Melanie Janisse-Barlow
Born in Canada, Melanie Janisse-Barlow has work in private and public collections around the world. She is represented by Youn Contemporary in Canada and has shown work at Art Toronto, Foire Plural, Art Palm Beach, and Art Busan. She has large works installed permanently in the Fisher Building and in Chroma, Detroit. Her ongoing Poet Series, a self-curating series of portraits of Canadian poets, has reached 80 pieces and has gained national media coverage in Canada and the US. Ship of Fools, an installation on a 24-foot Shark sailboat, was performed in Toronto and on Lake St. Clair for the Media City Film Festival. Commissioned works include a portrait of The Honourable Justice Edward Ducharme for the Superior Court of Ontario chambers. She has authored two collections of poetry: Orioles in the Oranges (Guernica, 2009), and Thicket (Palimpsest Press, 2019). She has exhibitions upcoming in Mexico City and Austin, and is completing her first novel, funded by the Canada Council for the Arts. She lives and works in Windsor, Ontario.
ARTIST STATEMENT
Many of us have a Rolodex of images that we have come across that are emblazoned into our memory. These images are important scenes from our everyday life or even powerful images that call out to us from the ether of our cellular devices. We may not remember even whether one is a photograph we have seen, or an impression that has come from life itself. Either way, their power and their aura render them larger than themselves. We return to them often, because they are images possibly thousands of images that please us. They speak to us in a way we may not even be able to articulate.
Windsor, Ont.-based painter Melanie Janisse-Barlow has her own cache of these images. They have haunted her artistic practice, stuck in her consciousness, created throughways into her painting practice. The act of bringing them from the privacy of archive and restoring them to a place of seeming authenticity is the slight-of-hand process Janisse-Barlow explores in Shell Games, her new series of paintings to be shown at Art Toronto.,2022, and at Galerie Youn for a solo exhibition on December, 2022.
“It always struck me that there is a lot to be said about what is fleeting, what is permanent, what is lost, and what is gained,” Janisse-Barlow said of the process of taking these largely contextless but oddly adjoining images and rendering them in acrylics on canvas and panel essentially implicating the aura German critic Walter Benjamin foresaw in the ever accelerating age of technological reproduction of art by way of reencapsulating them from the ether of her mind into painted works.
Patrons browsing in a gallery form the backdrop as a figure approaches the viewer in a platinum swirl of sequined fringe. A poet sits in quiet contemplation, her gaze cast down through the round frames of her eyeglasses, a tarot card tattoo visible on her bare arm. The artist herself, in an extravagant floral print outfit, shares a light moment with a barista in a café. A flower planter studded with countless seashells looms over the viewer from its perch on a grand American porch on Mackinac Island. The images are disparate, but oddly connected. They are bread crumbs to something.
“I have a difficult time explaining why these images are the images,” Janisse-Barlow says while discussing the series. “There is a vibration to them an atmosphere. They all strangely resonate together in my mind along some continuum of colour, shape, sensation, tone, theme. I like that the theme is slippery.
That slippage is part of what draws me to the urgency to create some analog for them.”
The paintings that comprise Shell Games exude a presence, even if that presence is flawed; they examine the plurality and reproducibility of images as they pass effortlessly and instantaneously through our experiences, our devices and our minds. Janisse-Barlow explores what happens if she stops that process and uses the slower medium of painting to reinvigorate the image, in effect restoring these I’mpressions to the transient and liminal aura of the authentic.
2021