C Magazine

La douche écossaise: Katie Bethune-Leamen Susan Hobbs Gallery, Toronto November 28, 2019 – January 25, 2020

hings—whether extracted, manufactured or discarded—are a defining part of modern life. They are also a defining problem for modern art, one which Katie Bethune-Leamen’s most recent show at Susan Hobbs Gallery addresses with generous helpings of drollery, pleasure and play. Her approach is exemplified by her cornucopian list of works, in which the exhibition’s series of formally similar porcelain, bronze and mother-of-pearl sculptures are titled with reference to an evocative array of objects—an Aztec knife, a teething clamp, a honeydew Melona bar—as well as to their real or imagined relationships with human subjects, as in the group of. As an artist, Bethune-Leamen uses her impressions of things—what they look like, how they feel, how they make her feel—as prompts to make new things that remind her of them, or of other things. You might say she has a thing for things, with both the sensual connotations and the ironic redundancy of that phrasing very much intended. Where too many artists have sought to rescue modern objects from a world they believe merely consumes them, Bethune-Leamen finds new pleasures in that consumption, further enfolding it in the flow of and that makes up an embodied modernity.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from C Magazine

C Magazine4 min read
João Onofre Daniel Faria Gallery, Toronto, 20 November 2021 to 22 January 2022
In just over two decades of art-making, Portuguese artist João Onofre has taken great stock of grand themes such as failure, irony, endurance, performance, connection, and love. The artist’s first solo exhibition in Canada, at Daniel Faria Gallery in
C Magazine4 min read
Trickle Down
A quick reading of this work might induce scorn toward certain entities. But mining, oil, and gas companies work within the system offered to them by the government of Canada. And when companies are caught stepping out of bounds of the law, the resul
C Magazine3 min read
“Out of Many” — Jorian Charlton Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, 18 December 2021 to 7 August 2022
In her essay “Homeplace: A Site of Resistance,” late feminist scholar bell hooks describes how the private space of the home can be a radical site for Black liberation. She highlights the caretaking role that Black women adopt in the home—whether act

Related Books & Audiobooks