Sorel Cohen is a Canadian photographer and visual artist currently living and working in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. She was represented by Donald Browne Gallery in Montreal until the gallery closed its doors in 2016.[1] [2]

Sorel Cohen
Born1936
EducationConcordia University
Movementconceptual art, feminist art
AwardsDuke and Duchess of York Prize in Photography, 1988
Websitehttps://sorel-cohen.squarespace.com/

Biography

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Sorel Cohen was born in 1936, in Montreal, Quebec, to parents of Ukrainian and Polish descent. Cohen pursued post-secondary education in Montreal, earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Concordia University in 1974, as well as a Masters of Fine Arts in 1979.[3] Her Masters thesis examined feminist influences on art in the 1970s,[4] and her work has continued to be shaped by her feminist values.[5]

Style

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Sorel Cohen has worked extensively with portraiture, both behind and in front of the camera. The majority of her work has a focus on both autobiographical works as well as feminist works. In the 1970s, Cohen began experimenting by combining photography with performance art, which was a relatively new idea at the time and soon became known for this.[6] Cohen often combines the use of this performance art with a slow shutter speed, creating a blurred aesthetic. By displaying these photographs in a series, the viewer feels a sense of time passing through them. Cohen draws inspiration from all forms of art, from painting to sculpture, to performance in her photographic work. Although Cohen's work comes from personal experience, she gives her photographs a quality that allows for interpretation, giving them an almost universal meaning.[7] Cohen has produced an extensive collection of work that comes from a perspective of psychoanalysis.[8]

Photographic themes

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Feminism

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Cohen’s feminist stance in her art was triggered by an interview between Lucy Lippard and Judy Chicago which she read in Artforum. She explains in her master’s thesis: “I realized then, that if I was going to be making artworks for the rest of my life it had better have something to do with me as a person, and in particular, as a woman.”[9] Cohen used photography to combat stereotypes of women, as well as subvert society's beliefs around a what a woman's role is. By placing herself both behind and in front of the camera, Cohen presents a commentary on the representation of women in these roles.[3]

Absence and psychoanalysis

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A published book featuring her work Divans maudits (with a text by Gérard Wacjman) shows how Cohen was strongly influenced by psychoanalytical perspectives. Some her most well-known work features primarily empty beds and couches. The photographs carry another strong theme that is found in many of Cohen’s works as well, the theme/idea of absence. By photographing these empty couches and beds, objects that are primarily only seen as important when they are full of people or things, Cohen aims to capture what is missing.[8]

Notable works and collections

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The Grid (1975-1976)

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This series of muslin sculptures echoes the grid as an emblem of modernism.[10] The handcrafted quality of the fabric sculptures however recalls traditional women's work and defies the modernist and masculine pursuit of uniformity and repetition.[11] From the sculptures in The Grid series, the artist also creates contact prints on canvas using techniques such as cyanotype and Van Dyke brown. When sewn together, these prints replicate the sculptural works in a 1:1 scale, resembling a "shadow".[12] This series thus marks a transition between the artist's sculptural and photographic practice.

Le rite matinal (1977)

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In 1977, Cohen begins a series of works (color photographs, video, cyanotypes) based on the action of making a bed.[13] Among these, the series of photographs Le rite matinal shows the artist performing this action repeatedly in front of the camera with an impression of movement obtained by a slow shutter speed and a long exposure time. By performing this banal action in front of the camera, the artist links women's domestic work with their artistic work, often neglected in art history.[14]

The Shape of a Gesture (1978)

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The series The Shape of a Gesture (originally titled Domestic Activity as Painterly Gesture[13]) shows the artist in action as she cleans a window with a colored cloth. This work refers to abstract expressionist painting by substituting the flat surface of the painting with that of the window and subverting the painterly gesture through a domestic activity traditionally reserved for women.[15]

After Bacon / Muybridge (1980)

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In After Bacon / Muybridge, Cohen looks at the work of painter Francis Bacon (artist) and uses photographic methods, such as long exposure and slow shutter speed to achieve a blurred effect. In this collection, Cohen also references the work of Eadweard Muybridge, who pioneered the study of motion in photography. Cohen appropriates these works from major male figures in art history from a feminist perspective in a way that is reminiscent of the conceptual work of Sherrie Levine around the same time.[16]

An Extended and Continuous Metaphor (1983-1986)

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With the series An Extended and Continuous Metaphor, Cohen abandons the sequential or grid form in favor of hierarchically organized polyptychs, some reminiscent of Flemish altarpieces.[17] The photographs show the artist simultaneously performing the roles of artist, model, and viewer through multiple exposures in an all-black space. This non-space refers to an idealized conception of the artist's studio: to that effect, the title of the series alludes to the painting The Painter's Studio: A real allegory summing up seven years of my artistic and moral life by Gustave Courbet (1855).[10]

Wounds of Experience (1995–1996)

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This collection features a series of nine photographs exploring themes of absence and the relationship between psychoanalyst and patient, through depictions of psychoanalyst offices.[8]

Divans Dolorosa (2008)

