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‘Glorious anarchy’: How Canadian painter Jean Paul Riopelle made good on his revolutionary roots

Widely considered the greatest Canadian painter of the postwar era, his work is on view at the Corkin Gallery.

Updated
3 min read
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In “Jean Paul Riopelle: Visual Exploration,” Corkin Gallery gathers work the artist made between the 1940s and ‘90s.聽


Jean Paul Riopelle is widely considered the greatest Canadian painter of the postwar era and, at the very least, the Canadian painter of widest renown.

In an impressive show, “Jean Paul Riopelle: Visual Exploration,” Corkin Gallery gathers work the artist made between the 1940s and 鈥90s.

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In the late 1940s, Riopelle started squeezing layers of oil paint directly from the tube onto his canvas and, instead of using a brush, spontaneously spreading the paint around with a palette knife.聽

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“Couleur (Colour),” 1955, exemplifies Riopelle’s work from this period. The bright reds at the edge of the canvas turn crimson as they approach the middle, until gradually they look like charred black streaks.聽

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“Sans titre,” 1958, is a highlight of the Corkin Gallery Jean Paul Riopelle show, with the athletic movement of Riopelle’s brush strokes and his exuberant use of colour.聽

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Riopelle was inspired to paint the looping black figure at the centre of “Ficelle En Marche (String Work),” 1972, by ajaraaq, an Inuit string game sometimes referred to as Cat’s Cradle.聽

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