Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Finalist - MANDORLA Art Award 2016

The Mandorla Art Award employs a thematic spiritual inspiration that changes with each exhibition. These inspirations are defined by quotations from the Bible and all participating artists are requested to interpret these in their own way. In 2016, artists will interpret the theme ‘The Resurrection’ in figurative and abstract form and through various media.
This national award is open to artists working in all media and artists are invited to submit an application to be considered for this award. A selection panel will choose the finalists for the exhibition and an independent judging panel will award the prizes.
The award features a $25,000 Main Prize, two $5,000 Highly Commended Prizes and a $2,000 People’s Choice Award. 
The Mandorla Art Award 2016 finalists will be showcased in an exhibition held at Linton and Kay Gallery, Perth from 15-24 July 2016. Artworks will be available for purchase.



Sunday, May 29, 2016

Turner Galleries has extended the Ricochet exhibition to the 28th of May 2016 - Turner Galleries - 470 William Street, North Bridge WA

RICOCHET, Turner Galleries, April 2016 © christophe canato


RICOCHET, Turner Galleries, April 2016 © christophe canato
RICOCHET, Turner Galleries, April 2016 © christophe canato

RICOCHET, Turner Galleries, April 2016 © christophe canato


RICOCHET, Turner Galleries, April 2016 © christophe canato

RICOCHET, Turner Galleries, April 2016 © christophe canato

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

RICOCHET at Turner Galleries - 1 to 30 April 2016 - 470 William Street, North Bridge WA





"I find Christophe Canato's images immediately arresting for their deep beauty and mystery. The strange yet familiar portraits are as pure and innocent as they are menacing, bestial and childlike, yet always composed with great elegance."
Sean Tobin, 2016

French-Australian Christophe Canato lives and works in Perth, Western Australia. Born in France, he grew up in an artistic family environment where his father was a painter. As an early drawer and painter himself, he successfully entered the Beaux-Arts school at seventeen years of age and studied Visual Arts.  Christophe received his DNSEP in 1989 (comparable to a Master degree in Fine Arts) and in 1993 a Diploma of Fashion from the prestigious Institut Français de la Mode (French Fashion Institute) in Paris. After working freelance in the Paris fashion industry, photography became his favoured tool to express himself as an artist.

In 1997 Christophe won first prize in the Paris Salon de la Jeune Création, and began his career as an artist in earnest. In 2005 he moved to Perth and quickly established himself as an artist to watch, winning a Town of Vincent Art Award that year. Since then he has continued to exhibit extensively in Australia and overseas.

Ricochet is a photographic series that he completed in 2013, exhibiting it in Anna Pappas Gallery in Melbourne and the Queensland Centre for Photography in 2014, and in the Singapore Fringe Festival in 2016. It is now Perth’s turn to view these hauntingly beautiful images.  Ricochet is comprised of images of children and still life objects. Each is beautifully lit in against an inky background.  Accompanying these are two dark landscapes, each with a foreground habitat; an anthill and a hideout. A video work from this series will also be on display.

The lack of background detail, the unadorned black clothing, and Christophe’s choice of subject matter, all combine to create timeless images. This is perhaps an unrealistic portrayal of contemporary youth, with today’s clutter of toys and technology. These are wistful, poetic memories of that time in childhood where you have newfound freedoms, days filled with curiosity and adventure, and the angst of adolescence is still some time away. Individually, these photographs attempt to capture those fleeting moments from childhoods past, the mesmerising time the ocean is first heard in a seashell, or the simplicity of placing a thorn on a nose to conjure a dragon or perhaps a rhino.

As Alasdair Foster noted, “It is an age of becoming. A voyage already begun; the maternal haven to stern and the churn of adolescence still to come. It is a time when the brain is plastic; knowledge is sketchy but tacked together with the rich embroidery of the imagination. These are the dog days before puberty.”

Like the ricochet of a bullet, or the skipping of a stone over water, these images bounce between different childhood experiences. From finding the treasures of a mother of pearl button, the skeletal remains of a frog, or the brilliant feathers on a dead parrot bejewelled in droplets of water, to watching a pair of snails mating, or building a hideout from branches and leaves, these are the experiences that open our eyes to the wonder of the world, the start of comprehending life and death, finding beauty in small places, and delighting in boundless imagination. This is the preparation for adulthood, where sadly the wonder and enchantment found in the everyday diminishes.  I do not see these as portraits, or even descriptions of the artist’s own childhood memories, but rather, a set of keys to open the past for all viewers. 


