Louis-Pierre Bougie

Louis-Pierre Bougie (August 16, 1946 - January 10, 2011)[1] was a Canadian painter and printmaker specialized in engraving and etching.[2][3] He developed his knowledge of intaglio techniques at Atelier Lacourière-Frélaut in Paris, where he worked for fifteen years, and through travel and study in France, Portugal, Poland, Ireland, Finland, and New York. His work is regularly shown in Canadian, American, and European galleries, and is represented in major public and private collections, notably in Québec and New York. Bougie was considered Québec's foremost engraver for the depth and consistency of his work.

Training

After an introduction to printmaking at École des Beaux-Arts de Montréal, where he attended classes with Angèle Beaudry, Louis-Pierre Bougie studied in Paris, notably at Lacourière-Frélaut (1979–1993), Atelier Rene Tazé, and Atelier Champfleury, and in Vancouver and Montréal. Additional training in Strasbourg (1979–1982), Cracow (1980), Helsinki (2003), and Buenos Aires (2006) introduced him to a compagnonnage-like approach to the transmission of printmaking skills.

  • 2006 - Québec artist residency, Buenos Aires, Argentina
  • 2003 - Québec artist residency, Helsinki, Finland
  • 1996 - Québec artist residency, New York City, United States
  • 1992–1993 - Atelier Champfleury, Atelier Lacourière-Frélaut, and Atelier René Tazé, Paris, France, and Atelier Sagamie, Alma
  • 1988 - Atelier Lacourière-Frélaut, Paris, France (engraving)
  • 1984–1987 - Atelier René Tazé, Paris, France
  • 1982–1987 - Atelier Circulaire, Montreal
  • 1980 - Stuido Lotozowska 3, Cracow, Poland
  • 1979–1987 - Cité Internationale and Lacourière-Frélaut, Paris, France (engraving)
  • 1979–1982 – Visiting artist, Arts Décoratifs, Strasbourg (lithography); Ateliers Champfleury (lithography) and Lacourière-Frélaut, Paris, France
  • 1975–1982- Atelier Luc Nadeau, Montréal, and Baie St-Paul
  • 1975–1977- Atelier Arachel (lithography, etching) and Atelier Graff, Montreal
  • 1972–1973 - Vancouver School of Art (independent student), Vancouver
  • 1969–1972 - Atelier de Recherche Graphique, Guilde Graphiqu, Montreal
  • 1967–1970 - École des Beaux-Arts de Montréal (independent student with Angèle Beaudry)

Work

Louis-Pierre Bougie produced a considerable body of engraved and painted works that applied traditional techniques such as burin, aquatint, and chine collé to contemporary printmaking. An heir to Goya, Blake, and Rops, he had developed an original monotype technique that combined engraving with live figure drawing in a reversal of traditional processes: the paper is first drawn with pierre noir and reworked with acrylic before receiving a print from a copper plate marked with spit-bite and drypoint. The finished print captures all elements with exceptional transparency, bringing its subject to light in the true sense of illumination. In Bougie's work, engraving was a process that both opened and sealed spaces. Desire and imagination inhabited matter in unexpected ways, and appearance was literally cast in a different light (through highlights and illumination), giving us back a bit of ourselves.

Influence and involvement

In the early 1980s, while also conducting residencies at major printmaking studios abroad (including Paris and Strasbourg), Bougie joined forces with Catherine Farish, Pierre-Léon Tétreault, Kittie Bruneau, and other print-based artists to found Atelier Circulaire. Throughout his career, he promoted the work of Quebec printmakers both locally and outside Canada. He also collaborated closely with writers and poets. In 1983, the poets Gaston Miron and Michael La Chance together signed a telegram to Bougie:

We salute Louis-Pierre Bougie, one of those rare souls who is always a step ahead, continuously opening the way to new possibilities and escaping the bounds of mortal time.

As an engraver and etcher of international renown, he has brought greater visibility to Québec printmaking and has been pivotal in inviting printmakers from abroad to take part in major collaborations with Québec, including artist's books, residencies, and exchanges between Québec and other countries. He has also helped foster talent in Québec, both through his work with artists at Atelier Circulaire and as the organizer and curator of numerous exhibitions.

Selected exhibitions

Bougie's work benefited from the support of major curators such as Léo Rosshandler, Bernard Lévy, Céline Mayrand, Gilles Daigneault, Claude Morissette, and Anne-Marie Ninacs.

