Showing posts with label canadian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label canadian. Show all posts

01/09/25

Wayne Ngan @ James Cohan Gallery, NYC - "Spirit and Form" Ceramics Exhibition

Wayne NganSpirit and Form
James Cohan Gallery, New York
September 5 — October 4, 2025 

Wayne Ngan Ceramics
Wayne Ngan 
Yellow Vase with Lugs, 2016, Rust Coloured Vase, 2017 
Yukon Black Jar with Geometric Lugs, c. 2000s, 
Thin Vase with Cast Iron Glaze, 2014, White Vase, 2016 
Photo courtesy of James Cohan Gallery

Wayne Ngan (b. 1937 Guangdong, China - d. 2020 Hornby Island, BC, Canada) is recognized as one of Canada’s premier ceramic artists. Ngan’s lengthy career spanned over six decades. At the age of thirteen, Wayne Ngan moved from Guangdong, China to a vastly different British Columbia, Canada. Wayne Ngan was determined to make a name for himself as an artist despite challenging circumstances. His practice drew influence from traditional Chinese, Korean, and Japanese pottery, as well as Modernist painting, pre-Columbian and ancient Egyptian art. Ngan’s extensive knowledge of these historic precedents and his connection to the natural beauty of Canada’s Hornby Island informed his abstract sculptural forms. This exhibition at James Cohan spotlights a selection of cornerstone works, created in the 1990s and the last decade of the artist’s life.

Inspired by the back-to-the-land movement, popularized in the 1960s and 70s, Wayne Ngan centered his life and artistic practice around a harmonious relationship with the environment anchored in self-sufficiency. Ngan sourced natural materials both to build his home and studio on Hornby Island, and also to fuel his artmaking, experimenting with creating various glazes from clay like Yukon black, a deep noir glaze with high shine. Ngan was committed to exploring process, using the wealth of knowledge he gained from his regular travels to China and Japan as well as independent research to refine techniques such as raku, hakeme (coarse brush decoration), and salt glazing. Waynes Ngan built his forms by throwing and altering pieces of clay, then sculpting them together. He would occasionally fashion elements that extend outwards and generate curvilinear, spouted openings in others. Here, elegantly elongated vessels in earth tones are in dialogue with compact lidded forms, which seem to contain the energy Ngan expended to render them. Their surfaces are varied – ranging from textural and patterned to slick and smooth. According to Wayne Ngan, “There are two ways of looking at pots: one is the actual clay pot, but the real pot to me is all around me—the spirit of the pot.”

Through his work in clay, Wayne Ngan fused East and West, the past and the present, collapsing disparate chronologies and geographies into intimate, evocative objects.

CERAMIC ARTIST WAYNE NGAN

Wayne Ngan studied at the Emily Carr University of Art and Design, formerly the Vancouver School of Art. The influential teachings of British potter Bernard Leach and Soetsu Yanagi, founder of the Mingei, a Japanese folk art movement (prioritizing beauty in the everyday) resonated strongly with ceramic artists in British Columbia, including Wayne Ngan. In 1967, Wayne Ngan settled on Hornby Island, where he lived and worked until his passing in 2020.

Wayne Ngan’s work has been exhibited in numerous solo and group exhibitions since the 1960s at venues including the Vancouver Art Gallery; the National Gallery of Canada; the Gardiner Museum, Toronto; Hanart Art Gallery, Taipei, Taiwan; Nathalie Karg Gallery, New York; the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria; The Apartment in Vancouver; and the American Crafts Museum, Concord, Massachusetts, among others. Ngan’s ceramics are in notable public collections such as the Vancouver Art Gallery, the Montréal Museum of Fine Art, the Gardiner Museum, the National Palace Museum (Taipei, Taiwan), the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, the Canadian Museum of Civilization, and the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery, University of British Columbia.

JAMES COHAN
48 Walker Street, New York, NY 10013

08/07/25

Shelagh Keeley @ The Power Plant, Toronto - "Film Notebooks 1985-2017" Exhibition

Shelagh Keeley 
Film Notebooks 1985-2017
The Power Plant, Toronto
Through September 14, 2025

Shelagh Keeley
Shelagh Keeley 
Still from Jardim do Ultramar / The Colonial Garden, 
Lisbon, Portugal, 2016
Film, 180 min 
Thanks to the Museu Coleção Berardo, Lisbon, Portugal 
and ifa-Galerie Stuttgart, Germany
© Shelagh Keeley, Courtesy the artist

At the core of Shelagh Keeley’s work is a drawing practice based on an intuitive and embodied response to readings and research in poetry, politics, cinema, and architecture. The artist applies the same approach to her work with film, where the moving image becomes a drawing notebook, a travel journal, an opportunity to bring the viewer into the spaces experienced by the artist and mediated through the lens of the hand-held camera. Since 1985, Shelagh Keeley has documented on film her encounters with gardens and uniquely built environments around the world. The resulting film notebooks quietly, yet poignantly, reveal the layered histories and contexts that created them at different moments in time. From the flamboyant artificiality of a desert oasis in Las Vegas to the discipline of a Zen Garden in Kyoto, and from a colonial garden in Lisbon to the largest European zoological-botanical garden in Stuttgart, the films invite us to contemplate the complexity and intangible essence–genius loci or spirit of the place–Shelagh Keeley felt in these places. Filmed while walking for hours at a time as a flâneuse, the moving image notebooks present an invitation for the viewer to become the artist as she draws with the camera, investigating and uncovering the visceral, hidden layers of these locations.

Curator: Adelina Vlas, Head of Curatorial Affairs

THE POWER PLANT Contemporary Art Gallery
231 Queens Quay West, Toronto, Ontario M5J2G8

Shelagh Keeley: Film Notebooks 1985-2017
The Power Plant, Toronto, April 11 - September 14, 2025

07/07/25

Emmanuel Osahor @ The Power Plant, Toronto - "To dream of other places" Exhibition Curated by Adelina Vlas

Emmanuel Osahor 
To dream of other places
The Power Plant, Toronto
Through September 14, 2025

Emmanuel Osahor Art
Emmanuel Osahor
 
Room for two, 2023 
Oil on canvas 
Photo: Joseph Hartman  
© Emmanuel Osahor, courtesy The Power Plant

Emmanuel Osahor’s practice focuses on beauty as a necessity for survival, respite, and sanctuary. Known primarily for his paintings of lush, verdant gardenscapes—inspired by real and imagined locations—these works meditate upon the complicated histories of these sites that entail the domestication of lands, plants, and individuals alike. To dream of other places is the artist’s first major solo presentation in his home city of Toronto and includes paintings, drawings, prints, ceramic sculptures, and a new, site-specific photographic wallpaper. Conceived as a night garden, the exhibition presents Osahor’s work in a unique environment intended to immerse the viewer in a contemplative space where feelings of delight and sorrow coexist as reflections of human experience. The artist’s poetic yet critical approach to a subject that has been well represented throughout art history reflects a practice that is profoundly engaged with beauty, painting, and the everyday at a time when meaningful encounters with art are needed more than ever.

