Ann Karine Bourdeau Leduc lives and works in Montreal/Tiohtià:ke. She holds a BFA from UQAM and an MFA from Concordia University. Her art consists primarily of sculptural installations that combine printed images and drawings with found objects and repurposed construction materials. Her installations draw on certain codes associated with archaeology, architecture, and design, while also espousing a specific context.

Through several cycles of transformation, she explores the reproducibility of images and objects by creating multiple iterations of them. The artist's environmental concerns have led her to constantly aim to develop new strategies for transforming, recycling, and reusing all the objects and materials she has accumulated over time. This process allows her to question the origin of objects and explore their pictorial and sculptural potential.

Through the use of raw materials—wood, plaster, cement, gypsum—mostly sourced from construction sites, she proposes a poetic reinterpretation of buildings and the memory of spaces, while also pondering on materiality, the environment, and the passage of time. Hailing from a family of carpenters and joiners, she favours materials that were part of her childhood. For as long as she can remember, she has been drawing and building cardboard houses with her sister. This allows her to design works that are rooted in these childhood memories while remaining connected to the construction field.