It’s cake | A wedding banquet like no other

At first glance, it looks like a wedding banquet. With an imposing glittering tiered cake here, chocolate tips there, small kitsch figurines included. It’s when you get closer that it gets worse…


It’s a piece of cake, an exhibition by Céline B. The Terror (with an oddly predestined name, because yes, that’s her real name) and whose curator is Joyce Yahouda, does indeed have a chilling little je-ne-sais-quoi. And we’re not talking about icing here, even though there’s plenty of it.

Think: an SOS in the icing, precisely, a handful of hair between different chocolate layers, or even a skull hidden in the cake. Not to mention this bone, these dentures, and even a (wisdom!) tooth that you will barely see hidden.

  • Here, a concealed skull

    PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

    Here, a concealed skull

  • There, a bloodied figurine

    PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

    There, a bloodied figurine

  • It's cake, an exhibition signed Céline B. The Terror and whose curator is Joyce Yahouda, has a little chilling je-ne-sais-quoi.

    PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

    It’s a piece of cakean exhibition by Céline B. The Terror and curated by Joyce Yahouda, has a little chilling je-ne-sais-quoi.

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Violent, you say? Certainly, but with a little comical side, and funny too, nuance the artist, whose work was presented for the first time in 2019, as part of Underground Art, at the Maison de la culture in Pointe-aux- Aspen. Finally, here she is again, as part of CAM (Conseil des arts de Montréal) on tour, at the Maison de la culture Maisonneuve until April 23. His installation then moved to LaSalle (from June 14 to July 14), then to the Plateau Mont-Royal (from August 24 to October 8).

Céline B. La Terror has always been interested in the status of women (she studied feminism alongside her studies in visual arts). “Domestic violence, we have to talk about it,” she explains in an interview. And that is perhaps a lighter or less heavy way, because there is also something playful about it. Very dark humour, there is no doubt about it.

It was while reading Simone de Beauvoir that the artist, who teaches visual arts at the Cégep du Vieux Montréal, was first made aware of, then “shocked” by the condition of the “second sex”. Then, with The Black Book of the Status of Women, a collective led by journalist and author Christine Ockrent, she began to make “nightmares” of it. “Femicide, security issues, war rapes, honor killings, stonings, she lists. I had nightmares about it. […] And then I stopped on the question of domestic violence, and by pushing my research, I realized how worrying it is. »


PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

Céline B. The Terror, artist

Domestic violence is found in all countries, all social groups. And it’s quite unknown. There are many more victims than you think…

Céline B. The Terror, artist

The theme of marriage imposed itself, because Céline B. La Terror adores ceremonies, especially their kitsch aesthetic. For the record, it is with her aunt Louise (pastry chef “emeritus” by profession) that she makes her very first layered cake, for the 40th anniversary of her parents’ marriage, 10 years ago. It is this same cake in height, separated by crystal champagne glasses, typical of the 1960s, which inspired the main work presented here, an almost perfect replica of the original, although it is here in acrylic .


PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

The kitsch aesthetic of wedding ceremonies particularly appeals to Céline B. La Terror.

And it is to be mistaken, to see the precision of the details of the icing (we always come back to it), in particular. In fact, all the works in the installation are acrylic-based. “Basically, I do painting and drawing, explains Céline B. La Terror. For me it’s paint work, my medium is acrylic. I do acrylic on recycled containers. “In particular cans of paint, or cans of coffee. “For me, it’s 3D painting. Super realistic painting. That’s an understatement.

The hidden objects are all recycled, she insists: family jewels, bones (precision: turkey!), even dentures (from her grandfather!). As for the skulls (yes, there are skulls) of squirrels or mice, they were given to him or were found. And yes, if you want to know everything, the wisdom tooth is his!

It’s a piece of cake is presented at the Maison de la culture Maisonneuve until April 23. The opening is this Saturday, March 25 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.


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