Curator: Adelina Vlas, Head of Curatorial Affairs

THE POWER PLANT Contemporary Art Gallery
231 Queens Quay West, Toronto, Ontario M5J2G8

Emmanuel Osahor: To dream of other places
The Power Plant, Toronto, April 11 - September 14, 2025

14/04/25

Lotus L. Kang @ 52 Walker, New York - "Already" Exhibition

Lotus L. Kang: Already
52 Walker, New York
April 11 – June 7, 2025

Lotus L Kang
LOTUS L. KANG
 
Documentation, '49 Echoes', 2025
© Lotus L. Kang, courtesy of the artist; 52 Walker, New York; 
Franz Kaka, Toronto; Commonwealth and Council, Los Angeles

52 Walker presents its fifteenth exhibition, Already, featuring work by Canadian-born, New York–based artist LOTUS L. KANG. Kang’s multidisciplinary practice includes sculpture, photography, and installation, often reflecting on ideas of impermanence, inheritance, memory, and time. In her iterative presentations, Lotus L. Kang realizes these thematic concerns by transforming materials like photographic paper and film whose light-sensitive surfaces implicate traces of surrounding architecture and bodies. At 52 Walker, the artist brings together a selection of discrete objects, wall works, and an installation staged within and around two greenhouses.

The exhibition title Already draws from an eponymous poem by Kim Hyesoon—one of forty-nine from her book Autobiography of Death (2019), which considers the Buddhist tradition of after-death rituals performed for forty-nine days during the intermediate period spanning death and rebirth.

Two modified greenhouses, respectively titled Receiver Transmitter (49 Echoes I and II), prominently mirror each other across the infrastructural pillars bisecting the gallery. Regularly utilized by Lotus L. Kang in outdoor environments as a process tool for exposing photographic film from her series Molt, the greenhouses at 52 Walker have been brought indoors, here envisioned as permeable, metabolic environments. Works titled Mesoderm punctuate the gallery walls, serving as abstracted indexes of Kang’s ongoing research and fixations, culled from her archive of found and taken photographs or from memory. To accompany the exhibition, the gallery presents a formative work from Kang’s recent Azaleas series that functions like the underbelly to Already. Azaleas II is titled after a 1925 poem by Korean modernist Kim Sowol (1902–1934). This kinetic sculpture comprises an enlarged rotary film dryer and a diaphanous length of 35 mm film depicting purple orchids that tautly wraps around its metal skeleton; the machine is placed atop a low, tatami-like base strewn with objects that reverberate within the artist’s orbit. The sculpture rotates according to a score that combines the syllabic meter of Sowol’s “Azaleas” alongside Kim Hyesoon’s “Already.”

LOTUS L. KANG was born in Toronto in 1985. She received a BFA from Concordia University, Montreal, in 2008, and an MFA from the Milton Avery School of the Arts at Bard College, New York, in 2015. 

Lotus L. Kang has exhibited widely in the United States and abroad. In 2023, she presented In Cascades, a major traveling solo exhibition co-commissioned by Chisenhale Gallery, London, and Contemporary Art Gallery, Vancouver. Further solo presentations have been held at Commonwealth and Council, Los Angeles (2024); Franz Kaka, Toronto (2023, 2020, 2017); Helena Anrather, New York (2021); Oakville Galleries, Ontario (2019); Interstate Projects, New York (2018); and Raster Gallery, Warsaw (2015), among others. Kang has also been included in several significant group exhibitions. Her installation In Cascades (2023) was featured in Even Better Than the Real Thing, the 2024 iteration of the Whitney Biennial.

Lotus L. Kang lives and works in New York. She is represented by Franz Kaka, Toronto, and Commonwealth and Council, Los Angeles.

Lotus L. Kang: Already is curated by Ebony L. Haynes and presented by 52 Walker.

52 WALKER GALLERY, NEW YORK
52 Walker Street, New York City

29/03/25

Jean-Paul Riopelle @ Vancouver Art Gallery - "Riopelle: Crossroads in Time" Retrospective Exhibition

Riopelle: Crossroads in Time
Vancouver Art Gallery
March 21 - September 1, 2025

The Vancouver Art Gallery presents the largest and most comprehensive exhibition of works by JEAN-PAUL RIOPELLE (1923–2002) in Vancouver’s history. A towering figure in Canadian art, Riopelle remains one of the nation's most significant artists of the twentieth century. Organized by the National Gallery of Canada to mark the centenary celebration of the artist's birth, Riopelle: Crossroads in Time brings together almost 100 works drawn from 20 Canadian and international private and public collections, including two paintings from the Vancouver Art Gallery’s permanent collection. Guest curated by art historian and independent researcher Dr. Sylvie Lacerte, this extensive exhibition offers an original take on Riopelle’s creative output, highlighting his commitment to freedom of expression, his experimental ways of working, and his visionary and innovative approach.

Riopelle: Crossroads in Time is part of the Jean Paul Riopelle Centenary celebrations — a global initiative of the Jean Paul Riopelle Foundation that honours the boundless creative spirit and enduring legacy of one of Canada's most iconic artists.

