Ydessa Hendeles


Ydessa Hendeles, is a German-born Canadian artist-curator and philanthropist. She is also the director of the Ydessa Hendeles Art Foundation in Toronto, Canada.
A graduate of the University of Toronto, the New School of Art and the Toronto Art Therapy Institute, Hendeles earned her PhD, cum laude, from the Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis at the University of Amsterdam. In 2009, Hendeles donated 32 works of International and Canadian contemporary art to the Art Gallery of Ontario. This donation represented the most significant single gift of contemporary art in the gallery's history.

Career

The Ydessa Gallery

In 1980, Hendeles established The Ydessa Gallery in Toronto, a commercial space devoted to the presentation of Canadian contemporary art. The gallery represented such artists as Kim Adams, Shelagh Alexander, Tony Brown, FASTWÜRMS, Andreas Gehr, Rodney Graham, Noel Harding, Nancy Johnson, Ken Lum, Liz Magor, John Massey, John McEwen, Peter Hill, Sandra Meigs, Jana Sterbak, Jeff Wall and Krzysztof Wodiczko. Hendeles closed The Ydessa Gallery in 1988.

Ydessa Hendeles Art Foundation

In October 1987, Hendeles announced that she would establish a not-for-profit art foundation and that she purchased a two-storey building located at 778 King Street West in downtown Toronto as the future site of the foundation's exhibition programme. In November 1988, after extensive renovations, the 14,000-square-foot former uniforms factory became home of the Ydessa Hendeles Art Foundation, Canada's first privately supported contemporary-art exhibition space.
Hendeles launched her exhibition programme in December 1987 with Katharina Fritsch: Madonna of Lourdes, presented at the Toronto Eaton Centre. For the week leading up to Christmas, Hendeles installed Fritsch's sculpture of a small Madonna icon statue, enlarged to adult-size and rendered in bright yellow-painted Duroplast, in the middle of the pedestrian mall at the peak of its busiest shopping season. Hendeles positioned the sculpture so that it could be viewed against the background of the Church of the Holy Trinity, a historic Anglican Church around which the western side of the Toronto Eaton Centre was built.
The Ydessa Hendeles Art Foundation was formally established in 1988 with a mandate to provide a programme of contemporary-art exhibitions from a developing collection. In November 1988, the gallery space opened its inaugural show Christian Boltanski, a five-gallery exhibition of the French artist's work, including the site-specific commission Canada.
In 1996, Maclean's magazine published a profile by Sharon Doyle Driedger on Hendeles and her exhibition programme at the Ydessa Hendeles Art Foundation. In this article, Driedger noted Hendeles’s influence on the art world:
Hendeles has managed to pique the interest of the art world by collecting and showing works by such luminaries as British photographer Eadweard Muybridge and American sculptor Louise Bourgeois. “These works are sought after by any great institution in the world,” says Marcel Brisebois, director of the Montreal Museum of Contemporary Art. “She has a great eye. When she buys something, we look at her and say, ‘Oh, why is she doing so?’” Her bold aesthetic vision led ARTNews, a respected U.S. journal, to twice include her in its list of “the art world’s 50 most influential people” in 1993 and 1995—the only Canadian and one of just a handful of women. “Every museum curator who is not asleep knows about her,” says Robert Storr, a curator at New York City’s renowned Museum of Modern Art. Storr adds that for exhibitions of videos, films, photography and installations, “there is absolutely no better place in the world” than Hendeles’s foundation.

In the book Private Spaces for Contemporary Art, Peter Doroshenko described the Ydessa Hendeles Art Foundation as functioning "more like an intellectual visual arts laboratory than an art centre or private collection space," and declared its gallery "one of the most important contemporary spaces in North America."
Over a span of 25 years Hendeles curated more than 30 exhibitions at the Toronto space. Though the Ydessa Hendeles Art Foundation closed its gallery doors in 2012, it continues to function as a not-for-profit organization but now its mission and mandate are pursued “without walls.”

