Hayden Beck Gallery

Art Gallery Row
Whistler, British Columbia

Bill Anderson
John Barkley
Paul Béliveau
Norah Borden
Claudia Bos
Sam Clemens
John Clinton
Jack Darcus
Steve Driscoll
Holly Farrell
Gretchen Gammell
Josh Garber
Ann Goldberg
Gabryel Harrison
Sabina Hill
Lawrence Hislop
Patrick Hughes
Patricia Johnston
James Lahey
Mark Lang
Sylvain Louis-Seize
Raymond Martin
Ken Mayer
Ross Penhall
Jeanie Riddle
David Robinson
Verona Sorensen
Jennifer Walton
John Webster
David Wilson
Thomas Wood
Rimi Yang
Les rencontres #2
2009
serigraph on archival paper, edition of 75
41 x 91 cm / 16 x 36 in
Les humanités
2008
serigraph on archival paper, edition of 75
48 x 99 cm / 19 x 39 in
Les rencontres #1
2009
serigraph on archival paper, edition of 75
66x 66 cm / 26 x 26 in
De nature transformable: étude #11
1998
xerox transfer and pencil on paper
56 x 38 cm / 22 X 15 in
De nature transformable: étude #19
1998
xerox transfer and pencil on paper
56 x 38 cm / 22 x 15 in
Paul Béliveau

Paul Béliveau was born in Quebec in 1954 and attained his Bachelor's degree in Visual Arts from Laval University in 1977; he is an expert in drawing, painting and engraving.

 

Béliveau's approach to creating art has been best described as 'pictorial archeology,' as his work references a database of literally thousands of personal and historical photographs. With painstaking accuracy, Béliveau paints culturally significant artifacts such as his own book collection, placing volumes on Friedrich, Futurism, and Van Gogh beside the poetry of Friedrich von Schiller and Beethoven. Although Béliveau says he values ambiguity (“I do not like to name or designate things”), his painting style illustrates a deep reverence for preservation, precision and clarity. This paradox of elements -- both technical and philosophical -- is what makes his work so intrinsically brilliant. Béliveau says, “I like to use painted books as a strategy against loss, even though worn books evoke the passage of time and reveal one's own finiteness.”

 

Béliveau is a member of the Royal Academy of Arts and has received several distinguished awards, including the esteemed distinction of Laureat de Québec in 2006 and the Honneur National in 2005. He has shown extensively throughout North America; has had 60 solo exhibitions in major cities such as New York, as well as being involved in an extensive number of group exhibits. His work has been widely reviewed by national and international press and is featured in several distinguished, critical publications. Beliveau's work has been collected by over 75 corporate and public institutions in both the U.S. and Canada.