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Atelier Wiki : Repenser la famille

Information

Length

3h00

Language

French

Audience

Adults

Type of activity

Special Event

Mode

In Person

Free

 
Saturday April 1, 2023 at 02:00 pm

Come meet key figures in Quebec cinema and visual arts, and help increase their visibility on the Web! Whether you simply want to learn more about the guests, are contributing to Wikipedia for the first time or haven’t done so in a while, we will adapt the content to your questions and needs.

Speakers:
Montserrat Duran Muntadas, artist
Louise Bourque, filmmaker
Julia Minne, trainer

 

This series of Wiki workshops is presented by PRISM, the MMFA’s digital lab, and the Cinémathèque québécoise’s Savoirs Communs du Cinéma initiative.

The Savoirs Communs du Cinéma initiative has been made possible by support from the Canada Council for the Arts, the Conseil des arts de Montréal, Université de Montréal and Wikimedia Canada.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Material: Please bring your laptop. Some are also available to the public.

Reservation terms: Admission is free.

Location: Michal and Renata Hornstein Pavilion for Peace, 2075 Bishop Street

About PRISM
PRISM is funded by the Quebec government as part of the implementation of Measure 115 of Quebec’s Plan culturel numérique du Québec.

About the workshop
The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts and the Cinémathèque québécoise are teaming up to hold Wiki training workshops, inviting you to meet artists Montserrat Duran Muntadas and Louise Bourque to discuss their practices and projects, notably their relation to the body, maternity, family and intimacy. Then, a trainer will guide you in the creation of Wikimedia pages using the invaluable information resources of the Médiathèque Guy-L.-Coté and the MMFA Archives and Library Department. Spend a pleasant and stimulating afternoon in great company—everyone is welcome!

The collaborative Wiki workshop, a continuation of the Museum of the Art of Today / Department of the Invisible (in French, le Musée d’art actuel / Département des invisibles, MAADI) by Stanley Février presented at the MMFA, aims to enhance the online visibility of marginalized artists and celebrate diversity in Quebec cinematography and art.

About the speakers
Louise Bourque is an Acadian French-Canadian filmmaker now living in Montreal after 25 years of absence, 20 of which were spent in the United States and five in her native Edmundston, New Brunswick, where she made films and taught cinema. Over the years, her films have been screened in some 50 countries across five continents. Her work has been presented in museums and galleries worldwide, including at the Musée de la civilisation and the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec in Quebec City, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, the Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. Bourque has received numerous honours for her work and has had several retrospective screenings, including one at La Cinémathèque québécoise in 2021. The book Imprints: The Films of Louise Bourque, edited by Stephen Broomer and Clint Enns, was officially launched on this occasion.

Montserrat Duran Muntadas is a Catalan-born artist living in Montreal. She graduated from the Centro Nacional del Vidrio at the Real Fábrica de Cristales de La Granja in 2007, and earned a Bachelor’s in Fine Arts from the Universitat de Barcelona in 2010. She has more than 10 solo exhibitions to her credit and has participated in over 50 national and international group exhibitions. She has been a finalist and winner of several awards, including the RBC Award for Glass in 2017 and the François-Houdé Award in 2019. In recent years, she has created several public artworks in Quebec as well as participating in several international artist residencies.

About the partners
A vibrant and nomadic museum, the MAADI is a performative action by artist Stanley Février. On view at the MMFA from June 15 to August 28, 2022, this work is aimed at challenging the power dynamics that contribute to underrepresentation in the art world and its institutions of multiple practices, and foster the marginalization of artists with diverse backgrounds.

The Cinémathèque québécoise is Montreal’s museum of moving images. Its mission is to acquire, document and safeguard Quebec’s cinema, television and audiovisual heritage, as well as that of international animation. It also collects significant works of Canadian and world cinema for screenings focused on culture and education. With its Savoirs Communs du Cinéma initiative, the Cinémathèque seeks to promote the sharing of knowledge and discoverability of works and artists, with the aim of inspiring new creative activities.

 

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