Please contact Turner Galleries for further information or images from the exhibition; email info@turnergalleries.com.au or phone 08 9227 1077. This exhibition can be viewed on our website www.turnergalleries.com.au from 1 April.

Sunday, January 10, 2016

CHRISTOPHE CANATO in conversation with SEAN TOBIN Artistic Director M1 Singapore Fringe Festival


In the lead up to Christophe Canato's exhibition RICOCHET in M1 Singapore Fringe Festival, in less than two weeks time, I managed to have a little online chat with Christophe about his work.

SEAN: There is such an intimacy to the works in Ricochet that keep me pondering about your relationships with the subjects in the photos. Would you like to share about any of them with us? The children? The animals?

CHRISTOPHE: As a migrant, born in France and living in Australia for the past 10 years, my emotions are certainly surfing between two cultures.
In this context, the isolation process due to relocation bring back memories and identities. Since then, my work in general has been quite intimate. However, with Ricochet my interest is to explore everyone's intimacies and memories. In these five boys portraits, one of them is more likely close to who I was.

SEAN: How would you describe your relationship with animals? Do you keep any animals? Do you have a favourite? Or any zoophobia?

CHRISTOPHE: That’s an interesting and vast question. I will try to keep it simple. My only religion is mother earth based upon respect for life in any kind.
My favorite will be to observe, learn from and appreciate each species included those that terrify me.

SEAN: I know that you have been taking photos for a long time, both in the fashion world and in the art world, bouncing between Paris and Perth. That’s an interesting life. What tends to keep you going artistically? What inspires and nurtures your voice and your craft as an artist?

CHRISTOPHE: I haven’t work with the fashion sector for quite a while now and there is something beneficial to take distance with this industry. It is exhilarating to be able to devote yourself to your passion. It makes me feel alive.

SEAN: As an artist and fashion photographer, do you have any strongly held views about the state of the fashion world and the art world that you would like to share?

CHRISTOPHE: Often some people ask me about my technical skills in photography rather than the concept or the message itself included in my art.
Recently, about my work in progress Andy is Dandling, this person was asking me 'how do you make your models pose this way?'. I guess this comes from the fashion where the body is the structure of the garment and you handle it at your leisure while preserving the emotions.

SEAN: I suppose by now you have managed to look at the rest of the Singapore Fringe programme. Are there any artists or works that stand out to you, that you are hoping to catch while you are here?

CHRISTOPHE:I have to be honest with you I didn’t have time to go through the all program yet. I was working on the 30 pages catalogue and tried to manage printing, framing, freighting before to visit you. I am very much looking forward to my 5 days in Singapore to enjoy relax and discover talents. I will throw my heart for any platform which will includes contemporary dance, I am a big fan of it. 

SEAN: So I guess M1 Singapore Fringe is your first gig for 2016. Any other exciting plans for 2016 that you can share with us? Plans to bring the work elsewhere? New works in the pipeline?

CHRISTOPHE: There is few projects but I will keep it quiet for now if you don’t mind. One thing for sure, my brain is boiling and it will be liberating back to my studio working on this series I mentioned previously. This time I am interested to express my feeling about male gender identities in our western countries. Let’s talk about that in front of a cup of tea.


SEAN: I look forward to the cups of tea Christophe, to introducing you to some of the other artists and works in the fringe, and we could have lots of long talks about male gender identities. Sounds like something that could fit in very well with Art & Skin, for 2017. 
émoticône smile

Friday, January 8, 2016

ION art gallery, Singapore

ION art gallery

M1 FRINGE FESTIVAL PRESENTS RICHOCHET BY CHRISTOPHE CANATO (AUSTRALIA | FRANCE)


