Clint Roenisch

Clint Roenisch St. Helens

Clint Roenisch's comforting neon sign may have disappeared from944 Queen Street Westafter a-decade of light, but it's not gone forever, just re-installed somewhere new, a space more well-suited to Roenisch's interests; that is motorcycles, cars, and art with presence. As is customary in urban contemporary life, neighbourhood structures are in constant, capitalist flux and more often than not, after ten plus years, the mainstays need refreshers.

Clint Roenisch

In fact, for the art world, Roenisch's move represents the end of era, as it were, on West Queen West, as he, alongside neighbouring institution, theMuseum of Contemporary Canadian Art(MOCCA) say goodbye to the West Queen West neighbourhood, both because of alooming condo development, and to go where many artists are headed these days: further west.

Clint Roenisch

For Roenisch though, in the new space, it seems that his intentions are less about re-establishing his relevance (which he has always kept in check with a sound roster of strong artists, and a strong understanding of the precarious line between saleability and conceptualism after years as a curator) and more about his desire for expansion. His new space boasts high ceilings, 3,200 square feet, and party-appropriate, front-opening garage door.

Clint Roenisch

At 190 St. Helens Avenue, the new space sits on a quiet, industrial/residential street, just west of Lansdowne and south of Bloor Street, alongside some of Toronto's most exciting commercial spaces. He's neighbours withDaniel FariaandScrap Metal Gallery, and just down the street fromMercer UnionandArsenal Toronto.

Clint Roenisch

The space's inaugural show, entitled First The Pleasure: Then The Thesis, pulls together a number of minimalist international artists including Stefan Bruggemann, Toronto's ownAleksander Hardashnakov, Jonathan Monk, Gedi Sibony, David Shrigley and Gabriel Orozco, showing off the size and scope of the new space. Group shows were cramped affairs on West Queen West, but are a rather natural curation strategy in the new warehouse space.

Clint Roenisch gallery

Following an incredibly well-attended opening on 10 July 2014, which saw cops forcing the throngs of attendees inside as they celebrated outside, it was clear that Toronto wants more of Mr. Roensich. Still, would it be too much to ask, now that he's embarked on a new life path, for him to perhaps add some more female names to his representation list -- and maybe even show them too? Just a suggestion.

Writing by Jess Carroll / Photos by Andrew Williamson


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