Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Joëlle Morosoli

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Nationality
  
Canadian

Period
  
Kinetic art

Movement
  
Kinetic art

Known for
  
Sculpture

Name
  
Joelle Morosoli

Patrons
  
Edmond Couchot

Role
  
Artist


Joelle Morosoli

Education
  
Laval University, Paris 8 University

Jo lle morosoli ombres sous tension hd


Joëlle Morosoli is a Quebec artist who was born in Strasbourg, France, of French and Swiss descent. Her work is essentially sculptural, taking the form either of installations or of architecturally integrated art in public buildings. Most of her works have moving parts, driven by mechanical systems.

Contents

Jo lle morosoli cama eu d ombres version courte


Biography

Joëlle Morosoli Art Frame Jolle Morosoli IMPOSSIBLE

Born of a French mother, Gisèle Talbot, and a Swiss father, Erwin Morosoli, Joëlle immigrated to Quebec with her family in 1961. She met Swiss-born biogenetics professor and researcher Rolf Morosoli who, very early in their relationship, participated in her artistic production. Alongside his professional scientific research, he collaborated with the artist in designing the technical and mechanical aspects of her installations, sculptures, murals, and architecturally integrated works.

Joëlle Morosoli Jolle Morosoli Art public

Morosoli completed a bachelor’s degree in visual arts at Laval University in Quebec City in 1975. In 1997, she moved to Paris where she undertook doctoral studies at Paris 8 University under the supervision of Edmond Couchot, and obtained her doctorate in aesthetics and science and technology in the arts with her thesis L'installation en mouvement: une esthétique de la violence (The installation in motion: an aesthetics of violence) in 2002.

Joëlle Morosoli httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

On her return to Quebec, she took part in numerous group and solo exhibitions. Many of her projects are produced as part of the government’s policy of integrating art into architecture.

In 2004, Joëlle married Rolf Morosoli in Montreal, where she lives. She has taught at Cégep de Saint-Laurent (college) since 1998.

Artistic approach

Morosoli began using movement as a kind of material very early in her career. Employing irregular, cyclical motions, whether slow or erratic, and playing on light and shadow, she strives to give shape to movement and to provoke emotion. Spectators are invited to stroll through the installation and to catch the interplay between movement in the work and their own. Activated by electric motors, the sculptures’ constant transformation changes one’s perception of space and of the work itself. Spectators must therefore take position with respect to the work and the space, while adapting their movement to that of the installation.

"(Morosoli's sculptures) stylize certain movements observed in plant, animal and aquatic worlds... to express the world of the subconscious, wherein threatening emotional energies lie buried..."

Whereas movement in kinetic sculptures like mobiles often originates from a natural source, such as wind or water, Morosoli equips each sculpture or installational element with a small motor that generates an even, often barely perceptible rhythmical motion. These movements will suddenly reveal new colours or forms, and sometimes reconfigure the entire work. Spectators move freely through the installations, witnessing the changes, while the slowness of the transformation creates a state of tension, of discovery and expectancy.

Her architecturally-integrated work conjures natural forms and movement. The breadth of the movements, the rhythms, and the resulting changes in form and colour manage to suggest a range of emotions.

Main works

Joëlle Morosoli has presented more than thirty solo exhibitions throughout Canada and Quebec. She was also invited to take part in major group exhibitions at such venues as the Centre Georges Pompidou and the Chartreuse de Villeneuve-lès-Avignon. In 2002, she was selected to represent Quebec at ArtCanal, part of Expo.02 in Switzerland.

She has more than twenty public artworks to her credit, including the Palais des Congrès in Gatineau, Centre Mère-Enfant in Quebec City, and Centre d’hébergement Roland-Leclerc in Trois-Rivières.

Other activities

Morosoli is also a writer. Her first novel, Le sablier de l'angoisse, won second prize for the 1986 Prix Robert-Cliche. She also published Le ressac des ombres, in 1988, and a collection of poetry Traînée rouge dans un soleil de lait in 1984.

She co-founded the art journal Espace, for which she was assistant editor from 1987 to 1997. She teaches visual art at Cégep de Saint-Laurent where she also coordinates the visual arts and art history department.

