$2.5 million for Espace Riopelle

$2.5 million for Espace Riopelle

DAY

Quebec City will contribute to the Espace Riopelle project at the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec. She will donate $2.5 million for the development of a room that will house the 40-meter fresco Tribute to Rosa Luxemburg of the Quebec painter.

Considered the masterpiece of Jean Paul Riopelle, this series of 30 paintings is currently exhibited in the Pierre Lassonde pavilion. The artist produced this fresco in his studio on Île-aux-Oies after learning of the death of his former companion, the American painter Joan Mitchell in November 1992.

Property of Loto-Québec and exhibited at the Casino de Hull, it was acquired by the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec in 1996.

The future Espace Riopelle should open its doors in 2025.

“&nbsp ;I am very proud that the City can contribute to keeping the works of The Tribute to Rosa Luxemburg alive over time.in an enchanting setting which will be strictly reserved there. People will come from everywhere to contemplate our chance to have this collection here, in our city,” said Mayor Bruno Marchand Monday in a press briefing, in front of the work of Jean Paul Riopelle.

Discussions had been ongoing since December between the City of Quebec and the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec. 

Mayor Bruno Marchand, said Jean-Luc Murray, director general of the National Museum of Fine Arts of Quebec, was sensitive to this participation. Newly in office, he quickly expressed his interest in seeing the City participate in this project.

Audacity

The mayor of Quebec highlighted the efforts made by all the authorities around this Espace Riopelle project.

“There have been people to believe in it and to kick down doors. Otherwise, none of this would have happened. He could have been in Montreal. He could have been in Vancouver. It could have been a hundred thousand times elsewhere”, he added, underlining the incredible vibe in Quebec, in the world of the arts. 

The General Manager du MNBAQ specifies that this 40-meter-long work, filled with symbols, will be presented in a circular fashion. 

“ It is a major work and we had to find a place for it. It would have been unfair for the patrons who contributed to this project for this work not to be well represented”, pointed out Jean-Luc Murray, during an interview. 

Glazed openings , arranged in this room of the Espace Riopelle, will allow you to see the Plains of Abraham and the St. Lawrence River.

“Riopelle painted this fresco surrounded by nature. We wanted it to be present. Donor Michael J. Audain, President of the Jean Paul Riopelle Foundation, was seduced by the audacity of this proposal. We didn't want it to be a completely closed bunker,” he said.