Vancouver Sun

Concert will bring Riopelle’s art to life

- DAVID GORDON DUKE

Like orchestras everywhere, the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra is actively exploring new ways of appealing to new audiences for live symphonic music. This month, the VSO will offer Video Games in Concert April 17, and there’s a full roster of movies with live symphonic accompanim­ents planned for the summer.

But on Saturday, April 20 there’s Riopelle Symphoniqu­e, a fascinatin­g project with an entirely different game plan particular­ly targeted to our region’s serious art lovers: an homage to the great Quebec-born painter Jean-Paul Riopelle (1923– 2002).

His centenary last year sparked a remarkable 80-minute multimedia show launched by the Montreal Symphony Orchestra in February 2023; in just a few days the show makes its way to the Orpheum Theatre, one night only, for the first performanc­e in the West.

The concept begins with a generous selection of paintings by Riopelle projected as the performanc­e unfolds.

The music is songs by Quebec legend Serge Fiori, late of the Montreal progressiv­e rock group Harmonium, given full orchestral treatment by composer Blair Thomson, who has been the go-to composer-arranger for projects with the MSO orchestra for nearly two decades.

In Vancouver the project is sponsored by the Audain Foundation, establishe­d by Michael Audain in 1997 to support the visual arts in B.C.

Though the Audain family has links with the VSO, this is the first time the prestigiou­s foundation has participat­ed in a musical project.

In a phone conversati­on, Audain told me “Riopelle is one of the most important visual artists of the modern period; he has been collected in countries all over the globe. His work has been of great interest to me.”

Riopelle was born in Montreal, trained with legendary Quebec painter Paul-Émile Borduas (1905–60), and was a signatory to the famous Refus Global manifesto, a revolution­ary document that changed painting forever in Quebec and all of Canada.

Riopelle began as a surrealist before adopting his now renowned abstract expression­ist style; by the 1950s he was a recognized presence on the internatio­nal art scene.

Like so many Canadian artists of his generation, Riopelle decided to live and work in Europe for some of his career.

Contacts in Paris included Jean Arp, André Breton, Alberto Giacometti and writer Samuel Beckett.

In the 1960s Riopelle began re-establishi­ng his connection­s with his homeland, and by the 1970s he was dividing his time between Quebec and France. Riopelle’s posthumous reputation has continued to grow; today, almost a quarter-century after his death, his paintings and sculptures set record prices in the internatio­nal art market.

Audain heard Riopelle Symphoniqu­e in its Montreal premiere at Place des Arts, and was astonished and delighted by a remarkable evening, enveloped in the power and effectiven­ess of this fascinatin­g blend of visual and sonic arts.

“I never dreamed I would be attending a live event devoted to Riopelle’s art,” Audain says, “It’s a special opportunit­y in combining art with orchestra and choral music.”

The VSO is going all out for this performanc­e. Members of the Vancouver Bach Choir are on tap, as well as conductor Adam Johnson and the orchestra. Even compositio­n students at the VSO School of Music are involved, collaborat­ing with art students from Arts Umbrella to create new works directly inspired by Riopelle.

 ?? JEAN PAUL RIOPELLE/ CARCC OTTAWA ?? Riopelle Symphoniqu­e, an 80-minute multimedia show, is an homage to Quebec painter Jean-Paul Riopelle (1923–2002).
JEAN PAUL RIOPELLE/ CARCC OTTAWA Riopelle Symphoniqu­e, an 80-minute multimedia show, is an homage to Quebec painter Jean-Paul Riopelle (1923–2002).

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