The Art of Yvon Goulet
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I met in the Quebequois artist Yvon Goulet (born 1956) in August of 2002, in the most unlikely of places, the party room for the 25th anniversary of the Montreal Motorcycle Club, MC Faucon, where he had an exhibit of his work. While the pieces on show were geared for the audience, i.e. largely focusing on male nudes, upon request Yvon did bring along a selection of photos of his other work. The selection he brought along showed that his subject matter ranged from overtly erotic and pornographic depictions of men such as the ones on display to complex statements on the interplay between economy, religion, politics, and sexuality.  All I can say is that I was immediately hooked and asked to visit his studio for a further look (see the Art and Artists section of my photo album).

Yvon Goulet's favorite medium is recycled corrugated advertising board, on which he superimposes images derived from photographs, frequently assembled in a collage like manner. Once the basic theme has been established, it is manipulated or enhanced through a variety of techniques, including wood cuts, lithography, etching, silk skreen technology, or the more or less focused superimposition of paint to underscore the mood of the piece.

His themes predominantly intertwine the local geography of Montreal with subject matter of a more or less explicitly erotic nature, particularly focusing on the Gay scene of
that city. At the same time, Yvon's paintings explore the possibilities
and limitations of the medium of his choice. In fact, the material
itself regularly becomes part of the theme, or is used as a springboard
to add an additional dimension to the image, such as when the text
on recycled posters is allowed to come through as if revealing a
hidden message.

The multi-dimensionality of the image is frequently increased through
the xerographic imposition of text fragments, the relevance of which
is left to the viewer more fully to explore.

A very good example of Yvon's technique is the picture of a soldier,
depicted as if standing in mid-air, an effect that is enhanced by the
surrounding splashes of color. However, upon closer inspection, the
figure seems to be positioned in the middle of the Rue Ste. Catherine,
the heart of Montreal's 'Gay ghetto', identified by the vaguely visible
photographic images of several of the architecturally unique buildings
located along that street, notably a high rise and a bank. That it should
be a bank that is depicted seems to suggest an underlying economic
theme to the painting, a possibility that is enhanced through the percent
sign visible at the bottom of the picture, and the barely legible snippets of text.

The image of the soldier itself combines elements of the erotic (suggested by the clear outline of his penis) and violent (the submachine gun apparently held at the ready), leaving it open to the viewer to interpret whether the source of the emotions raised is a paramilitary fantasy or the result of the picture's reference to the political tension inherent in the relationship between the Gay community and society at large, whereby the soldier is there to guard the economic lynchpin that is critical to society's tolerance of the inherently subversive Gay lifestyle. 

Erotic tension of a very different kind is conveyed through a painting I
refer to as the "Hitchhiker", which however has the more enigmatic
title of "Memory of a certain 4th of April, always raising the miserable
problem of living over the border." (Click on the thumbnail for a larger
image of the painting, which measures 6'x4' in the original.)

The first version of this painting I saw posed the hitchhiker alone against
a blue background, focusing solely on the erotic beauty of the young man,
n his invitingly unzipped jeans.

However, the hitchhiker is given a totally different meaning in this second painting, in which one sees the young man against the backdrop of Montreal, specifically on a bridge leading into the city. The story told by the picture gains additional complexity through the profile of the smoking male introduced at the right. That this figure is given a superhuman dimension gives the impression that he is imaginary rather than being an observer of the scene. Could he be the young man's reason for wanting to head for the city? Such an interpretation seems to be made all the more plausible by the man's pose -- smoking a cigarette, as if to pass away the time waiting in expectation of a "scene" -- and by the fact that he appears to be at least partially nude. At the same time Yvon has integrated this male with the city itself, by continuing to trace the outlines of the buildings of the cityscape across his body. I suggest that this integration of city and figure opens the possibility that rather than depicting a specific person such as the hitchhiker's lover, this figure might be just an anonymous representative of the city's Gay population, a trick or an anonymous hustler?

Again, Yvon has chosen to paint over the side of the cardboard that has been previously used, simply taping over the holes with which it was affixed to a wall and subtly leaving a few fragments of words exposed that appear to refer to one of the Quebequois political parties.

A 'humorous' extension of this integration of different layers of reality is caused by the fact that once framed and hung in my home, the picture now reflects the closed louver doors of my bedroom closet, thereby integrating the painting into the world in which I myself live.

This integration of the depicted subject matter and the underlying message of his material is even more explicit in some of Yvon's other paintings, such as those available for viewing on his
site. As he explained to me, Yvon occasionally takes particular pleasure in turning the original message on its head, such as when he uses the poster of a right wing politician as the material on which to create a particularly explicit statement about Gay sex or homosexuality in general. In other works, such manipulations are the very subject matter of the work itself, for instance in his series of Madonnas, in which he uses photographic images of famous paintings as the basis of messages about Gay life. The resultant surrealism is even more obvious in his paintings of drag queens, typically depicted as ostriches, an animal whose use is clearly ambiguous, when one considers its fundamental ugliness and then keeps in mind that the use of ostrich feathers is an extremely popular component of drag outfits.

Though he appears little known in the United States, Yvon's work has been on display internationally, both in solo exhibitions and in group show in places as far away as Tokyo, Paris, Korea and Austria, and even the United Arab Emirates.
Souvenir d'un certain 4 avril, 2002
Soldat, 2001
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