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This collection features photographs of empty psychoanalyst consultation rooms of in Quebec. The focus of these photographs are the empty couches (or divans), allowing Cohen to present the idea of absence as something that is wholly present in the scene. Like Wounds of Experience this series is characterized by the inclusion of text, with words inscribed below each of the photographs referring to different symptoms as described by psychoanalysts.[18]

Lacrimosa (2010)

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Presented as a sequel to Divans Dolorosa, this collection features photographs of handkerchiefs with psychoanalytical descriptions attached to them.[19]

Exhibitions

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Sorel Cohen has had her work exhibited both nationally and internationally over the past three decades. Her work has been featured in both solo and group exhibitions.[3]

Solo exhibitions

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Canada

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Year Gallery City
1977 Galerie Mira Godard Montreal, Quebec
1979 Nova Gallery Vancouver, British Columbia
1980 Eye Level Gallery Halifax, Nova Scotia
Mercer Union Toronto, Ontario
1981 Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Queen's University Kingston, Ontario
1983 Galerie Optica Montreal, Quebec
S.L. Simpson Gallery Toronto, Ontario
1984 Southern Alberta Art Gallery Lethbridge, Alberta
1986 Musee d'art contemporain de Montreal Montreal, Quebec
1987 Presentation House Gallery North Vancouver, British Columbia
1988 Toronto Photographer's Workshop Toronto, Ontario
1989 Wynick/Tuck Gallery Toronto, Ontario
1990 Dazibao Montreal, Quebec
1991 Wynick/Tuck Gallery Toronto, Ontario
1992 Galerie Samuel Lallouz Montreal, Quebec
1993 Wynick/Tuck Gallery Toronto, Ontario
Galerie Vu Quebec, Quebec
1996 Galerie Samuel Lallouz Montreal, Quebec
1997 Wynick/Tuck Gallery Toronto, Ontario
1999 La Tranchefile Montreal, Quebec
2000 The Koffler Gallery Toronto, Ontario
2004 Dazibao Montreal, Quebec
2008, 2010 Galerie Donald Browne Montreal, Quebec
2021 VOX, centre de l'image contemporaine Montréal, Québec

International

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Year Gallery City/Country
1981 49th Parallel New York, New York, US
1983 Institute for Art and Urban Resources, MoMA PS1 New York, New York, US
1984 Services culturels du Quebec Paris, France
1985 Northlight Gallery, Arizona State University Tempe, Arizona, US
1994 Les Ateliers Nadar Marseilles, France
2003 Centre culturel canadien Paris, France

Group exhibitions

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Canada

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Year Exhibition Gallery City
1973 Les moins de 35 ans Saidye Bronfman Centre / Galerie de la SAPQ / Casa Loma / Galerie Espace / Média-Gravures / Musée du Québec / Pavillon Pierre-Boucher, UQTR Montréal / Quebec / Trois-Rivières, Quebec
1975 ARTFEMME'75 Saidye Bronfman Centre / Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal / Powerhouse Montreal, Quebec
1982 Art et féminisme Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal Montreal, Quebec
1983 Photographie actuelle au Québec Saidye Bronfman Centre Montreal, Quebec
1984 L'Art pensé, Congrés international d'esthétique Université de Montréal Montreal, Quebec
Edge and Image Concordia University Art Gallery Montreal, Quebec
Production and Axis of Sexuality Walter Phillips Gallery Banff, Alberta
Reflections National Gallery of Canada Ottawa, Ontario
1986 Songs of Experience National Gallery of Canada Ottawa, Ontario
1989 Taking Pictures Presentation House Gallery North Vancouver, British Columbia
Le geste oublié Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal Montreal, Quebec
Incorporation Galerie d'art Lavalin Montreal, Quebec
1989-1990 The Zone of Conventional Practice and Other Real Stories Galerie Optica Montreal, Quebec (travelling)
1991 Un archipel de désir: les artistes du Québec et la scene internationale Musée du Québec Quebec, Quebec
Practicing Beauty Art Gallery of Hamilton Hamilton, Ontario
1992 Exposition rétrospective Galerie Optica Montreal, Quebec
1993 The Historic Female Galerie 111 Montreal, Quebec
Empowering the World Carleton University Art Gallery Ottawa, Ontario
1994 Quotation Winnipeg Art Gallery Winnipeg, Manitoba
Contemporary Canadian Works The Art Gallery of North York Toronto, Ontario
1996 Found Missing: Archival Photographs and the New Historicity Gallery 44 Toronto, Ontario
1997 Here's Looking at Me Kid Art Gallery of North York Toronto, Ontario
1998 The Word in Art Art Gallery of North York Toronto, Ontario
2012 Art Histories[20] VOX, centre de l'image contemporaine Montreal, Quebec
2016-2017 Elles Photographes Montreal Museum of Fine Arts Montreal, Quebec
2017 Photography in Canada: 1960–2000[21] National Gallery of Canada Ottawa, Ontario