The celebrations were initiated in 2019 by renowned philanthropist and collector Michael Audain, Chair of the Audain Foundation, and past Chair and Cofounder of the Jean Paul Riopelle Foundation: “I consider Jean Paul Riopelle to be one of the greatest Canadian artists of all time. Over the past five years, the Jean Paul Riopelle Foundation curated an exceptional program to mark the centenary of his birth. Never before has one of our national artists been celebrated this way. We consider this to be our collective duty of memory. And we hope it will inspire others, so we may see our cultural heroes duly acknowledged for their contribution to the history of Canadian and international art. I am grateful to both the National Gallery of Canada and to the Vancouver Art Gallery for bringing this exhibition to British Columbia.” 
Anthony Kiendl, CEO & Executive Director of the Vancouver Art Gallery, reflects on the significance of this presentation and the support that made it possible to bring the exhibition to the West Coast of Canada: “We feel privileged to present Riopelle: Crossroads in Time at the Vancouver Art Gallery as the grande finale of the artist’s centenary celebrations. We are grateful to our presenting sponsor, The Audain Foundation, who made it possible to give Vancouver audiences this incredible opportunity to experience Riopelle’s remarkable work and the new perspectives that the exhibition offers.”
Spanning five decades of Riopelle’s creative journey—bringing together paintings, sculptures, drawings, prints and collages—Riopelle: Crossroads in Time recognizes the breadth of Riopelle’s imagination and the diversity of his work and interests. The exhibition is organized chronologically to highlight his far-ranging practice and explosive periods of creativity, from the popular works of his youth, such as Le perroquet vert [The Green Parrot] (1949), to his final works, including Sans titre (Autour de Rosa) [Untitled (Around Rosa)] (1992). Early works from the 1940s mark the development of a spontaneous painting style inspired by his brief time as part of Les Automatistes, an influential group of Québécois artists. By the 1950s, when Riopelle’s work was being shown all over the world, he had arrived at what became his signature “mosaic” style in which he manipulated the paint with a palette knife to create bold shapes and energetic compositions. The exhibition spotlights several stunning canvases from this defining period, including La Roue II [The Wheel II] (1956) and Chicago II (1958).

In the 1960s Jean-Paul Riopelle moved fluidly between sculpture and painting, and the exhibition features several bronze sculptures from this period, as well as paintings and prints created in the 1970s that were inspired by the imagery and atmosphere of the Far North. His final work from the 1980s and 1990s represents a surprising turn with colourful panel paintings peppered with spray paint and glitter. The exhibition will also unravel Riopelle’s creative and cultural connections through the inclusion of a selection of works by his contemporaries, including Sam Francis, Alberto Giacometti, Roseline Granet, Joan Mitchell and Françoise Sullivan, which draw out influences and exchanges that shaped the artist’s life and work over time.

This exhibition is organized by the National Gallery of Canada as part of the Jean Paul Riopelle Centenary celebrations. The Jean Paul Riopelle Foundation, co-founded in 2019 by Canadian philanthropist Michael Audain and Yseult Riopelle, the artist’s daughter, orchestrated a vast program to mark the centenary, leading to national and international celebrations and to the acknowledgment of Jean Paul Riopelle as a Canadian cultural icon. For decades Riopelle’s experimental works have inspired generations of artists in Canada and around the world.
Jean-François Bélisle, Director and CEO, National Gallery of Canada, reflects on the celebrations: "We were honoured to present Riopelle: Crossroads in Time on the occasion of the centennial year of Jean Paul Riopelle's birth. From one of our best-attended openings of 2023 to innovative music and dance events, this major retrospective of works by this legendary Canadian artist was a huge success. I would like to underscore the importance of partnerships between our country's museum institutions to make Canadian art accessible to all Canadians, from coast to coast to coast. Following its opening in the National Capital Region, we were elated to see the show have an outstanding run at the Winnipeg Art Gallery last summer. I would now like to express my gratitude to the Vancouver Art Gallery for hosting the final stop of this exhibition.”
Offering a unique take on Canada’s famed artist, this visually spectacular exhibition presents Riopelle’s renowned works alongside many which have been rarely shown in public. The presentation at the Vancouver Art Gallery also features works by Jean-Paul Riopelle from the Gallery’s permanent collection, including his bold composition Sous le Mythe de Gitskan No. 3 [Under the Myth of Gitskan No. 3] (1956)—which has not been shown for more than a decade—and Figure libre-Parure [Free figure-Adornment] (1967). In preparation for the exhibition, Figure libre-Parure [Free figure-Adornment] has undergone extensive conservation treatment. Delicate consolidation, infilling and inpainting took place to resolve areas of unstable cracking and lifting paint. Now stabilized, preserved and newly framed, the painting is ready to be seen in its full brilliance.
“Jean Paul Riopelle was the first post-war Canadian artist to achieve international status. He is a pillar of our history, who has left in his wake a multifaceted body of work that encourages pushing past boundaries, and this is perhaps his greatest legacy,” says Dr. Sylvie Lacerte, Art Historian and Independent Researcher. “Underlining the extraordinary career of this prodigious artist enables us to keep the memory of his accomplishments alive. Riopelle was first and foremost a trailblazer, and that is precisely what made him an eminently contemporary artist. He was invested in the present moment; situating him at a crossroads in time highlights the currency of a body of work that will always be in the here and now.”
The exhibition is curated by Dr. Sylvie Lacerte, Art Historian and Independent Researcher. The Vancouver Art Gallery presentation is coordinated by Siobhan McCracken Nixon, Associate Curator. 

Riopelle: Crossroads in Time - Catalogue
Riopelle: Crossroads in Time
National Gallery of Canada, 2023
Hardcover, 208 pages, 10 x 12 inches
ISBN 9780888849663
The exhibition is accompanied by a richly illustrated catalogue. This thoughtfully designed hardcover publication, edited by Sylvie Lacerte, includes essays by artists and art historians, including Gilles Daigneault, Vera Frenkel, Manuel Mathieu, Caroline Monnet, Marc-Antoine K. Phaneuf and Marc Séguin, who reflect on Riopelle’s legacy.

VANCOUVER ART GALLERY
750 Hornby Street, Vancouver, BC V6Z 2H7

08/09/24

David Rabinowitch @ Peter Blum Gallery, NYC - " Works from 1962 – 2018" Exhibition

David Rabinowitch 
Works from 1962 – 2018 
Peter Blum Gallery, New York 
September 3 – November 2, 2024

Peter Blum Gallery presents an exhibition of sculptures and works on paper by DAVID RABINOWITCH entitled, Works from 1962 – 2018. This memorial survey exhibition of selected bodies of work spans six decades of Rabinowitch’s artistic output. It is the eighth solo exhibition of the artist’s work with the gallery; his first being the inaugural exhibition at Peter Blum Gallery in 1993. 

For over six decades, David Rabinowitch employed a rigorous empiricism through numerous serial investigations into the principals of perception. His cycles from the early 1960s through the 2010s, comprised primarily of metal sculptures and works on paper, constitute a fundamental project probing the modes of observation. He practiced a highly independent and philosophical approach grounded in an analysis of the basic conditions, properties, and relations that mark out experience of the physical world, aiming to facilitate a synthesis of the act of seeing with that of recognizing and knowing.