Artist's books

A significant part of Louis-Pierre Bougie's printed oeuvre involved a dialogue with poetry in the form of collaborative exhibitions and, above all, artist's books that brought together the artistry of typographers, printmakers, poets, and bookbinders. Bougie created books with many poets, among them Gaston Miron, Paul Chamberland, Geneviève Letarte, Jérôme Élie, Michel Butor, Michel van Schendel, François-Xavier Marange, Paule Marier, and Michaël La Chance. Working closely with the authors, he contributed a distinctive sensibility that was both rough and sensitive, abrasive and idyllic. His artist's books were featured in the following exhibitions:

  • 1990 – Titre?, Bibliothèque des arts, Université du Québec à Montréal
  • 2005 – Titre?, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec
  • 2007 – Actualité de l’estampe au Québec, Grande Bibliothèque, BAnQ (second iteration of exhibition originally presented in Québec City, 2005)
  • 2013 - Louis-Pierre Bougie – 30 ans de livres d'artiste, Centre d'archives de Montréal, BAnQ (curator: Claude Morissette)

Collections

Catalogs and monographs

  • 2013 - Michaël La Chance, Louis-Pierre Bougie. Espaces chavirés, torsions du désir. Foreword by Isabelle de Mévius, preface by Georges Leroux. Montreal: Les Éditions de Mévius.
  • 2007 – Léo Rosshandler, Désert vert. Quebec City: Éditions Lacerte Art Contemporain - Galerie Orange.
  • 2005 – Sylvie Alix, Louis-Pierre Bougie: prix de la Fondation Monique et Robert Parizeau 2005. Ed. Anne-Marie Ninacs, with translations by C. Bilodeau and M. E. Elgue. Quebec City: Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec.
  • 2005 - Michel van Schendel, Absence de bruit. Quebec City: Éditions Lacerte Art Contemporain - Galerie Orange.
  • 2001 - Bernard Lévy, Études au quotidien. With poems by Paul Chamberland and Michaël La Chance. Quebec City: Éditions Galerie Madeleine Lacerte.
  • 1996 - Louis-Pierre Bougie, Journal d’exil, New York 1996. With texts and poems by Michaël La Chance, Jérôme Élie, Geneviève Letarte, François-Xavier Marange, and Paule Marier. Quebec City: Galerie Madeleine Lacerte.
  • 1996 – Louis-Pierre Bougie, Christine Palmiéri, Espace D. René Harrison, et al., De la monstruosité, expression des passions. Montreal : Jaune-Fusain.
  • 1991 - Michaël La Chance, Céline Mayrand, Morsures. Louis-Pierre Bougie Gravures et monotypes 1986-1990. Preface by Léo Rosshandler. Montreal: Éditions Promotion des arts Lavalin, Maison de la Culture Côte-des-Neiges, Atelier Circulaire.
  • 1978 - Louis-Pierre Bougie (dessins). Quebec City: Musée du Québec.

Selected solo exhibitions

2015

  • UQAC and Galerie La Corniche, Chicoutimi
  • Galerie d'art du Centre culturel de l’Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke
  • Galerie du Théâtre, Magog
  • Galerie d’art Jean-Claude Bergeron, Ottawa
  • Galerie atelier Circulaire, Montreal

2014

  • Musée d'art contemporain de Baie St-Paul (retrospective), Baie St-Paul
  • Galerie Madeleine Lacerte, Quebec City
  • Centre d’arts Orford, Orford

2013

  • Centre culturel 1700 La Poste (retrospective), Montreal
  • Bibliothèque et archives nationales du Québec (30 ans de livres d’artiste), Montreal

2012

  • Maison de la culture Marie-Uguay, Montreal
  • Bibliothèque de Sainte-Thérèse (retrospective), Sainte-Thérèse
  • Galerie Madeleine Lacerte, Quebec City
  • Maison de la culture Villeray - Parc-Extension (30 ans de livres d’artiste), Montreal

2007

  • Galerie Orange, Montreal

2005

  • Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec (Monique and Robert Parizeau Foundation Prize), Quebec City
  • Centre d'exposition de l'Université du Québec à Chicoutimi, Chicoutimi

2004

  • Atelier Circulaire, Montreal
  • Galerie Orange, Montreal
  • Galerie Madeleine Lacerte, Quebec City

2003

  • Galerie Pierre-Luc St-Laurent, Ottawa

2002

  • Atelier Lacourière et Frélaut, Paris
  • Galerie Madeleine Lacerte, Quebec City
  • Galerie Pierre-Luc St-Laurent, Ottawa
  • Galerie Éric Devlin, Montreal

2001

  • Calligraphic Centre, Winston-Salem, United States

2000

  • Bibliothèque nationale du Québec, Quebec City
  • Atelier-Galerie Presse-papier (Festival de Poésie), Trois-Rivières
  • Calligraphic Centre, Winston-Salem, United States

1999

  • Galerie Eric Devlin, Montreal
  • Galerie Madeleine Lacerte, Quebec City
  • Centre culturel de Saint-Jérôme

1998

  • Galerie Nane Cailler, Lausanne, Switzerland

1997

  • Galerie L’Autre Équivoque, Ottawa.

