994.

Jorge Zontal, originally named Slobodan Zaia-Levy, was born in a concentration camp in Parma, Italy, on January 28, 1944. After the end of the Second World War, Zontal and his mother reunited with his father, who was sent from Italy to Auschwitz. The family immigrated to Venezuela when Zontal was eight years old. In the 1960s, Zontal went to study architecture at Dalhousie University in Halifax, graduating in 1968. He also studied video at Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, where he met Bronson, who was then teaching a workshop. A visit to Toronto made him move there permanently.

Felix Partz, born Ronald Gabe, was born on April 23, 1944, in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Partz studied Fine Arts at the University of Manitoba in the mid-1960s. He traveled to Toronto in the summer of 1969 to visit his friend at Rochdale College, when he decided to remain in the city.

AA Bronson, born Michael Tims, was born on June 16, 1946, in Vancouver. In 1964, he enrolled in architecture studies at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg. Three years later, Bronson abandoned his studies to participate in building an alternative community that also produced the newspaper The Loving Couch Press, where he became a contributing editor. In 1969, Bronson settled at Rochdale College in Toronto.

The same year, the three artists met at Theatre Passe Muraille in Toronto. Shortly after that, Bronson, Zontal, and Partz founded the artist collective General Idea.

During the group’s artistic career, they produced a wide variety of media-based artworks and installations commenting on popular culture, mass media, consumption, social inequalities, the AIDS crisis, and queer identity, among other topics. In 1971, General Idea created the fictional narrative Miss General Idea Pageant, satirizing glamour and commenting on beauty, fame, and the commercial process of the art world. In 1984, the group created The 1984 Miss General Idea Pavillion, a bigger-scale event based on the Miss General Idea narrative from 1971, which included a series of architectural proposals for the installation of a pavilion. In 1972, they published the first issue of FILE Megazine, a publication that aimed to promote other artists’ works as well as General Idea’s major projects. The group released 26 issues, the last one was published in 1989. In 1986, General Idea produced a painting for an exhibition in support of the American Foundation for AIDS Research, featuring the word AIDS in the style of Robert Indiana’s 1966 work LOVE, which was highly popular and appeared in a wide variety of formats such as keychains, napkins, postage stamps, etc. General Idea’s intention in creating the AIDS painting in the same style as LOVE was for it to spread like a virus and raise awareness of the AIDS crisis. The AIDS painting was later produced on a variety of different media, including sculpture, posters, wallpapers, and rings, and was used as a logo for AIDS campaigns in several cities such as New York, Berlin, and Toronto, and AIDS awareness became a central subject of the group’s work.

General Idea’s innovative conceptual approach to art-making gave them widespread recognition, participating in 149 group exhibitions and 123 solo exhibitions around the world.

General Idea remained active until the deaths of Jorge Zontal and Felix Partz on February 3, and June 5, 1994, respectively, from AIDS-related causes.

Thouin, Guy
GT2 · Personne · 1940-

Guy Thouin est un musicien et artiste né le 10 avril 1940 à Montréal. Il a étudié la percussion avec un professeur privé de 1959 à 1960 et, au début des années 1960, a commencé à jouer de la batterie dans les bars de Montréal. Diplômé de l'École d'Optique du Québec en 1964, il a travaillé comme opticien pendant un an avant d'entreprendre des études en arts à l'École des Beaux-arts de Montréal. De 1969 à 1970, Thouin a étudié percussion classique à l'Université McGill sous la direction de Pierre Béluse. De 1971 à 1976, il a étudié de la musique indienne à Pondichéry et à Calcutta, en Inde, en se spécialisant dans le tabla.

En 1967, Guy Thouin, avec Yves Charbonneau, Jean Préfontaine et Maurice C. Richard, devient l'un des membres fondateurs du Quatuor de jazz libre du Québec, connu originalement sous le nom de Quatuor du nouveau jazz libre du Québec. Le groupe se produit dans plusieurs bars de Montréal, collèges et universités du Québec, jusqu'à sa dissolution en 1974. En 1969, Thouin se joint également à L'Infonie, un groupe d'avant-garde où il joue avec Walter Boudreau et Raôul Duguay jusqu'en 1971, année où Thouin décide de quitter les deux groupes pour aller étudier la musique en Inde. De retour à Montréal en 1976, Thouin se réintègre à la scène de jazz montréalaise et collabore avec plusieurs artistes et musiciens, comme le groupe Mirage, qui a été finaliste du Festival de jazz de Montréal en 1985. En 1989, il fonde le Heart Ensemble, un quintette avec des musiciens invités qui interprète les compositions de Guy Thouin pendant plus de 20 ans dans des centres culturels et des bars de Montréal, d'Ottawa, de Joliette et d’autres villes du Québec. Plusieurs de ces prestations ont été enregistrées et diffusées par la Société Radio-Canada (SRC). En 2012, avec Bryan Highbloom, Thouin a fondé le Nouveau Jazz Libre du Québec, donnant plusieurs concerts, dont un au Festival Suoni Pel II Popolo.

Thouin a composé Rien ô tout ou linéaire un, une expérience sonore immersive, alors qu' il étudiait à l'Université McGill. Cet environnement sonore a été créé pour une œuvre de l'artiste visuel Roland Poulin et a été exposé en 1971 au Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal. Depuis 2015, Guy Thouin continue de composer et de jouer, avec Félix-Antoine Hamel, dans une nouvelle version du Heart Ensemble appelée From the Basement, qui invite des musiciens à jouer avec eux dans leur sous-sol, et à explorer différentes avenues du mouvement " free jazz ".

Participation Quebec
PQ1 · Collectivité · 1976-1982

Participation Quebec was founded in November 1976. It was a non-profit public interest organization dedicated to bringing together the anglophone and francophone communities in Quebec. Participation Quebec was non-partisan and was not affiliated with any other organizations until its eventual merger with Alliance Quebec. The organization was incorporated under the laws of Quebec and was registered as a charity for tax purposes. In 1978, the members of its executive were Michael Prupas (President), David Steward (Treasurer) and François Goulet (Executive Director). At that time, the organization had approximately 200 members.

According to Participation Quebec, it's goals were: "to have a positive influence on the policies of education and governmental institutions which promote the isolation of cultural groups within Quebec, or which are prejudicial to the building of a Quebec for all Quebecers" and "to improve the relations between the French and non-French speaking communities in Montreal." Throughout its years of Operation, Participation Quebec hosted symposiums, formed committees, sponsored meetings with government officials, prepared and tabled briefs, held press conferences, and organized speaker series, among other activities.

In May 1982, Participation Quebec and other anglophone rights organizations, including the Positive Action Committee, merged with Alliance Québec.