In 1962 at the age of 19 in Toronto, David Rabinowitch developed a series of textured and colored woodblock monotypes. Although independent works, the emblematic shapes seem to anticipate future sculptures. The next year he created his first horizontal metal sculptures with his drawing studies visualizing the artist’s process and vantage points for the three-dimensional works, as in the expressive drawings for 1964’s Fluid Sheets. Begun in 1967, the Phantom Group of floor-based elliptical sculptures with multiple straight “folds” are accompanied by drawings that lend an immediate and energetic movement in two dimensions through rubbed oil crayon, pencil, charcoal, and paint on paper.

In 1968 – 69, David Rabinowitch began his signature hot rolled steel sculptures with the Mass Works series – three examples of which are included in the exhibition. This group investigates the properties of perceived mass through weight, density, and viscosity. The solid and compact works present a sense of inertness and immovability; the viewer’s own mobility around them highlights the viewer’s physical position and viewpoint as being integral to overall perception. In Plane of 3 Masses, I, the segmented elliptical form further serves to emphasize its mass, but now with a centralized sense of gravity. Suggesting possibilities of rearrangement and highlighting an internal structure, Raised Construction of (9) Opposed Members, presents masses in a stage of being lifted or lowered. Romanesque Abutment I, emphasizes perceived external pressure that mass can exert through the sculpture’s appearance of supporting a section of wall; its “notches” draw attention to the internal distribution of mass.

From 1969 through the mid-1970s, David Rabinowitch created a series of stand-alone ink and graphite works on paper entitled, Construction of Vision. These employed a systematic approach in the medium of two-dimensional art through a refined geometric language of ellipses, straight lines, and circles that are rendered precisely. Focusing the viewer’s attention on the nature of observation itself, Rabinowitch separates distinct visual elements. These do not literally “combine” in the work into an overall composition, but rather they come together in the “constructive” act of the viewer’s perception by facilitating readings of relations, comparisons, and unifying elements. Both complementing and contrasting with this series during the same period, Rabinowitch simultaneously concerned himself with the subject of the tree, and more generally with order found in nature, that he rendered in expressive and energetic drawing studies.

Over the subsequent decades, David Rabinowitch would continue his investigative practice through a focus on works on paper. By 2008, the Birth of Romanticism Drawings would now favor a high diversity of perceived forms and dense layers through rapid sketching, quick traces of crayon and pencil, and highly built-up surfaces. In his subsequent series, Untitled: For Lucretius/Lucretia, the compositions take shape as shifting visual combinations of moving parts creating a rapid and allover sense of observation with an emphasis on the natural form of the seashell.

Romanesque architecture was of consistent interest throughout David Rabinowitch’s life, and in 2012 he began the series Périgord Construction of Vision using ecclesiastical architecture of the Périgord region in France as a conceptual framework. Creating a unique visual language, the works on paper are rich in diverse structural complexities as well as materials including beeswax and collage. They propose a fluctuating relationship between abstraction, architecture, and perception of the physical world, a thread throughout Rabinowitch’s body of work that offers a space to question and challenge visual certainties.
 
DAVID RABINOWITCH was born in Toronto, ON in 1943 and passed away in 2022. Solo institutional exhibitions include Museum Wiesbaden, Germany (2017); Museum Kunstpalast Düsseldorf, Germany (2016); Haus der Kunst St. Josef, Solothurn, Switzerland (2012); The Chinati Foundation, Marfa, TX (2008); National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, ON (2004); Kunst Museum Winterthur, Switzerland (2004); Musée des Beaux-Arts de Montréal, QC (2003); Fogg Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA (1996); Jeu de Paume, Paris, France (1993); among others. Institutional collections include: Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, ON; The Art Institute of Chicago, IL; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA; Cleveland Museum of Art, OH; Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, MA; Kunsthaus Zürich, Switzerland;  Museum Kunstpalast Düsseldorf, Germany; MIT Museum, Cambridge, MA; Musée des Beaux-Arts de Montréal, QC; Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany; The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX; The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, ON; National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin, Germany; Saint Louis Art Museum, MO; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, CA; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN; among others.

PETER BLUM GALLERY
176 Grand Street, New York, NY 10013

17/08/24

Artist Tau Lewis @ ICA Boston - "Tau Lewis: Spirit Level" Exhibition + Monograph

Tau Lewis: Spirit Level
ICA, Boston
August 29, 2024 – January 20, 2025 

The Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston (ICA) presents Tau Lewis: Spirit Level, the artist’s first solo museum presentation in the United States. For the ICA, TAU LEWIS (b. 1993, Toronto) is creating a new body of work that is accompanied by her first monograph. The exhibition is organized by Jeffrey De Blois, ICA Mannion Family Curator, with Max Gruber, Curatorial Assistant. 

Tau Lewis transforms found materials into fabric-based figurative sculptures, quilts, masks, and other assemblages through labor-intensive processes such as hand-sewing and carving. She forages for objects and materials that carry meaning and memories—from previously worn clothing and leather to driftwood and seashells. Often, these artifacts are drawn from a meticulously organized material library the artist has amassed since 2000 collected from innumerable places. The evocative objects Tau Lewis gathers and transforms carry their own spirit and energy and connect her work to the social, cultural, and physical landscapes that she moves through, collects from, and inhabits. Tau Lewis describes these different landscapes as “Black geographies.” These geographies—oceanic, terrestrial, extraterrestrial—are the areas where Tau Lewis’s otherworldly beings live.  
“Lewis harnesses the beauty and power carried by found materials in her monumental soft sculptures,” said Jeffrey De Blois. “Her sculptures are alive with the energy of previously worn found fabrics and animated through every meticulous gesture. They are intensely personal, yet open to a world of associations and meanings.” 
Tau Lewis’s upcycling relates to forms of material inventiveness practiced by Afro-diasporic communities. For the artist, working with things close at hand is a reparative act aimed at reclaiming agency. Her works circumnavigate a broad range of references, from the mythic underwater civilization of Drexciya, to forms of material inventiveness practiced by artists such as Thorton Dial, Lonnie Holley, and the quilters from Gee’s Bend Alabama. Throughout, Lewis’s interest is in advancing the diasporic traditions and exploring the transformation and rebirth of materials that occurs when an object is made by hand.  