Exhibitions

In 2003, Hendeles guest-curated Partners, a 16-gallery exhibition for the Haus der Kunst, Munich, at the invitation of then-incoming director Chris Dercon and the new chief curator, Thomas Weski. For Partners Hendeles combined work by Diane Arbus, Maurizio Cattelan, James Coleman, Hanne Darboven, Walker Evans, Luciano Fabro, On Kawara, Paul McCarthy, Bruce Nauman, Giulio Paolini, Jeff Wall and Lawrence Weiner, together with series of photojournalistic images, anonymous vernacular photographs and antique vernacular objects. This exhibition also included Hendeles's own artwork Partners , 2002, a large-scale installation built around an archive of family-album photographs, each including the image of a teddy bear.
Partners was first shown in the group exhibition sameDIFFERENCE at the Ydessa Hendeles Art Foundation in Toronto. It was expanded as a two-gallery installation for Partners at Munich's Haus der Kunst, then remounted in Noah's Ark by the National Gallery of Canada and 10,000 Lives, the 2010 Gwangju Biennale, South Korea. It was exhibited again in 2016 at New York's New Museum in The Keeper, a group show curated by Massimiliano Gioni.
Other exhibitions include Marburg! The Early Bird! at the Marburger Kunstverein, Germany ; The Wedding at Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York ; and THE BIRD THAT MADE THE BREEZE TO BLOW at Galerie Johann König, Berlin. Her work From her wooden sleep... was shown at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, UK in 2015, curated by Philip Larratt-Smith. In 2016, Hendeles expanded and augmented From her wooden sleep… specifically for the Helena Rubinstein Pavilion for Contemporary Art at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Israel, curated by Suzanne Landau.
Hendeles is represented by Barbara Edwards Contemporary, Toronto. Her first exhibition for the gallery, Death to Pigs was presented in the fall of 2016. An exhibition catalogue for Death to Pigs was published in 2018.
In the summer of 2017, Hendeles's exhibition The Milliner's Daughter was shown at Toronto's The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, curated by Gaëtane Verna. This was the first major survey of Hendeles's work in a public museum.
In 2018, the Kunsthalle Wien mounted Death to Pigs, the first institutional retrospective of Hendeles's work in Europe. Curated by Nicolaus Schafhausen, the exhibition was spread over both floors of the Kunsthalle and included work by the artist drawn from the past decade.
Hendeles’s work, The Steeple and The People, is currently on view at the Abtei St. Bonifaz as an off-site installation in the group show Tell me about yesterday tomorrow, curated by Nicolaus Schafhausen at NS-Dokumentationszentrum München. This exhibition will be on view until August 30, 2020.

Awards and Recognition

Hendeles was inducted as a Member into the Order of Canada in 2004 and the Order of Ontario in 1998. She received a Governor General's Award in 2002 for "Outstanding Contribution in the Visual and Media Arts." She was awarded a Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal in 2002 and a Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal in 2012.
Hendeles received an Honorary Doctorate of Fine Art from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in 1996, an Honorary Doctorate of Laws from the University of Toronto in 2000 and an Honorary Doctorate of Philosophy from Philipps-Universität Marburg in 2017. She was named an Honorary Fellow of the Ontario College of Art and Design in 1998
and received an "Award of Distinction" from the Faculty of Fine Arts of Concordia University, Montreal in 2009.
Hendeles received the 2004 "Founders Achievement Award," presented by the Toronto Friends of the Visual Arts and the 2003 "Award of Distinction," from the Toronto International Art Fair. In 2007, she was named a Life Member of Art Metropole, Toronto.
The Ontario Association of Art Galleries has honoured Hendeles with multiple awards:
In 2003, The Globe and Mail, Canada's national newspaper chose Hendeles as its "Artist of the Year."

Art and Design Juries

Hendeles has served on the following art and design juries: