Biennale Nationale de Sculpture, June 26th – September 11th, 2020, Opening: June 26th, 2020

at Art Mur Gallery, March 7th – April 11th, 2020, Opening: March 7th, 2020, 15h – 18h
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Patrick Bérubé’s work focuses on the contradictory relationships (affective, ideological, psychic and carnal) that humans have with themselves and their environment. In these troubled and highly uncertain times, the exhibition deals more precisely with the disjunctions that occur between the real world, its direct perception and mediation, between the palpable and the impalpable, between interiority and exteriority. Starting from the fact that technology and the flow of images (digital, media and  branded) shape our imaginations and absorb our relationship to nature, space and time, Bérubé questions the tenuous space  dedicated to the emergence of a self-awareness that is situated, free and autonomous – in an era that, paradoxically, praises  individuality.

Although the title En Parallèle… (In Parallel…) underlies the idea of a second universe, the exhibition deals more with the elusive nature of the world, knowing that the visible necessarily includes a hidden double. For beyond the instability of representations, Bérubé is more globally interested in the fact that the limits of our sensory faculties do not allow us to empirically grasp most of the laws governing the universe. Moreover, his work underlines the persistence of the great metaphysical questionings linked to the origin of the Cosmos and the finiteness of life. Existential questions that have always encouraged human communities to invent strange stories, often populated by spectral figures, to  respond to the dizzying incommensurability of the immeasurable.

Conceived with inspiration from Pac-Man’s labyrinth, the exhibition’s scenography refers to the structures and control systems, both physical and immaterial, that govern our lives and from which it is sometimes difficult, if not impossible, to find a way out. Bérubé’s hybrid visual program borrows as much from popular culture as it does from scientific and media imagery. Pie charts used for statistical purposes are set alongside TicTac branded almonds and the doctored covers of TIME (Today Information Means Everything) magazine, showing a post apocalyptic landscape (where the title, once overturned, becomes EMIT). All this cohabits in an installation setting that is both baroque (for its overload and dramatic effects) and minimalist (for its sleek aesthetic).

As in the artist’s previous proposals, the exhibition is constructed,  like so many hyperlinks, by embedding ideas and forms which, once duplicated and altered, become confused and echo each other simultaneously. Several levels of reading thus make up the narrative canvas of the exhibition in which notions of deadlock, powerlessness, vulnerability, desires and power are intertwined,  like so many feelings that permeate our contemporary lives, captured by the system of globalization and hypercapitalism.

Text by Ariane Deblois
Translated by Noémie Chevalier

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November 8th – November 24th, 2019 – at Fondation Grantham – Opening : November 8th

At Art Mur Gallery, March 3th – April 28th, 2018, Opening : March 3th, 15h – 17h
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Mass production is considered to be the second iteration of industrial revolution. It is the link between production and commerce where intentions beyond capital are not clearly defined. It has led to the ability to manufacture anything, at any scale. The ACME corporation comically developed weapons, imposing the might of the arms industry on children. The name ACME denotes the Greek expletive “ἀκμή” – an utterance that can be extrapolated to most extreme point of something. It alludes to the extent that things can go, when it rains it pours. And no matter how bad you think things are they can always be worse. The potentiality of horror is constantly on the horizon. Ultimately it is the death of the sun, the solar catastrophe. Today we find it in the simultaneously accelerated and decelerated frenetics of the everyday, the mandatory entrepreneurialism and lexapro/modafinal-induced cognitive inertia of every moment.
Patrick Berubé takes these absolutes and their discontents into careful consideration in Autrement Dit…. In a time when infinite iterations of realities exist, truth is a baroque abstraction. Our interpretation of the world is a series of dramaturgy, one act after the next. Berubé conveys this in his installation through exposing the viewer only to certain aspects of the work at certain time, it can never be viewed all at once. The setting is the place of concentrated anxiety, the meditative zone of contemplation where we’re constantly alone together, intensified through 21st Century non-time that impairs our ability to tell one scene from another.

The ubiquitous obsession of desire, compulsory strategising, scrum managerialism, downer haze, self-image and networked faith of the commons tragically contribute to the decimation of creative thinking – all this is dramatised to absurdity in this installation. Berubé distills Spinoza’s declaration that there is no such thing as free will. The more free we appear to be, the more entrenched in suppression we actually are. There is a rational buddhist reflection in this installation – that the pursuit of what the past should have been and the dwelling on what the future should be a artificially imposed precariousness that are laughable once you apply logic. The drives are the ultimate curse of our existence, and you’ll spend your fleeting moment wrestling with them.

So take your kids to daycare, go to the waiting room, go to the gym, go back to your all-purpose desk, all the time subdued by the low-level anxiety that you aren’t reaching every target, everywhere all the time. In this installation you will find a manifestation of the pathetic attempt to escape death, the one thing we are actually all driven towards. As you stare at yourself in the mirror at the gym there is diametric opposition of peace and self-disdain that causes you to question the symmetry of your face, flushed and slightly aroused. The endorphins and adrenaline give you a sense that you are, in this 12-month subscription room, in total control of your being. You can attain your geometric figure of pure beauty. If only you could see the joke. To quote one of the great thinkers of our time “True luxury is the absence of all desire.”

Text by Terence Sharpe

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Date : November 16th – December 13th, 2017
Location : Berlin (DE)
Collective Exhibition

Date : November 16th – December 13th, 2017
Location : Bermondsey Project Space, Londres (UK)
Collective Exhibition

Date : November 2nd – December 16th, 2017
Location : Centre d’art Jacques-et-Michel-Auger, Victoriaville (QC)
Collective Exhibition

Date : November 15th, 2017 – January 5th, 2018
Location : Ubisoft, Montréal (QC)
Solo Exhibition

Event : Art Souterrain Festival
Location : Montréal (QC)

Date : June 17th – July 29th, 2017
Location : galerie Art-Mûr, Leipzig, Germany