For the ICA, Tau Lewis is creating a new, interrelated body of sculptures including a large floor-bound quilt and five monumental figurative sculptures. The patchwork quilt is pieced together with a series of repeating panels the artist refers to as sequences radiating out from the center, where a miniature architectural form made from found metal components and a starfish is located. Each repeating sequence is composed of a set of found objects from the artist’s material library that recall kingdom-like organizations of the universe: animals, planets, satellites, weapons, aliens, and more. Intricately detailed in its configuration, and a whole world unto itself, the quilt evokes the idea of a portal or a galactic landscape; a cosmological ecosystem where struggles for power are playing out. The quilt is surrounded by five statuesque, fabric-based sculptures, each approximately 10 feet in height, adorned with hand-sewn, cloak-like garments and holding unique gestural hand poses. Their garments are pieced together with a makeshift aesthetic from found fabrics—ranging from muslin scraps dyed with tea or rust to deconstructed leather jackets and parachutes—while the figures themselves are by turns oceanic and extraterrestrial in appearance. Holding space in the exhibition, the figures congregate together as onlookers towering over the quilt.    

TAU LEWIS - Artist Biography 
Born in 1993 in Toronto, Tau Lewis lives and works in New York. Her work has been exhibited internationally, at venues including the Barbican, London; Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami; Lafayette Anticipations, Paris; ICA/Boston; National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; The Hepworth Wakefield, London; MoMA PS1, New York; the Art Gallery of York University, Toronto; and New Museum, New York. Her work has been included in major international group exhibitions including The Milk of Dreams, the 59th Biennale di Venezia, and Yesterday we said tomorrow, Prospect.5, New Orleans. Tau Lewis’s work is held in several permanent collections, including Grinnell College Museum of Art, Iowa; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami; The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts; National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario; and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.  

Tau Lewis Monograph
Publication - The exhibition is accompanied by the artist’s first monograph featuring an essay from the exhibition’s curator, Jeffrey De Blois, and a conversation between Tau Lewis and Lonnie Holley, renowned artist, musician, and long-time mentor to Tau Lewis.  
Related Post on Wanafoto: Taux Lewis, Atlanta Contemporary, 2018

ICA - INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY ART / BOSTON
25 Harbor Shore Drive, Boston, MA 02210 

24/04/24

Artist Jan Wade @ Richard Saltoun Gallery, New York - "Colored Entrance" Exhibition

Jan Wade 
COLORED ENTRANCE
Richard Saltoun Gallery, New York
2 May - 22 June 2024

Jan Wade
JAN WADE
Mama Story (1996)

Richard Saltoun Gallery New York presents its inaugural solo exhibition COLORED ENTRANCE, by African-Canadian artist JAN WADE (b. 1952).

COLORED ENTRANCE is Jan Wade's first solo exhibition in the United States, on the occasion of the acquisition of her work, Epiphany, by the National Gallery of Canada and her upcoming retrospective Soul Power opening at the Art Gallery of Hamilton, Ontario in June 2024. Previously touring from Vancouver Art Gallery (2022), this marked the first solo show by a Black woman artist in the museum's ninety-year history.
“We couldn’t be more excited to present Jan’s works to a US audience, given the incredible wealth of connections and references to her Southern-American roots and the historic slave trade, and their resounding contemporary political relevance. This will be the first major showing of her work in America and coincides with her touring retrospective opening in June, in Hamilton, Ontario; we have selected both historic and new works to showcase the full breadth of her practice here.”
- Niamh Coghlan, Director
Jan Wade
JAN WADE
 
Epiphany (1994 - 2012) and Spirit House (2021)
Installation View at Soul Power
Vancouver Art Gallery, Canada, 2022 

Jan Wade's practice explores Black identity in a post-colonial landscape from a deeply personal perspective, drawing from her heritage, African diasporic spiritual practices, and the history of Southern Slave Cultures. She was born in 1952 in Hamilton, Ontario, to a Black Canadian father with familial origins in the American South and a Canadian mother of European descent. Raised in a relatively segregated but close-knit community, Wade's formative years were heavily influenced by her local African Methodist Episcopal Church, Southern African-American culture and aesthetics from the perspectives of her paternal grandmother and great-grandmother. Although it stems from personal experience, Wade's work seeks to articulate a new understanding of her ancestors' traumas and the discrimination they themselves suffered. 

Exhibition Highlights include a new iteration of Wade's most iconic work Epiphany (1994-), an installation comprising crosses made of found pieces of wood and embellished with thrift store finds and objects connected African-American culture, acting as a monument to cultural survival and perseverance. Exhibited at the 1st Johannesburg Biennale AFRICUS (1995), and included in Jan Wade's touring retrospective Soul Power, this is the first time Epiphany is shown in the USA. A previous iteration of this work has recently been acquired by the National Gallery of Canada for their permanent collection. 

Jan Wade
JAN WADE 
Memory Jug, 2016

Also on view is a new series of Jan Wade's ongoing Memory Jugs, which she was inspired to make after seeing an archival photograph of memory jugs placed on Slave cemeteries in the American South. These funerary vessels were traditionally adorned with fragments-broken china, glass shards-and items beloved by the departed. Unlike historical memory jugs, Wade's pieces incorporate text as well as imagery in addition to found objects, rooted in the oral traditions of her African Methodist church. 
"Memory Jugs in particular have a fascinating history. Social Anthropologists believe they originated from BaKongo culture in Africa, which influenced slave communities in America. Their origins come from the tradition of African mourning vessels and were used as a way of honoring family members and friends. They were placed in Cemeteries and used as grave markers. (...) They had a revival in the Victorian era and even in the 50’s and 60’s but the original function and meaning had by then been mostly forgotten. I am dedicating mine to…. BLACK LIVES MATTER….and all those through the ages who have suffered and died at the hands of injustice….only the cameras are new….."
- Jan Wade
These vessels are exhibited alongside early paintings such as Mama Story (1996), and Women Cometh Forth Like a Flower (1995) which illustrate Jan Wade's enduring focus on the matriarchy of her family.

The show also features works from Jan Wade's decade-long project Breathe (2004-2022), a series of 70 embroidered canvases in abstract patterns that are informed by traditional Southern American, Gee Bend quilting techniques, and dedicated to the Black Lives Matter movement. The series is titled after the last words of Eric Garner, who was killed in a prohibited chokehold by a police officer in 2014. The repetition echoes the relentless recirculation of the spectacle of Garner's death, which was captured on video, pointing to the ongoing pattern of injustice and anti-Blackness. 