Solo

  • 1981, Centre d’exposition l'Imagier, Aylmer.
  • 1982, Édifice Jos-Montferrand, Gatineau.
  • 1988, Galerie Port-Maurice, Saint-Léonard.
  • 1989, Musée régional de Rimouski, Rimouski.
  • 1990, Centre d’exposition l’Imagier, Aylmer.
  • 1990, Musée de Lachine, Lachine.
  • 1991, Centre des arts contemporains du Québec, Montreal.
  • 1991, Musée Pierre-Boucher, Trois-Rivières.
  • 1991, Musée du Bas-Saint-Laurent, Rivière-du-Loup.
  • 1991, Saint Mary’s University Art Gallery, Halifax, Nova Scotia.
  • 1992, Trajectoires, Bell Auditorium, Montreal.
  • 1992, Goethe Institut, Montreal.
  • 1993, Galerie Horace, Sherbrooke.
  • 1993, Maison de la culture Frontenac, Montreal.
  • 1994, Galerie d’art de Matane, Matane.
  • 1995, Occurrence, Montreal.
  • 1996, A SPACE Gallery, Toronto, Ontario.
  • 1996, Observatoire 4, Belgo Building, Montreal.
  • 1997, Glendon Art Gallery, York University, Toronto, Ontario.
  • 1998, Definitively Superior Gallery, Thunder Bay, Ontario.
  • 1998, Hamilton Artists Inc., Hamilton, Ontario.
  • 1999, Observatoire 4, Belgo Building, Montreal.
  • 1999, The New Gallery, Calgary, Alberta.
  • 2000, Galerie des arts visuel, Université Laval, Quebec City.
  • 2000, Plein Sud, Centre d’exposition en art actuel, Longueuil.
  • 2000, Forest City, London, Ontario.
  • 2001, Maison de la culture Frontenac, Montreal.
  • 2002, Musée d’art contemporain des Laurentides, Saint-Jérôme.
  • 2003, Galerie d’art de l’Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, Trois-Rivières.
  • 2009, Camaïeu d'ombres, Galerie d’art d'Outremont, Montreal.
  • 2011, Ombres sous tension, Circa, Montreal.
  • 2013, Camaïeu d'ombres, Galerie de l'Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke.
  • 2013, Traquenard, Maison de la culture Côtes-des-Neiges, Montréal.
  • Group

  • 1986, Centre d’exposition de Nîmes, France.
  • 1986, Délégation générale du Québec à Paris, Québec en 3D, Paris, Cannes, Lyon, France.
  • 1986, La Chartreuse, Villeneuve-lez-Avignon, France.
  • 1986, Palais des congrès de Montreal, Salon national des galeries d’art, Montreal.
  • 1987, Centre Georges Pompidou, Les machines sentimentales, Paris, France.
  • 1987, Espace Austerlitz, Paris, France.
  • 1987, Théâtre de Caen, Caen, France.
  • 1988, Galerie Espace, Solidarité, Montreal.
  • 1988, Galerie Daniel, Choix de professeurs, Montreal.
  • 1989, Art Expo, New York, United States.
  • 1989, Galerie d’art Lavalin, Artluminium, Montreal.
  • 1989, Galerie Daniel, Sculpture 89, Montreal.
  • 1989, Leo Kamen Gallery, Sculpture: Six artists from Quebec, Toronto.
  • 1990, Maison de la culture Mercier, Dans dix ans, l’an 2000, Montreal.
  • 1990, Maison de la culture Frontenac, Déplacement, Montreal.
  • 1991, Maison du Meunier, Destination: le temps, Montreal.
  • 1992, Maison de la culture Plateau Mont-Royal, Le Nouveau Monde, Montreal.
  • 1993, Maison de la culture de Côte-des-Neiges, Champs magnétiques, Montreal.
  • 1994, 460 Ste-Catherine Street West, Présence artistique suisse au Québec, Montreal.
  • 1994, Observatoire 4, Article premier, Belgo Building, Montreal.
  • 1997, Galerie Samuel Lallouz, Montreal.
  • 1997, Occurrence, Espaces disséminés, Montreal.
  • 1999, Glendon Gallery, A look back, Commemorative project, 1990–98, Toronto.
  • 1999, Passart, Rouyn-Noranda.
  • 2002, ArtCanal, Expo.02, Canal de la Thielle, Suisse.
  • 2004, Le Centre régional d’art contemporain de Montpellier, La sculpture contemporaine au Québec, Montpellier, Québec.
  • 2007, Joyce Yahouda Gallery, Espace 1987-2007, Montreal.
  • 2008, Cégep du Vieux-Montréal, Topographie, Montreal.
  • 2009, Galerie d’art d’Outremont, 15th anniversary, Montreal.
  • 2010, Galerie d’art de l’Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières.
  • 2011, Circa, Montreal.
  • Public art

