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Funeral set for Canadian painter killed in New York

A Montreal art gallery says a funeral will be held Tuesday in New York for Mathieu Lefevre, a promising Canadian painter and sculptor who died last week during a cycling accident in Brooklyn.
Promising Canadian artist Mathieu Lefevre, killed in a cycling accident in New York, was known for injecting satire, humour and a sense of playfulness in his art, such as in this oil-on-canvas piece entitled I Don't Get It. (Galerie Division)

A Montreal art gallery says a funeral will be held Tuesdayafternoonin New York for Mathieu Lefevre, a promising Canadian painter and sculptor who died last week during a cycling accident in Brooklyn.

Galerie Division, which displayed Lefevre's work, says the 30-year-old Edmonton native died last week when a flatbed truck made a right-hand turn and hit him as he rode a bike in an industrial part of Brooklyn, where he had a studio.

Hugues Charbonneau, the gallery's co-director, says the accident happened last Tuesday night. He said Lefevre was dead when the ambulance arrived.

"A lot of people were looking at him as one of the great, great upcoming artists in Canada," said Charbonneau.

"So for everybody it was a shock to lose this young man that they all liked, but also it was a shock to see this great, fantastic potential that stopped."

Known for playful, humorous art

A graduate of L'Universitdu QubecMontral, Lefevre was known for injecting a sense of playfulness, satire and humour into his pieces. Through paint, sculpture and photography, he purposefully distorted and misinterpreted language, signs, symbols and meaning relating to art history.

His works include an oil on canvas piece bearing the words I Don't Get It, and a blank canvas that has a bicycle wedged between the wooden frame in the back and the title My Bike Disguised as Contemporary Art.

"It's the first time I've encountered artworks that would make people laugh out loud," said Charbonneau. "You could not repress the laughter."

On his website, Lefevre wrote that he was "interested in images, social myths, networks and systems that surround and structure us, often in an unconscious manner."

"My pieces raise questions as to what art can be, what it is worth and what is its role in a cultural and commercial framework," said his bio.

In the spring, Lefevre represented Canada at the Prague Biennale in the Czech Republic. His works have also been displayed in Quebec City, Toronto and New York, where he was planning two upcoming shows.

"It's very hard for a Canadian artist to make it in New York City and at 30 years old he already had two shows planned," said Charbonneau.

"He was really developing a great network in New YorkHe was very ambitious."

Charbonneau said the funeral will be Tuesday at a small chapel in Brooklyn due to logistics. Memorials are also being planned for Montreal and Edmonton, where Lefevre's parents still live.

Galerie Division is now brainstorming ways to keep Lefevre's memory alive and get his work out into the public domain.

"There are great artists but there are also great [people] and Mathieu was really, really a great guy," said Charbonneau.