Additionally on view are Jan Wade's pastel-coloured skull drawings titled Boneheads (2001-), which evolved out of her interest in both the iconographies of the African Methodist church and the Cuban diasporic religion of Santería, delving into universal themes such as death and grief alongside poignant contemporary issues around environmental and racial politics.
“My "BONEHEAD" drawings emerged as a form of relief or an exploration of my own understanding that life and death are intertwined. Humor and vibrant colors play a significant role in my work, as they make it easier for me to delve into these images and explore my thoughts and emotions. In the midst of life, death is ever-present, as we witness in nature. When something or someone passes away, new life springs forth.”
- Jan Wade
Jan Wade
Portrait of JAN WADE
 

JAN WADE - SHORT BIOGRAPHY

Born in 1952 in Hamilton, Ontario, Jan Wade's work explores Black post-colonial identity, ethnicity, and spirituality. She produces paintings, textiles and mixed-media works that feature slogans and symbols that are made entirely from found or readymade objects, and recycled materials.

Jan Wade studied at the Ontario College of Art and Design (1972–76). She moved to Vancouver in 1983 and became part of the underground art and music scene in the city, with its innovative performances, do-it-yourself art shows, anti-establishment ethos and spontaneous happenings. During this period, Wade began her research into African diasporic spiritual practices and made art that reflected her roots and identity, commencing her unique artistic journey marked by self-sufficiency, empowerment, hope and radical joy.

After three decades spent on the fringe of the cultural mainstream, Jan Wade has received overdue acknowledgement for her unique contributions to Canadian art. Jan Wade: Soul Power—the landmark first solo exhibition by a Black woman in the Vancouver Art Gallery’s ninety-year history—presented the artist’s mixed-media assemblages, paintings, textiles, and sculptural objects from the 1990s to the present day.

RICHARD SALTOUN GALLERY | NEW YORK 
19 E 66th Street, New York, NY 10065 

27/02/24

Sin Wai Kin @ Buffalo AKG Art Museum - "It's Always You" Exhibition

Sin Wai Kin: It's Always You 
Buffalo AKG Art Museum 
March 1 - August 12, 2024

The Buffalo AKG Art Museum presents Sin Wai Kin: It’s Always You, a new solo exhibition of the work of one of the world’s most exciting visual artists.

It’s Always You, 2021, which the Buffalo AKG acquired in 2022, encourages viewers to reflect on the performance and commodification of identity in our present moment. The two-channel video work features a boyband of Sin’s construction in which they perform dressed up as each of the band’s four members—The Universe, The Storyteller, The One, and Wai King (a pun on the artist’s name). Each sways in slow motion against a greenscreen to a slow beating rhythm, alternately taking on the frontperson’s solo as they flirtatiously repeat the captivating lyrics.

The personalities that Sin deploys through each character developed out of their careful research into boyband culture, from late 1990s groups such as the Backstreet Boys and *NSYNC to contemporary groups such as BTS and Mirror. The members of such bands are often marketed individually, creating distinct fandoms around each. This sociocultural phenomenon serves as the backdrop for the universal message of It’s Always You: that all gender in the social sphere is a staged performance. In addition to the video, the installation features framed “publicity” posters and life-size cutouts of each of the group’s characters, with which visitors are invited to pose and take selfies. By actively engaging with Sin’s work, the public plays along in the performance and commodification of gender identity—a role that offers a collective escape into a world that celebrates the diversity of all beings.

SIN WAI KIN (Canadian, born 1991) produces complicated fictions based on their own journey through the spectrum of gender identity. In their teens, they became interested in the Toronto drag scene but found true liberation in the fluidity of London’s thriving queer community and drag cabarets when they relocated there in 2009. Around this time, the artist performed as Victoria Sin, a drag character that exuded a larger-than-life female archetype. In the artist’s own words, through “a process of doing [female] drag and purposefully putting on a gender and then taking it off again,” Sin’s nonbinary identity was realized. These personal experiences inform their fantastical narratives, in which Sin aims to interrupt social norms around issues of desire, identification, and objectification.

BUFFALO AKG ART MUSEUM
1285 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo, New York 14222

16/12/23

Kapwani Kiwanga: The Length of the Horizon @ Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg + Copenhagen Contemporary

Kapwani Kiwanga 
The Length of the Horizon
Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg
September 16, 2023 – January 7, 2024

The Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg presents Kapwani Kiwanga. The Length of the Horizon, the first institutional and comprehensive mid-career retrospective of the artist’s work worldwide. Research-based, thematically highly topical, and futureoriented—these terms can be used to describe the impressive oeuvre of KAPWANI KIWANGA (b. 1978). The Canadian and French artist recently received numerous international awards and will represent Canada at the 60th Biennale di Venezia in 2024. The exhibition brings together works in all media from Kiwanga’s artistic beginnings to the present day, including the highly acclaimed installation Terrarium (2022), her sixteen-meter-long colored light tunnel pink-blue (2017), and her sculptural series Glow (2019, ongoing). Kapwani Kiwanga’s expansive works come together in the exhibition to create a uniquely aesthetic, insightful, and physical experience.
Uta Ruhkamp, curator of the exhibition, explains: “Kapwani Kiwanga’s works are multi-layered. They are extremely complex artistic translations of well-researched situations, conditions, and mechanisms of our society and the world we live in. Her installations, paintings, works on paper, photographs, and video works are captivating in their aesthetics, formal clarity, and reduction. Yet, her sensitive choice of materials and colors is always grounded in deeper levels of meaning that charge her works both historically and socio-politically and break the visual pleasure in terms of content. Kapwani Kiwanga poetically surveys and expands our social horizons. I am particularly pleased that she is developing a new work with shade cloth, one of her ‘signature’ materials, for her exhibition with us.”
As a graduate anthropologist and scholar of comparative religion, Kapwani Kiwanga has the academic background for her social analytical practice. In her work, she employs so-called exit strategies: “I’m not trying to restate what one knows. I’m also trying to see what ways to get past what we know. To do that requires very simple things like just looking at it differently, or just even looking at it for the first time. […] These ‘exit strategies’ are very personal, but they can be collectively experienced as well,” Kapwani Kiwanga summarizes.