13 – 24 January 2016, L4 ION Art Gallery
Christophe Canato’s rich photographs of  darkly lit portraits and still life trigger memories of one’s childhood. In  this  emotional  space  between  affection  and fascination, animals are featured and mimed. Each  evocative  piece  brimming  with  a  sense  of mystery delves into the psyche of childhood and looks  at  the  imagination  held  only  within  the  mind of the child. In reference  to  wildness  and  nature,  the  series  of  haunting  photographs  and  videos  in Ricochet will bring us back to our instincts and memories.
“It is not just that the boyhood imagination is inventive, it is also collective. Ideas  are  shared,  actions mimicked,  styles  adopted  and  tales  believed. The period  before  puberty  is  one  in  which  we  first  discern  the  expectations  the world has of us. Having left the close embrace of the maternal to explore the nature of being an individual, the child discovers demands are being made, ambitions  set... There  is  tension  between  a  desire to  conform  and the  urge
to discover what might be possible." — Alasdair Foster, Cultural Development Consulting
French-Australian  visual  artist  Christophe  Canato  has  been  living  and  working  in  Perth, Western Australia since 2005. After receiving his DNSEP in 1989 (comparable to a Master in Fine Arts) and a Diploma  of  Fashion  from  the  prestigious  Institut  Français  de  la  Mode  (French  Fashion  Institute)  in 1993, Canato has continued to draw on his background in the Paris Fashion industry.

Thursday, December 17, 2015

RICOCHET at the M1 Singapore fringe festival - 13 to 24 January 2016

RICOCHET is part of the M1 Singapore Fringe Festival 2016, Art and the Animal. This project has been supported by the Western Australian Department of Culture and the Arts, M1 Singapore Fringe Festival and ION art gallery.

RICOCHET fait parti du M1 Singapore Fringe Festival 2016, Art et l’Animal. Ce projet a été réalisé avec le soutien du Ministère de la Culture et des Arts de l’Australie Occidentale, M1 Singapore Fringe Festival et ION galerie d’art.








Sunday, October 18, 2015

Narcissus has been selected as a finalist for the Kennedy Prize Art Award 2015 and will be exhibited from 20-28 Nov 2015, Adelaide, South-Australia.

The Kennedy Prize is an annual Australian art award of $25,000 for ‘beauty’

The prize, offered by the Kennedy Arts Foundation, is based and exhibited in Adelaide but open to Australian artists nationwide, and is awarded to works that embody, comment on or celebrate beauty.
The winning artist will receive the Kennedy Prize of $25,000, and their artwork will be acquired by the Kennedy Arts Foundation, toured nationwide and auctioned at the next year’s Kennedy Prize exhibition. The work’s increased recognition, prestige and market value will thus contribute significantly to the prize’s funds, ensuring continued annual growth. The main exhibit will present finalists’ works, demonstrating their exceptional quality.
The Foundation’s Choice,  a separate exhibition comprising a selection of the remaining entries, will run alongside the main exhibit. The Foundation’s Choice exhibition will showcase the scope of the entries and feature a diverse, exciting array of emerging and established Australian artistic talent.
A people’s choice award will also be awarded to the audience’s preferred entrant.
NARCISSUS 2015 © Christophe Canato

Saturday, October 10, 2015

WORK IN PROGRESS

GREY GARMENT, SELF PORTRAIT, NARCISSUS © christophe canato 2015

As in many societies, religious doctrine is a factor in the policing of hair.
To mark their status, ladies never cut their hair among the fashionable middle and upper classes of Victorian society. In contrast, hair became the focal point of sexual interest and the primary expression of femininity could be seen as decadence if untied. What was decadent not that long ago now finds its civilian status as a third gender. Beyond sexuality, what some people consider a vice or confusion between gender will reveal balanced identities with one of its famous representatives, talented bearded lady Conchita Wurst.

Narcissus saw his own reflection in the water and fell in love with it. From the Greek myth we find the origin of the term narcissism, a fixation with oneself and one's physical appearance. Some say that narcissism is the direct expression of same-sex attraction but can we reduce homosexuality to a single schema, given the complexity of our human brain. Considering recent introduction to same sex marriage in our Western world, Canato’s Narcissus is a way to examine ethic and the relationship between narrative and representation.

Much like artists might look to religion or myths as a catalyst for their work, Patricia Piccinini with The Carrier, 2012, uses biology as a narrative to understand and express the issues of our contemporary world sparking a dialogue with our desire to homogenise the human body. Inspired by this particular work of hers, Christophe Canato’s ludic self-portrait with his partner in life, expressing the challenges of our ability to accept those who don’t meet our concept of the ideal.


This trilogy serves as an expression of the membrane between two worlds; that by which we are surrounded, and another which belongs to the individual, a sort of no man’s land. Intense of emotion and metaphor, this interior space could be portrayed as circus freaks with the bearded lady, the giant and the conjoined twins.

