Lina Vandal

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Lina Vandal

Lina Vandal

Born in Montreal in 1952.

Introduced very early to the visual arts by an architect father, she frequented

throughout her childhood the Saturday morning classes offered at the École des Beaux-arts

from Montreal. Subsequently, her curiosity and her passion for the Arts

allowed her to explore over the years a multitude of forms of expression

as diverse as weaving, ceramics, modeling, drawing,

painting, dance, theater and circus arts.

It was in 1999, after a career in advertising, that she decided to devote herself

more particularly in drawing and painting by signing up for workshops

of live models at the Saydie Bronfman Center. The human body and face

quickly become the central subject of her research and her

interest, because of the richness of what they evoke and the intensity of

the emotion they arouse in her.

She sees in the human body a place of expression carrying several

dualities: masculine/feminine, living/non-living, subject/object, shadow/light,

strength/fragility, interiority/environment, resistance/abandonment,

singularity/plurality.

Her paintings seek to represent the human in it’s imperfect beauty,

mysterious and spiritual by placing it in dreamlike environments,

unreal or not clearly defined but which often evoke landscapes and

towns she frequented. She paints raw textures, often

optical illusion, from which she brings out bodies or faces, most

time evoking a certain ambiguity. Ambiguity of place, genre,

time, intention, leaving the observer the freedom to interpret as he pleases

the story presented to him.

I am fascinated by the visual plurality of

big cities that I like to explore on foot when I

visit them. I am very attached to my neighborhood

Mile end, a colorful and effervescent district.

A neighborhood in

mutation whose nature intrigues me. Her

infrastructure and urban markers are

tattooed, scratched, sometimes even fractured and

silently bear witness to the passage of time

and humans. An environment constantly in

movement, an enigmatic environment that

resonate with me and that I take pleasure in

reinterpreting in my own way. »

She uses acrylic, pigments, charcoal, pastels, collage and

spray cans (mixed media) on canvas. She also transfers onto canvas

images that she has created and reworked, such as photos or drawings.  She likes to draw, which explains the use of

charcoal to draw faces and bodies.

She studied with Sophie Jodoin, Jacques Clément, Olivier Longpré and JeanLouis Émond at the Saydie Bronfman School in Montreal from 1999 to 2006.

Installed for 7 years in a Mile End workshop, she devotes herself fulltime to her artwork.