The artist searches for a vocabulary to look at existing structures and power relations from new perspectives in order to think about them differently in the future. The visually impressive works initially appeal to the viewer in a very sensual way. At second glance, the historical-political dimensions of her works reveal themselves, some of which surprise and unsettle. Glass, two-way mirrors, shade cloth, stone, sand, sisal, and plants, as well as light and color—for Kapwani Kiwanga, these are not value-neutral materials, but rather materials charged with content. Their choice is never purely aesthetic. Rather, she translates social, geological, ecological, historical, and diasporic themes into powerful artistic statements. She stages material histories in which the material is at once ambassador, metaphor, bearer of experience, and socio-political instrument. In this way, she shakes the foundations of our cultural socialization. She refines our sense for “hidden” social mechanisms, structural injustices, as well as global and everyday power asymmetries.

Kapwani Kiwanga. The Length of the Horizon begins for visitors with a surprising spatial and color experience: The walk through the colored light corridor pink-blue marks the transition from the entrance area of the museum to the heart of the presentation. The tunnel-like installation not only forces visitors into an austere architecture, but the immersive experience also reveals how light and color are used in everyday urban contexts and disciplinary architectures to control behavior. The work references research on the psychological effects of color. For example, Baker-Miller pink is said to have an aggression-reducing effect on prisoners. For pink-blue, Kapwani Kiwanga combines this pink tone with fluorescent blue light, which is also used to regulate behavior and prevent intravenous drug use in public spaces, as veins are difficult to locate in this light. Kapwani Kiwanga raises physical and mental awareness of everyday disciplinary structures.

In the approximately 1,800 m2 exhibition hall, the artist’s key works come together to form a pointed tour through her oeuvre. It becomes clear how Kapwani Kiwanga uses the effective power of color, light, and material to tell global histories from new perspectives.

While in the powerfully colorful installation The Marias (2020) it is the bright yellow of the walls and the pedestals that initially captivates the viewer, Kapwani Kiwanga uses the delicate paper versions of the peacock bush to address the toxic nature of the ornamental plant. As the naturalist Maria Sibylla Merian (1647–1717) described in her famous collection Metamorphosis insectorum Surinamensium, the peacock flower was used by enslaved women in Suriname as an abortifacient.

The artist works with a similar visually enticing effect in her installation Terrarium (2022), which she developed for the main exhibition The Milk of Dreams at the 59th Biennale di Venezia and consists of four semi-transparent fabric panels (Sunset Horizon) and three Hour Glass sculptures. Terrarium explores different uses of natural resources, in this case quartz sand for making glass or shale oil and gas extraction through fracking. The Hour Glasses exhibit their own material, evoking the long iconography of the hour glass as a vanitas symbol of human life and transferring this idea of finitude to the state of our planet, to the way its inhabitants deal with raw materials and nature, and thus to the Capitalocene, a sharpened reading of the Anthropocene.

Especially for her exhibition at the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg, Kapwani Kiwanga has developed an eight-meter-wide wall piece made of shade cloth. The variably colored fabric nets that Kapwani Kiwanga uses to develop her so-called shade cloth works as wall objects, expansive installations, and sculptural screens are actually used in industrial agriculture to allow plants to thrive better or outside of their original habitat. Metaphorically, the nets with their shading properties can stand for European colonial projects in which ecosystems in the colonies were reshaped to either better suit European ecosystems or to facilitate regional mass cultivation with high yield increases.

The exhibition is accompanied by a comprehensive bilingual publication (German/English), edited by Uta Ruhkamp, with installation views of the exhibition, archival material, a conversation between Cecilia Alemani and Kapwani Kiwanga, and essays by Julie Pellegrin and Uta Ruhkamp.

Kapwani Kiwanga. The Length of the Horizon is being realized in cooperation with Copenhagen Contemporary, where it will subsequently be on view from January 25, 2024.

Curator: Uta Ruhkamp
Curatorial Assistants: Veronika Mehlhart, Dino Steinhof

KUNSTMUSEUM WOLSBURG
Hollerplatz 1 - 38440 Wolfsburg

12/11/22

Ben Reeves @ Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto - Slack Tide

Ben Reeves: Slack Tide
Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto
November 5 - 26, 2022

Nicholas Metivier Gallery presents Slack Tide, an exhibition of new paintings by BEN REEVES. This is Ben Reeves’ second solo exhibition at the gallery. 

Having resided in British Columbia for most of his life, Ben Reeves is acutely aware of the natural world and our shifting relationship with it. For this exhibition, Ben Reeves reflects on "back-to-the-land" activities and wildlife encounters that are at once utopian and ominous. Practices of casting a fishing net, digging for clams and foraging for mushrooms are portrayed in an ethereal light, opening passageways for fantastical elements including a forest floor composed of colourful sea stars. Ben Reeves' signature impasto and collaged surfaces are also at play, echoing the physical, sensory and emotional experience of the places he depicts in his paintings. 

While the forest scenes recall Ben Reeves’ childhood memories of growing up in Lynn Valley, the fisher paintings reflect on his experiences in Newfoundland. When locals would toss their nets into the ocean to catch small fish, Ben Reeves was particularly drawn to the formlessness of the nets while in midair. He sees the act as a metaphor for painting, a process that is hard to pin down and difficult to describe. Ben Reeves often avoids the use of horizon lines which when absent, flatten the perspective and emphasize the mysterious qualities of water - its vastness and its depth. 
Places are experienced physically, sensorily and emotionally, but also culturally. Painting has these similar dimensions and, for both, they do not all perfectly align. So there is always work to be done and many mysteries to consider.
 
The paintings in “Slack Tide” explore pasts, presents and futures of so-called natural places that skirt urban areas. There is a sense that these spaces have multiple histories and meanings. As a result, we have multiple identities within them.

– Ben Reeves
NICHOLAS METIVIER GALLERY
190 Richmond Street East, Toronto, ON M5A 1P1
_______________


08/11/22

Juliette Agnel @ Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto - Les Nocturnes

Juliette Agnel: Les Nocturnes
Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto
November 5 – 26, 2022

Nicholas Metivier Gallery presents Les Nocturnes, an exhibition of new photographs by Juliette Agnel.  This is Juliette Agnel’s first solo exhibition at the gallery. 

For over two decades, Juliette Agnel has travelled the world documenting remote landscapes. Her interest in anthropology and archeology alongside a life-long passion for the histories of fallen kingdoms, explorers, and ancient mythologies, has led Agnel to pursue ambitious site-specific projects abroad. Most recently, she has photographed in Greenland, Morocco, Sudan, and the Alps.

