Showing posts with label University of Toronto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label University of Toronto. Show all posts

13/09/25

Kent Chan, Alvin Luong, Solveig Qu Suess @ Art Museum at the University of Toronto - "Dwelling Under Distant Suns" Exhibition Curated by Yantong Li

Dwelling Under Distant Suns
Kent Chan, Alvin Luong, Solveig Qu Suess
Curated by Yantong Li 
Art Museum at the University of Toronto
September 4 – December 20, 2025

Kent Chan, Future Tropics, 2023-24
Kent Chan
Future Tropics, 2023–24 
Film still composite 
Two-channel video 
© Kent Chan. Image courtesy of the artist

Alvin Luong, Endowment, 2024
Alvin Luong 
Film still of Endowment, 2024 
Video, 11:05 min 
© Alvin Luong. Courtesy of the artist

Solveig Qu Suess
Solveig Qu Suess 
Film still of Holding Rivers, Becoming Mountains. Video, 2025
© Solveig Qu Suess. Courtesy of the artist

The Art Museum at the University of Toronto presents the exhibition Dwelling Under Distant Suns, curated by Master of Visual Studies in Curatorial Studies graduate student Yantong Li, which addresses environmental precarity by highlighting the struggle to make visible the increasingly unpredictable landscape.

Works by Kent Chan, Alvin Luong, and Solveig Qu Suess

Dwelling Under Distant Suns grapples with the challenge of representing our planet’s growing climate crisis, especially environmental dangers that feel distant or out of sight. The artists in the exhibition turn to speculative storytelling and myth-making to bring a sense of immediacy to these realities, while interrogating the way we currently consume media about environmental precarity with a focus solely on the spectacular and dramatic, with little patience for things that require more time and attention.
“On a recent trip back home to Yunnan, I was struck by the fact that I could no longer see snow and ice on the peaks of the Cangshan Mountain, which has maintained frozen terrain for decades,” says Yantong Li. “An unstable climate has made the mountainous environment precarious, with native vegetation in gradual decline and water cycles becoming unpredictable. This sight was a direct visualization of climate-induced catastrophe — sensed only in longue durée — and I wanted to locate methodologies to represent these disparate sites across time and space. I included film-based works in this exhibition because representations of catastrophe across digital media have wreaked havoc on our attention span, rendering viewers as passive voyeurs. All the film works in the exhibition require lengthy sit-ins, denying immediate consumption but also extending an invitation to viewers to engage in a dialogue, with the only prerequisite being the willingness to sit with it.”

Alvin Luong,  Cyanide Debt, 2025
Alvin Luong 
Cyanide Debt, 2025
Video still
© Alvin Luong. Courtesy of the artist

The exhibition features a new commissioned film by Alvin Luong, Cyanide Debt (2025), which restages and reimagines a mass cyanide poisoning in Bangkok as the artist creates a weak solution of cyanide using cassava, Thailand’s primary agricultural export. 


Solveig Qu Suess
Solveig Qu Suess 
Film still of Holding Rivers, Becoming Mountains 
Video, 2025
© Solveig Qu Suess. Courtesy of the artist

Solveig Qu Suess
Solveig Qu Suess 
Film still of Holding Rivers, Becoming Mountains 
Video, 2025
© Solveig Qu Suess. Courtesy of the artist

Solveig Qu Suess also uses archival materials that complicate our understanding of historical events by meditating on the downstream politics of hydroelectric development affecting the Mekong River. 


Kent Chan
Kent Chan
Film still of Future Tropics, 2023–24
Two-channel video 
© Kent Chan. Image courtesy of the artist

Kent Chan, Solar Orders
Kent Chan
Film still of Solar Orders, 2024
Two-channel video, 17’41
© Kent Chan

In Kent Chan’s work, the artist pushes observations of tropical expansion due to the climate crisis to extreme ends, arriving upon a fictional scenario of a future global tropic that blurs geographies, histories, and cultures.