International

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Year Exhibition Gallery City/Country
1983 New Images: Contemporary Quebec Photography 49th Parallel Gallery New York, New York, US
1985 Visual Facts: Photography and Video by Nine Canadian Artists Third Eye Centre Glasgow, Scotland (travelling)
1986 50 Years of Modern Colour Photography, 1936-1986 Photokina Cologne, Germany
Doppleganger/Cover Aorta Gallery Amsterdam, Holland
1987 Figures The Cambridge Darkroom England (travelling)
1989 Montréal '89 CREDAC Ivry-sur-Seine, France
1990 Odalesque Jayne Baum Gallery New York, New York, US
1991 The Photographic Image: Photo-Based Works 49th Parallel Gallery New York, New York, US
1997 a little object Centre for Freudian Analysis and Research London, England
Virtue and Vice: Derivations of Allegory in Contemporary Photography International Photography Research; Site Gallery Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Sheffield, England (travelling)
2008 Wild Signals Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart Stuttgart, Germany

[22][3][19][23]

Awards

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Sorel Cohen was awarded the prestigious Duke and Duchess of York Photography Prize, by the Canada Council in 1988.[4]

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Sorel Cohen has been a member of various arts councils throughout her career. Most notably the Canada Council for the Arts, from 1990-1997. Cohen was also Ministère des Affaires culturelles du Québec in 1992. From 1979-1989 Cohen was a member of the Board of Directors for the Galerie Optica in Montreal.[22] Cohen has been a guest lecturer at various Canadian Universities.[24]

References

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  1. ^ "Sorel Cohen - Biography".
  2. ^ "Le Belgo perd un autre espace". Le Devoir (in French). 20 January 2016. Retrieved 2021-12-13.
  3. ^ a b c d "Sorel Cohen". Canadian Artists of Eastern European Origin: An Introductory Guide. Concordia University. 1998.
  4. ^ a b "Sorel Cohen".
  5. ^ Heller, Jules; Heller, Nancy G. (2013). North American women artists of the twentieth century : a biographical dictionary. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-315-05168-0. OCLC 1086457528.
  6. ^ "Galerie La Castiglione".
  7. ^ Cook, Sharon Anne; McLean, Lorna R.; O'Rourke, Kate, eds. (2001). Framing Our Past: Canadian Women's History in the Twentieth Century. Canada: McGill-Queen's University Press. pp. 70–71. ISBN 0-7735-2172-0.
  8. ^ a b c Cohen, Sorel; Wajcman, Gerard (2003). Divans Maudits. Paris: Centre Culturel Canadien. ISBN 1-896940-26-9.
  9. ^ Tuer, Dot (2022). "The Haunting of Memory in the Photographic Practice of Sorel Cohen". Sorel Cohen: Conceptual Metaphors. Montreal: VOX, centre de l'image contemporaine. p. 133. ISBN 9782981878410.
  10. ^ a b Graham, Robert (1986). "Veiled Relations: The Fabric of Sorel Cohen's Work". Sorel Cohen… et les ateliers de femmes (où se jouent les regards). Montreal: Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal. p. 27.
  11. ^ "Sorel Cohen at VOX, Centre de l'Image Contemporaine". www.artforum.com. Retrieved 2022-02-14.
  12. ^ Roger, Claudine (2022). "Bio-bibliography". Sorel Cohen: Conceptual Metaphors. Montreal: VOX, centre de l'image contemporaine. p. 158. ISBN 9782981878410.
  13. ^ a b Lang Rosenberg, Avis (1979). "Sorel Cohen, Nova Gallery, Vancouver, October 2 to 20". Vanguard. 8, 10: 26–27.
  14. ^ "Richard Rhodes on Sorel Cohen". www.artforum.com. Retrieved 2021-12-13.
  15. ^ Cohen, Sorel (1979). "Sorel Cohen". The Winnipeg Perspective 1979. Photo/Extended Dimensions : Barbara Astman, Sorel Cohen, Suzy Lake, Arnaud Maggs, Ian Wallace. Winnipeg: The Winnipeg Art Gallery. p. 14.
  16. ^ Jean, Marie J. (2022). "To Show a Doing". Sorel Cohen: Conceptual Metaphors. Montreal: VOX, centre de l'image contemporaine. p. 40. ISBN 9782981878410.
  17. ^ Nemiroff, Diana (2005). "Performances for the Camera: Montreal and Toronto in the 1970s and 1980s". Point and Shoot: Performance and Photography. Montreal: Dazibao. p. 49.
  18. ^ "Württ. Kunstverein Stuttgart: Wild Signals - Works".
  19. ^ a b "SOREL COHEN @ donald browne".
  20. ^ "Art Histories - (Re)formulating art history's narratives". VOX. Retrieved 2021-12-13.
  21. ^ "Sorel Cohen, Suzy Lake and Susan McEachern in Conversation".
  22. ^ a b "Sorel Cohen". Archived from the original on 2017-03-16. Retrieved 2017-03-16.
  23. ^ "Württ. Kunstverein Stuttgart: Wild Signals".
  24. ^ "Sorel Cohen".
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