Magazin'art, 11th year, summer 1999
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Expressing Creative Tension and Spontaneity "Sylvie Cloutier leads a double life: artist and art teacher. This duality overflows into her art.
Over the years, theory or rather certain similarities, e.g., the use of shape, colour or transparency, have left a coherent, well-defined corpus. Sylvie always begins with a geometric approach - the rational side of her personality. However, at this stage, Sylvie's work resembles collages rather than sketches. There is texture, an architecture of sorts. As she once said in an interview, the architecture in her art starts with a drawing but is overtaken by the poetic side of her personality. |
Like a puzzle, the pieces finally come together in one painting. Throughout te process, there is a tension that the artist herself struggles to describe. In order to retain this tension, she works vertically, that is, she stands in front of the piece that is lying on the ground.
There is a surge, but in the creative fireworks, drippings soon follow. As a result, her art exudes tremendous emotional intensity in wich discord merges with harmony as if inspired by an inner music that haunts the studio. Cloutier's art seems like an elegant dance yet there is something monumental about it, too. Current or future owners of Sylvie cloutier's paintings will no dought agree." J.-C. Leblond |