Close
Jean-Philippe Deneault

A Promising Debut for Annie Bérubé and Her Dreamlike Paintings

In November 2019, the University of Saskatchewan’s Gordon Snelgrove Gallery exhibited Annie Bérubé’s series Mother, six large canvases with a dreamlike, retro-futurist aesthetic that were produced in the months preceding and following the death of her mother. The Quebec artist has been living in Saskatoon for eight years and is a member of the Fransaskois artists’ collective Sans-atelier.

While the works in the Mother series fulfilled the requirements for a Bachelor’s degree in Fine Arts, Bérubé has not always been part of the arts community. Before taking up her studies, she was a project director in the manufacture of air filtering systems for generators and turbines in offshore production platforms, and a drafter and designer of heavy equipment. A complete mastery of 3D drawing techniques and an advanced knowledge of mechanical technology both inform her artistic practice, with striking results.

From industrial design to painting

While still employed by a multinational energy producer, Bérubé made frequent trips to Europe, South America and Asia. She was beginning to feel exhausted professionally and impelled by a longstanding desire to launch an artistic career. The time had come for the artist, then in her forties, to make the leap.

“I chose painting because it is the medium I find the most difficult,“ Bérubé explained. “Learning to put emotions on canvas was hard compared to making meaningless, mechanical images. I was at a point of no return, and I had to create images in places replete with meaning.”

The piece that was hung at the gallery’s entrance, next to the artist’s statement and the show’s title, features a drilling rig suspended against a backdrop of desert hues. The yellowish sky recalls that in the shot of the Tyrell Corporation’s headquarters in the film Blade Runner from 1982. Visitors immediately understand that they are being invited to follow a dense, immersive visual trajectory in which light and sound play an essential role. Bérubé put together a sound track for the occasion from recordings of colliding underwater structures.

“This platform looks to me like my mother did – strong, straight and unbending,” Bérubé commented. “I just had to let the straight lines run. At that point, I told myself that chances were that I might not see her again, perhaps not ever. The sound of the metal surfaces scraping together underwater symbolizes her stifled cries, as she was by then very ill.”

Painting as a platform for the emotions

Industrial platforms reappear in several of the paintings, one of them in more than 10 versions.  This coincided with receiving the news that her mother’s illness was terminal. “I was determined to transmit the idea that feelings are by their nature ephemeral, that they change as much as they fade,” she remarked.

Bérubé also makes use of in situ objects that she positions among the paintings, such as a white barrier of the kind found on construction and industrial sites. For her, the barrier represents the hurdles set up by the medical and health system as well as by physical distance.

“I started to work in a much cruder fashion, using spray paint. By contrast, from a natural standpoint, the evergreens that appear in other paintings symbolize what remains, the distance between us,” she explained.

Bérubé also employs a nightgown hanging on a clothesline to represent the loss of her mother. It harks back to scenes in some of the other paintings of colourful clothing drying outdoors at the mercy of the elements, and provides a transition to clotheslines in the back alleys of Montreal, where Bérubé grew up. One painting pays tribute to balconnage, the practice among housewives in Montreal’s downtown and working-class districts to trade gossip from balcony to balcony in the 1920s and 1930s.

“It reminds me of when we lived at De Lorimier Avenue and Rachel, in the heart of Montreal, in a middle-class neighbourhood. I remember the butcher shop next door, life in the district, and the apartment where my mother grew up a few streets over from our house,” she recounts.

Beyond painting

The exhibition ends with a painting in darker tones evoking the work of US artist Ross Bleckner. We see an army of drones like dragonflies emerging from darkness in a beam of light. “The drone painting speaks of the beyond. Whether you choose to believe it or not, since my mother’s departure I have a feeling that she sees me, she’s watching me... In the end, it could just be my way of telling my mother, ‘I know you‘re watching me,’ like an inside joke between the two of us.”

Surveillance and robotics are powerful contemporary themes that Bérubé intends to take even further. On the level of form, the influence of such artists as Manitoba’s Alison Norlen and Belgium’s comic book illustrator François Shuiten endorse her paintings’ technical quality. The amount of time the many Saskatoon visitors devoted to each canvas confirms that Annie Bérubé’s future as an artist is a promising one.


English translation by S.E. Stewart

Print
27359

Jean-Philippe DeneaultJean-Philippe Deneault

Other posts by Jean-Philippe Deneault
Contact author

Contact author

x
Conseil économique et coopératif de la Saskatchewan

Le CCS sur Facebook

Nouvelles du CÉCS

Prochain atelier «ÊTES-VOUS BUSINESS?»

Le Conseil de la Coopération de la Saskatchewan (CCS) est heureux de vous inviter au second atelier d’information, d’initiation et de développement des affaires. L’atelier sera sous le thème Les...
Thursday, October 9, 2014/Author: Conseil économique et coopératif de la Saskatchewan/

Foire de l’emploi de Saskatoon

Vous cherchez un emploi? Venez partagez vos expériences professionnelles et rencontrer des employeurs potentiels lors de notre Foire de l’emploi! Celle-ci aura lieu le 23 octobre prochain (de 10 h...
Monday, September 15, 2014/Author: Conseil économique et coopératif de la Saskatchewan/

Une économie tournée VERT l’avenir

Le Conseil de la Coopération de la Saskatchewan (CCS) vous invite à son Forum économique « Une économie tournée VERT l’avenir«   L’évènement aura lieu les 3 et 4 octobre prochains à l’hôtel Ramada ...
Monday, September 8, 2014/Author: Conseil économique et coopératif de la Saskatchewan/
RSS
First4041424345474849Last

Actualité économique

Un quatrième économusée inauguré en Saskatchewan Un quatrième économusée inauguré en Saskatchewan

Un quatrième économusée inauguré en Saskatchewan

3467

Le 7 juin, l’hydromellerie artisanale Prairie Bee, la première en son genre dans la province, a été désignée économusée.

Le FDÉFP, une bouffée d’air pour la fransaskoisie Le FDÉFP, une bouffée d’air pour la fransaskoisie

Le FDÉFP, une bouffée d’air pour la fransaskoisie

Grâce aux financements du Fonds de développement économique francophone des Prairies (FDÉFP), trois organismes fransaskois peuvent concrétiser...
4159
La Belgique tisse des liens avec la Saskatchewan La Belgique tisse des liens avec la Saskatchewan

La Belgique tisse des liens avec la Saskatchewan

L'ambassadeur de Belgique au Canada, Patrick Van Gheel, a effectué une visite officielle en Saskatchewan du 24 au 27 octobre afin de...
5885
Le CÉCS dresse le portrait des régions Le CÉCS dresse le portrait des régions

Le CÉCS dresse le portrait des régions

Disponibles sur le site du Conseil économique et coopératif de la Saskatchewan (CÉCS) depuis la mi-juin, six rapports statistiques offrent un...
5005
Gaspillage alimentaire : la Saskatchewan veut mieux faire Gaspillage alimentaire : la Saskatchewan veut mieux faire

Gaspillage alimentaire : la Saskatchewan veut mieux faire

Depuis le 3 août, une nouvelle application, Too good to go, permet aux habitants de Regina et de Saskatoon de réduire leur gaspillage alimentaire....
5154
RSS
12345678910Last
Terms Of UsePrivacy StatementCopyright 2014 par L'Eau vive
Back To Top