Cuba, Oil on Canvas, 56 x 88 inches, 2010, $8700 La Grande Séduction, Oil on Canvas, 11 x 9 feet, 2011, $9800 Holguin, Mixed Media on Panel, 34 x 50 inches, 2011, $2800 Barbwire, Mixed Media on Board, 48 x 32 inches, Sold Barbwire #4, Mixed Media on Canvas, 35 x 47 inches, 2011, $2800 No Trespassing, Mixed Media on Board, 48 x 36 inches, Sold Saint Antoine, Mixed Media on Panel, 48 x 48 inches, 2011, $3800 Riped Open 1, Oil on Board, 24 x 28 inches, $950 Aphrodisiac, Oil on Panel, 36 x 36 inches, 2006, $1500 In Between Layers, Mixed Media on Board, 36 x 36 inches,  Collection of La Petite Mort Gallery Mitsou!, Mixed Media on Board, 36 x 36 inches, $1500 Pulp Fiction, Mixed Media on Board, 24 x 36 inches, $1200 Asian Fever, Mixed Media on Board, 72 x 48 inches, $4000 Spring Reaction, Mixed Media on Board, 24 x 36 inches, $1200

January 2010

La Petite Mort Gallery presents…

MARTIN OUELLETTE
“In Between the Layers”
New Paintings / One Month Exhibit

December 31, 2009 – January 31, 2010
Vernissage & New Years Eve Party
Thursday Dec 31 / 8pm to midnite

Tunes by DJ NICK
Proudly sponsored by CKCU 93.1 FM

** Canapes provided by KINKI:
KINKI is sushi inspired creations & so much more. Get KINKI
www.kinki.ca

** Canapes provided by MAMBO:
MAMBO is fresh and exotic with Explosions of New Latin Inspired flavours. www.mambonuevolatino.com

Come Celebrate New Years with a Bang…

Artist Statement

“There is something sacred in the profane, something beautiful and lasting in the fleeting and forgotten things that get thrown away or left behind. My paintings are inspired from small objects found in industrial sites or junk yards such as details of worn out magazines, rusted nails or wooden poles layered with staples. These once purposeful objects have been left to decay to their natural element. In this transitional state, in this moment somewhere between glory and gloom, I find a world that we all live in every day even though we rarely take notice of it. I like to leave just enough elements of the magazine’s original self: a pixilated image or other graphic key words to form an identity to these abstractions. The image teases the viewer’s curiosity and their need to give definition to what they are looking at, as a result a personal interpretation is formed of the overall piece.

Time and the cycle of life of these objects are what I find fascinating. I see the aesthetics of decay – of a “natural” decay of artifacts – as one aspect. Then there is the aspect of time and history materialized; traces of time on a specific object, unique traces of their trajectory over time that can as well arise curiosity. I would like to think that the act of combining those images and creating a composition by painting them is a type of alchemy”. – Martin Ouellette, 2009

Thank you,

Guy Berube, director
La Petite Mort Gallery

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This