Monday, April 20, 2026

Joyce Wieland | Reason over Passion








Joyce Wieland
Reason over Passion
1968
Quilted cotton, 256.5 x 302.3 x 8 cm
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa


Joyce Wieland reported had high hopes for Pierre Trudeau when he became Canada’s 15th Prime Minister, in 1968. She and her then-husband Michael Snow hosted a reception for the Liberal leader at their Chambers Street loft in New York City, and were impressed by his knowledge of avant-garde cinema, dance, jazz drummers, etc. 

Inspired by Trudeau's notion of “Reason over passion” ("that is the theme of all my writing,” he declared) she promptly stitched the phrase into this celebrated quilt work, which ended up in Trudeau’s home (stories differ as to whether the work was gifted to, or purchased by him.). A decade later it was almost destroyed in a domestic spat [see below].

The following year Wieland released a film of the same name, which was screened in the Directors' Fortnight program at the 1970 Cannes Film Festival. The phrase (at least in online searches) is more strongly connected to her now, than to him. 

Later disillusioned by the Liberal leader, Weiland has claimed that both the party and the artwork were jokes at Trudeau’s expense. Certainly conflating reason over passion with a bedspread would seem to support her later assertion. 


“Not long after getting home, on a terrible evening full of misery and rage, I attacked a priceless quilt by Joyce Wieland, a piece of art that hung on the sitting-room wall and one that Pierre particularly loved. Stitched on the front, neatly and smugly (it seemed to me then), were his favourite words: “Reason over Passion.” I seized a pair of scissors and cut the words off. Taking a box of pins, I then switched the words round, so they read “Passion over Reason.” I was in one of my manic phases, and I had concluded that the only way to make Pierre Trudeau listen was to desecrate art.”
- Margaret Trudeau, Changing My Mind, 2010



General Idea | Passion over Reason







 


General Idea
Passion over Reason
Toronto, Canada: Self-published, 1991
24 x 20.5 cm.
Open Edition


One of ten chenille and embroidery on crest-shaped felt patches produced by General Idea between 1988 and 1991. Intended as an unlimited edition, fewer than a hundred copies were made. In 2010, a second iteration of 100 were released as a fundraiser for the  Kunsthalle Basel.

The crest combines the ziggurat form with a phallic take on the fleur de lis.

Felix Partz produced a first series of Ziggurat paintings in the late sixties before the inception of the group, which were later absorbed into the General Idea oeuvre. The motif appears again in the Miss General Idea’s venetian blind dress and the 1984 Miss General Idea Pavilion.

It’s unclear if the title was a response to Joyce Weiland’s Reason over Passion, from 1968 [see next post].

“We were brought up in the post-war period, and we were interested in the idea of progress and images of progress.  We didn’t believe in progress as a concept.  We were interested in how it dominated the post-war imagination.  If you look at business magazines from the ’50s, for example Fortune Magazine, the advertising features a lot of skyscrapers, which are always stepped.  This image of the ziggurat always dominates.  It is an image of power or even male power […] the ziggurat came to represent the future, the strength of progress and technological change and the male power of construction.”

-  AA Bronson, interviewed by Hans Ulrich Obrist






Sunday, April 19, 2026

Bas Jan Ader











Bas Jan Ader was born on this day in 1942. He disappeared at sea thirty-three years later. 




Friday, April 17, 2026

Dave Dyment | Incomplete Open Cube







Dave Dyment
Incomplete Open Cube
Sackville, Canada: Self-published, 2026
15 x 15 cm.
Edition of 25 signed and numbered copies


Last month Jon Clayton hosted the International Sackville Cube Day event as part of the book launch for his new graphic novel Nowhere. Poet Geordie Miller read, singer Julie Doiron performed and a dozen or so visual artists displayed cube related art works. 

My contribution was a take-away envelope containing an image of the cube that I took on our second visit to the town, when the fully automated refrigerator building was not yet complete.




Takako Saito: Schachspiele + Performance 1989




Takako Saito
Takako Saito: Schachspiele + Performance 1989
Wiesbaden, Germany: Harlekin Art, 1990
24 pp., 14.8 x 12 cm., softcover
Edition size unknown


Twelve perforated postcards, each with an image of the artist with added cartoon speech bubbles with space for the owner to add their own texts before sending. 

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Takako Saito | Schachspiele, Spiele und Bücher







Takako Saito
Schachspiele, Spiele und Bücher
Weissbaden, Germay: Harlekin Art, 1989 
[2] pp., 10 x 16.5 cm., 
Edition size unknown


An announcement card in the shape of a Saito’s signature bowler hat for an exhibition of chess games, games and books that ran from the 23rd of June to the 28th of July, 1989. 




Maddie Lycheck