ART MUSEUM AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
Justina M. Barnicke Gallery
7 Hart House Circle, Toronto, Ontario M5S 3H3

12/09/25

Earthwork Exhibition @ Art Museum at the University of Toronto - Curated by Mikinaak Migwans

Earthwork 
Alex Jacobs-Blum, Art Hunter, BUSH Gallery, Edward Poitras, Faye HeavyShield, Lisa Myers, Michael Belmore, Mike MacDonald, Protect the Tract Collective
Curated by Mikinaak Migwans 
Art Museum at the University of Toronto
September 4 – December 20, 2025

Faye HeavyShield
Clan (performance documentation), 2019 
Courtesy of Blaine Campbell

BUSH gallery
BUSH gallery 
MOMENTA 2021
Photo by Jean-Michael Seminaro 

The Art Museum at the University of Toronto presents the exhibition Earthwork, which reassesses the art historical framing of the “earthwork” popularized by the land art movement of the 1960s and ’70s, reclaiming it from an Indigenous perspective. It is curated by Mikinaak Migwans, Curator of Indigenous Contemporary Art at the Art Museum and Assistant Professor in the Department of Art History at the University of Toronto.

Works by Alex Jacobs-Blum, Art Hunter, BUSH Gallery, Edward Poitras, Faye HeavyShield, Lisa Myers, Michael Belmore, Mike MacDonald, Protect the Tract Collective

Earthwork redefines a term that until now has referred to a type of artistic practice associated within the larger conceptual framework of land art. In this exhibition, Mikinaak Migwans shifts our understanding of earthwork to refer to a way of working, rather than the making of singular objects — similar to the term “beadwork.” With a Canada-wide scope emphasizing the Great Lakes region, the exhibition takes as its starting point an understanding of ancestral earthworks less as monuments and more as sites of ongoing stewardship and care. It considers multiple layers of engagement with the land, including a history of land defense movements, medicine walks, and ancestral practices of prescribed burns, alongside contemporary artworks as creative acts of relational intervention.
“Redefining earthwork in this way helps us think about land as part of the cycles of life and death, rather than eternal monuments outside of time,” says Mikinaak Migwans. “It also helps us to see the huge labour investment that goes into maintaining relations on the land, getting away from this idea that the natural is something opposite to the human. Indigenous connections to land, especially, have been erased in colonial accounts that talk about a natural environment that is ‘virgin,’ ‘untouched,’ and in this way, unclaimed. But recent scholarship is starting to show that North America’s ecosystems were carefully cultivated and maintained by Indigenous Peoples. They’ve quite literally shaped the landscape through generations.” 
Art Hunter
Art Hunter 
Untitled (Controlled burn at Kay-nah-chi-wah-nung mounds), 2023
Digital print
Photo courtesy of the artist

Art Hunter
Art Hunter 
Untitled (Controlled burn at Kay-nah-chi-wah-nung mounds), 2023
Digital print
Photo courtesy of the artist

Central to the exhibition is photo and video documentation by Art Hunter of land stewardship practices at the ancestral Kay-Nah-Chi-Wah-Nung Historical Centre, a national historic site and one of the most significant places of early habitation and ceremonial burial in Canada located in northwestern Ontario. Art Hunter’s description of the Anishinaabe community’s controlled burn and other processes to maintain the site’s special ecology served as the inspiration point for Earthwork. 

Michael Belmore
Michael Belmore
drift, 2025 
Steel, wood, 2.43 m x 9 m x 4.5 m
Photo courtesy of the artist.

Michael Belmore
Michael Belmore
drift, 2025 
Steel, wood, 2.43 m x 9 m x 4.5 m
Photo courtesy of the artist

Internationally recognized artist Michael Belmore will create a new piece in his snow fence series, which will be on view from November 2025 through March 2026—following the seasonal cycle rather than the exhibition cycle. 

A new audio work by independent curator and artist Lisa Myers helps visitors think about land relations through walking and listening. 

Other featured artists are #BUSH Gallery (Gabrielle L’Hirondelle Hill, Peter Morin, Tania Willard), Alex Jacobs-Blum, Faye HeavyShield, Mike MacDonald, Edward Poitras, and Protect the Tract Collective

The exhibition offers visitors a printed Engagement Guide, to better connect with the works on view by sharing specific histories and information in an accessible way.

ART MUSEUM AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
University of Toronto Art Centre
University College, 15 King’s College Circle, Toronto, Ontario M5S 3H7