  • 1981, Palais des congrès de Gatineau, Gatineau, 35m x 25m.
  • 1983, Centre hospitalier régional de Gatineau, Gatineau, 16m x 4,50m x 3m.
  • 1985, Bibliothèque Lucien-Lalonde, Gatineau, 9m x 9m x 5m.
  • 1986, Saint-Léonard Pool, pillar-sculpture, 3m x 61 cm x 61 cm.
  • 1986, CLSC Centre-Sud, Montreal, 6m x 3m x 5m.
  • 1990, Pierrefonds Library, outdoor mural, 8m x 6m.
  • 1992, Centre de recherche Fernand-Seguin, Montreal, 8m x 4m x 5m.
  • 1992, École Geai-Bleu, outdoor mural, La Plaine, 25m x 9m.
  • 1995, Parc Marie-Victorin, Longueuil, outdoor sculpture, 4.40m x 3m x 2.40 m.
  • 2000, C.P.F. de Mont-Laurier, Mont-Laurier, 8.40m x 6.45m x 3.75m.
  • 2002, Canal de la Thielle, Parc de sculptures, Switzerland.
  • 2002, École Pierre-Elliot-Trudeau, Vaudreuil, 10m x 7.20m x 3m.
  • 2002, École Lambert-Closse, Saint-Léonard, outdoor mural, 9m x 1.80m.
  • 2003, CHUQ Centre mère-enfant, Quebec City, 63m x 8m x 14m.
  • 2004, Centre de formation professionnel de Lachine, Lachine, 6m x 4m.
  • 2004, École des métiers du meuble de Montréal, Montreal, 5.70m x 2.85m.
  • 2004, Symmes Junior High School, Gatineau, 10m x 6m x 2m.
  • 2004, École secondaire Jean-Jacques-Rousseau, Boisbriand, 15m x 8m x 3m.
  • 2005, École Saint-Grégoire-le-Grand, outdoor sculpture, Montreal, 3.50m x 1.80m.
  • 2006, Centre d’hébergement Maison-Pie-XII, Rouyn-Noranda, 6m x 1.25m x 5m.
  • 2007, Bibliothèque Rina-Lasnier, Joliette, 5m x 1.5m.
  • 2008, Centre de formation Nova, Châteauguay, 9m x 8m x 5.3m.
  • 2008, École régionale du Vent-Nouveau, Longueuil, 9m x 9m x 3.80m.
  • 2009, Centre hospitalier de Granby, outdoor sculpture, Granby, 5m x 3.2m x 4m.
  • 2011, Aréna de Salaberry, mural 3.06 x 4m; hanging sculpture, Salaberry, 18.8m x 10.6m x 11m
  • 2011, Centre d’hébergement Roland-Leclerc, hanging sculpture, Trois-Rivières, 26m x 12m x 9m.
  • Publications

  • Traînée rouge dans un soleil de lait, poetry, Éditions Naaman, Sherbrooke, 1984, ISBN 9782890402973.
  • Le ressac des ombres, novel, Éditions de l’Hexagone, Montreal, 1987.
  • Lack of Understanding about Copyright: Aberrations and Abuse (English translation), Espace, no.73, 8-14, 2005.
  • L'installation en mouvement: Une esthétique de la violence, essai, Les Éditions d'art Le Sabord, Trois-Rivières, 2007, ISBN 978-2-922685-47-3.
  • References

    Joëlle Morosoli Wikipedia