1996

  • Galerie Madeleine Lacerte (Journal d’exil), Quebec City
  • Atelier Circulaire, Montreal
  • La Galerie Trois-Rivières (Festival de poésie), Trois-Rivières
  • Centre Culturel Henri Lemieux, Ville La Salle

1994

  • Galerie Madeleine Lacerte, Quebec City
  • Galerie James Roussel, Montreal
  • Galerie L’Autre Équivoque, Ottawa

1993

  • La Galerie, Trois-Rivières
  • Galerie Michèle Broutta, Paris, France

1992

  • Galerie Nane Cailler, Lausanne, Switzerland

1991

  • Maison de la Culture Côtes des Neiges (Promotion des arts Lavalin), Montreal
  • Susan Conway Galery, Georgetown, Washington DC, United States
  • Michel Tétreault Art Contemporain, Montreal

1990

  • Circa, Montreal
  • L'autre équivoque, Ottawa

1989

  • Aire du Verseau, Paris (France)
  • L'autre Équivoque, Ottawa

1988

  • Galerie L'Aire du Verseau, Paris and Dijon, France
  • Michel Tétreault Art Contemporain, Montreal
  • Grand Palais à Paris (SAGA 88, FIAC Édition), France

1987

  • Galerie Triangle, Brussels, Belgium

1986

  • L'autre Équivoque, Ottawa

1986

  • Michel Tétreault Art Contemporain, Montreal

1985

  • Délégation du Québec à Paris, Paris, France

1984

  • Galerie de l'Université de Moncton, Moncton
  • Radio-Canada, Moncton

1983

  • Michel Tétreault Art Contemporain, Montreal

1982

  • Galerie Jean-Jacques Thibeault, Montreal

1981

  • Independent exhibition, Quebec City

1980

  • Délégation du Québec à Paris, France
  • Studio exhibition, Montreal

1979

  • Centre d'art du Mont-Royal, Montreal
  • Atelier Graff, Montreal
  • Studio exhibition, Montreal

1978

  • Musée du Québec, Quebec City

1974

  • Balcon les Images, Montreal
  • Galerie du Vieux Marché, Ottawa

1971–72

  • Atelier Galerie Laurent Tremblay, Montreal

Artist books

  • 2013–15 - Ainsi fait, 13 engravings, text by François-Xavier Marange. Montreal-Paris: Éditions de la Griffe d’Acier.
  • 2011 - Les mots griffonnés, 12 engravings, text by Michel van Schendel. Montreal-Paris: Éditions de la Griffe d’Acier.
  • 2005 - Le jardinier, 17 engravings, text by Michel van Schendel. Montreal-Paris: Éditions de la Griffe d’Acier.
  • 2004 - Terre brune, 25 engravings, poem by Michel van Schendel. Montreal-Paris: Éditions de la Griffe d’Acier.
  • 2000 - Flou comme la nuit, 7 engravings on chine collé, poem by Geneviève Letarte. Saint-Lambert-Montreal: Éditions Bonfort and Éric Develin.
  • 1996 - Rencontres, 16 engravings on Japan paper, texts by Paule Marier, François-Xavier Marange, Geneviève Letarte, and Jérôme Élie. Quebec City: Éditions Galerie Madeleine Lacerte.
  • 1992 - Entre deux eaux, 8 etchings and 4 tinted plates, text by Michel Butor. Montreal-Paris: Éditions de la Griffe d’Acier.
  • 1992 - Les derniers outrages du ciel, 6 engravings, text by Michaël LaChance. Montreal-Paris: Éditions de la Griffe d’Acier.
  • 1990 - Terminus Nord, 12 engravings on chine collé, poem by Geneviève Letarte. Montreal: Éditions Atelier Circulaire).
  • 1987 - Forger l’Effroi, 12 colour etchings, text by Michaël LaChance, foreword by Gaston Miron. Montreal-Paris: Éditions de la Griffe d’Acier.
  • 1983 - Le prince sans rire, 12 etchings, poem by Michaël LaChance, postface and poem by Gaston Miron. Montreal-Paris: Éditions Lui-même.
  • 1977 - Le rendez-vous d’août, 5 lithographs, poem by Raymond Cloutier.
  • 1975 - Doux le vent, 5 silkscreen prints, poem by Jean-Guy Charbonneau. Montreal : Guilde Graphique.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.