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Monthly Archives:April 2024

“Creepy Portraits” lands Quebec teacher in lawsuit

In the modern art paradigm, consent and plagiarism are more hotly debated topics than ever. From the purposefully slippery cesspool that is AI art generation to reopened debates on the likes of Warhol, we are seeing the topic batted around more each passing year. But maybe the most unexpected addition to the debate comes from a grade school teacher in Quebec, thanks to their side hustle of Creepy Portraits.

 

A $1.5 million lawsuit is being levelled at Mario Perron and the Lester B. Pearson School Board following the reveal that Perron had been repurposing his students’ work to sell as merchandise on his website. After assigning his students the task of creating portraits inspired by the signature style of Basquiat—an assignment he perhaps insensitively called “Creepy Portrait”—Perron took their portraits and began printing them to order various merchandise that was selling for up to nearly $40 a pop.

 

Parents were living when they found out about the matter, and students also seemingly felt despondent about having their works being used without permission, especially with their first names attached. They filed their lawsuit in the Quebec Superior Court, and it calls for not only the monetary damages but also an apology from Perron and a report of Creepy Portraits’ sales.

 

There is a good chance the lawsuit has strong footing, especially given Perron having actively sold the works of the students for Creepy Portraits. This coupled with the contemporary examples being set regarding similar cases of artist plagiarism may put the school and Perron in hot water. But kudos to each student for making some truly haunting portrait work.

“The Mousetrap” celebrates 50 years at St Martin’s Theatre

When most people think of theatre productions with legendary longevity, their mind goes to Broadway. After all, the North American mecca of musicals and beyond has been home to the likes of Wicked, The Lion King, and The Phantom of the Opera, each holding decades under their belts. But even these feats pale in comparison to the well-lived and loved gem of London’s West End, Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap.

 

The Mousetrap has just recently celebrated its fiftieth year at its home in St Martin’s Theatre. This alone is a grand achievement, but truly, the show has been running in the West End for seventy years, having switched over from its original home of Ambassadors Theatre after running there from 1952 to 1974. The only interruptions in its run have been two days while it moved theatres and a year and two months during the pandemic. St Martin’s is denoted by its proud neon sign for The Mousetrap and has a wooden sign within clocking how many performances have shown—now upwards of 29,500.

 

Agatha Christie’s piece started out as a radio play entitled Three Blind Mice, before spinning into a short story—one that Christie demanded not be published in the UK so long as the show ran—and was inspired by the real-life death of a young boy in foster care. The Mousetrap is a whodunit murder mystery of several guests snowed in at a lodge as a woman’s murder is investigated. A standard piece of mystery work with a requisite twist ending, the sheer continuity of the show has become the true reason tourists flock to it.

 

While there is often dismay as to the future of theatre at large, and while there are certainly many theatrical artifacts that could do with supplanting to breathe new life into the medium, The Mousetrap is a pleasant and present reminder of an era gone by. There is little to wish it except another fifty years at home in the West End.

Art Gallery of Ontario’s workers strike for fair wages

We go to galleries to surround ourselves with the delights of the exhibited artists, meandering through peaceful halls to engage in quiet contemplation of works past and present. But it’s easy to forget that there is a bustling team making it such that these serene and beautiful moments can happen. And just like every other workforce, they are feeling the squeeze of unfair wages—and it’s because of this that the Art Gallery of Ontario’s workers have gone on strike.

 

As of March 26th, the Art Gallery of Ontario’s workers, Local 535 of the Ontario Public Service Employees Union, has voted to strike after ten months of negotiations with the AGO. The latest offer was not representative of necessary living wages in the rapidly worsening housing crisis of Toronto, an issue keenly felt coast to coast. After three years of wage freezes and the tumultuous issues in the sector stemming from the pandemic, the union has finally decided enough is enough.

 

As one of the largest museums in North America, the Art Gallery of Ontario’s workers fairly point out the AGO’s ability to throw money around. From 2020 to 2021 their CEO Stephan Jost took home almost $800 thousand. Recently the gallery has announced plans for a $100 million expansion for modern and contemporary art. While it may have stated a deficit in its last year, the gallery certainly isn’t hurting for money—but the union members certainly are.

 

Whether the Art Gallery of Ontario’s workers will get to the agreement they desire is to be determined in the face of such a titanic target for bargaining. Hopefully, the AGO will take stock beyond its own growth and do right by those who keep the ship running.

Fiberart International 2025

International Deadline: June 30, 2024 – Fiberart International seeks the best of contemporary art and invites submissions that reflect a wide range of works related to the fiber medium. Multiple venues, top jurors, cash awards…

RFP : City Square Sculpture

U.S. National Deadline: May 31, 2024 – The City of Joliet announces a request for proposals (RFP) for a signature sculpture installation at City Square. The City’s budget for the sculpture is $200,000.00…

Portrait Art Competition | Paint the Faces

International Deadline: April 30, 2024 – Teravarna invites artists to enter its “9th Portrait International Juried Art Competition.” It is an online competition and your chance to win cash prizes of up to $3500, more…