Monday, August 31, 2015

INTIMACIES - Courthouse Gallery, ArtGeo Cultural Complex, City of Busselton, 1 September to 13 October 2015 - Art On The Move


Curated by participating artists Christophe Canato and Christine Tomas; Erin Coates, Thea Constantino and  Justin Spiers will present audiences with photomedia art that delves into unconventional notions of intimacy.

Friday, July 24, 2015

artist talks - QUIET MOMENTS - 6 June 2015- Fremantle Arts Centre

Quiet Moments: contemporary poetic photography is on exhibit from Sat 6 June – Sun 26 July. 
FREMANTLE ARTS CENTRE, 1 Finnerty St, Fremantle Western Australia 6160.
Free Entry.
The shows include work by John Gollings, David Bate (UK), Jane Burton (VIC), Christophe Canato (WA), Kate Hamilton (UK), Estelle Hanania (Fr), Susan Hill (WA), Sascha Weidner (Germany) & Christopher Young (WA).








Photos by Jessica Wyld Photography

Sunday, May 3, 2015

QUIET MOMENTS: contemporary poetic photography - Fremantle Art Centre, Western Australia- 06 June to 26 July 2015 - David Bate (UK) Jane Burton (VIC) Christophe Canato (WA) Kate Hamilton (UK) Estelle Hanania (France) Susan Hill (WA) Sascha Weidner (Germany) Christopher Young (WA)

ad vitam æternam © Christophe Canato



Opening Fri 5 June | 6:30pm | Free
Exhibition Runs Sat 6 June – Sun 26 July

quiet moments showcases the work of some of the premier photographers from the UK, Europe and Australia. Poetic photography is distinctive for cutting juxtaposition and languid beauty, offering many possible meanings in stark contrast to the majority of advertising and online imagery saturating today's media.
Curated by Susan Hill, the works presented feature strange scenes, peculiar figures and random objects from everyday life combined in unexpected ways. Rich in colour, hidden meaning and metaphor, viewers are invited to contemplate the images and project their own day dreams into the scenes.
quiet moments features the work of eight prominent national and international photographers including:
David Bate (UK)
Jane Burton (VIC)
Christophe Canato (WA)
Kate Hamilton (UK)
Estelle Hanania (France)
Susan Hill (WA)
Sascha Weidner (Germany)
Christopher Young (WA)
Susan Hill, artist, freelance curator and lecturer, holds a BA (Visual Arts) from the Canberra School of Art and an MA in Photographic Studies from the University of Westminster, England. She has curated exhibitions throughout the UK, Germany and Australia.
Workshop & Public Program
Artist talk with Susan Hill | Sat 6 June
Poetic Photography workshop | Sun 21 June 

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Inside-Out Billboard by Christophe Canato

PANDORA'S BOX 2015 © Christophe Canato

The City of Joondalup’s Inside-Out Billboard has undergone a change with a new artwork display of commissioned work by artist Christophe Canato. 
Artist Christophe Canato was commissioned by the City for the third instalment of artwork for the Inside-Out Billboard, displaying series of diverse and engaging contemporary artworks by Western Australian artists.
Canato is a professional artist working in the medium of photography and was the winner of the Popular Choice Award at the 2014 Community Invitation Art Award.
The artwork called ‘Pandora’s Box’ was developed following a series by Canato called ‘Ricochet’. The series consists of darkly lit still life photographs representing subjects brimming with a sense of uncertainty and mystery, in this case evoking the fascination and imagination that lies within the mind of a child.
‘Pandora’s Box’ is an image of a young woman, in a dark forest, in front of a gently lit canopy of leaves, kneeling and holding a box. She is back-lit and glows in the dark forest. 
The artwork changes throughout the day depending on the light and position of the sun. In the morning the scene appears as a very dark landscape with only the outline visible of the girl in the forest - creating a sense of tension and mystery. As the sun moves to the west further details of the forest leaves and canopy appear, finally at twilight the billboard begins to glow and the scene is revealed in fine detail. 
Canato’s artwork will remain on display until September 2015. The next artist to be commissioned to produce an artwork will be selected from artists taking part in the Community Art Exhibition in June 2015.

NEXUS, solo exhibition, Rockingham Arts Centre, 7-24 November 2024

  Je suis heureux de vous annoncer ma deuxième exposition, NEXUS, en Novembre, j’espère vous y voir nombreux. Nexus est une rétrospective ...