This exhibition features Juliette Agnel’s ongoing project, Les Nocturnes, a series she began in 2017. Using composite images, she creates ethereal landscapes surrounded by expansive starry skies. By combining photographs taken at different times of day, she conveys every detail of the terrestrial and cosmic elements in her subjects. 

Juliette Agnel’s latest body of work, Taharqa et la nuit, captures the mysterious beauty of the ruins of Meroe in Sudan, home of the ancient kingdom of Kush and the Pharaoh Taharqa. She was entranced by the power and poetic beauty of the vestiges of the once-mighty empire emerging from the desert sands. Her approach to photographing her nocturnal landscapes lends a surreal quality to the work that transports us to another time.
In all my subjects, there is the presence of terrestrial and cosmic forces. In Meroe, all the sites were built according to the position of the stars, in particular the tombs. The cosmos had a sacred significance. What drives this series is the desire to show the forces that are there, invisible forces, that speak of our origins and the relationship to the sacred and to nature - and to ask myself the question of how to show these forces that animate this place.
Juliette Agnel
NICHOLAS METIVIER GALLERY
190 Richmond Street East, Toronto, Ontario, M5A 1P1
_________________


Edward Burtynsky: African Studies @ Flowers Gallery, London

Edward Burtynsky: African Studies
Flowers Gallery, London
14 October - 19 November 2022

Edward Burtynsky
EDWARD BURTYNSKY
Sishen Iron Ore Mine #5, Tailings, Kathu, South Africa, 2018
Pigment Inkjet Print on Kodak Professional Photo Paper
 © Edward Burtynsky 
courtesy of Flowers Gallery, London and 
Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto

Edward Burtynsky
EDWARD BURTYNSKY
Desert Spirals #4, Verneukpan, Northern Cape, South Africa, 2018
Pigment Inkjet Print on Kodak Professional Photo Paper
 © Edward Burtynsky 
courtesy of Flowers Gallery, London and 
Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto
“I’m finding new visual resonances emerging while photographing in Africa. As I evolve my use of the aerial perspective, in these recent pictures I am surveying two very distinct aspects of the landscape: that of the earth as something intact, undisturbed yet implicitly vulnerable... and that of the earth as opened up by the systematic extraction of resources.” - Edward Burtynsky
Flowers Gallery presents an exhibition of new work by Edward Burtynsky produced across the African continent between 2015-2019.

Edward Burtynsky’s works chronicle the major themes of terraforming, extraction, agriculture and urbanization, developing a long-standing preoccupation with the unsettling reality of the human imprint on the planet.

In African Studies, Edward Burtynsky reflects on landscapes undergoing rapid industrial and manufacturing expansion. Focusing on Sub-Saharan Africa, his images present environments shaped by processes of resource extraction, from the salt pans of Senegal to the ‘residual landscapes’ of mechanized extraction such as Sishen Iron Ore Mine #5, Tailings, Kathu, South Africa, 2018. Images of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD #8, Benishangul-Gumuz Region, Ethiopia, 2019) reflect an ongoing enquiry into the global theme of water and its related environmental and geo-political impacts.

Alongside industrialised landscapes, Edward Burtynsky presents images of the pristine natural environment as a reminder of its fragility and finitude, such as the rich sculptural topography of Sand Dunes #3, Sossusvlei, Namib Desert, Namibia, 2018; and the unaltered ecosystem of the Rift Valley in northern Kenya in Flamingos #1, Lake Bogoria, 2017.

Photographed predominantly from aerial viewpoints, Edward Burtynsky’s works often have a flattened frontal aspect, transforming the image into sumptuously graduating colour fields or vigorous grid-like compositions, strikingly reminiscent of Modernist abstraction. Presented at a large scale, and with compelling detail, their painterly surfaces and gestural marks reveal the coalescing designs of both nature and human infrastructure. Edward Burtynsky’s perpetual search for abstraction within the landscape navigates a fine balance between form and content. He describes this dualistic approach as “keeping two doors open” for the viewer to enter the work - leading an enquiry into the expansive subject matter, while exploring the image as a mode of intuitive sensory expression.

This exhibition coincides with the expected publication of African Studies, a new book by Edward Burtynsky by Steidl (Not yet published).

Edward Burtynsky, African Studies, Steidl
Edward Burtynsky
African Studies
Publisher: Steidl, 2022
208 pages, 154 images
Hardback / Clothbound, 36.4 x 28.8 cm
ISBN 978-3-96999-145-9
Book Cover © Edward Burtynsky / Steidl

EDWARD BURTYNSKY

Edward Burtynsky’s works are in the collections of over sixty museums around the world, including Museum of Modern Art and Guggenheim, New York; Tate, London; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, California; Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid; and the National Gallery of Canada. Exhibitions have included Anthropocene (2018), which premiered simultaneously at the Art Gallery of Ontario and National Gallery of Canada before travelling to Manifattura di Arti, Sperimentazione e Tecnologia (MAST), Bologna in Spring 2019; Water (2013) at the New Orleans Museum of Art & Contemporary Art Center, New Orleans, Louisiana (international touring exhibition); Oil (2009) at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. (five-year international touring show), China (toured 2005 - 2008); Manufactured Landscapes at the National Gallery of Canada (touring from 2003 - 2005); and Breaking Ground produced by the Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography (touring from 1988 - 1992).

Edward Burtynsky and filmmakers Jennifer Baichwal and Nicholas de Pencier have created a trilogy of films - Manufactured Landscapes (2006), Watermark (2013), and Anthropocene. Edward Burtynsky received the inaugural TED Prize in 2005; and won the Tiffany Mark award in 2012. In 2006, he was named an Officer of the Order of Canada; and in 2016 he received the Governor General’s Award for Visual Arts. He holds six honorary doctorate degrees. His distinctions also include the National Magazine Award; MOCCA award; Outreach Award at Rencontres d’Arles; ICP Infinity Award; the Kraszna Krausz Book Award; and was honoured as Master of Photography at Photo London in 2018; and Outstanding Contribution to Photography at the Sony World Photography Awards in 2022.

His recently released project In the Wake of Progress, a fully choreographed blend of photographs and film from his 40-year career premiered as a public art piece in Yonge-Dundas Square, Toronto, ON, Canada in June 2022 as part of the Luminato Festival, and was transformed into a new indoor immersive experience from June 25 – July 17, 2022 at the Canadian Opera Company Theatre, Toronto, ON, Canada. In the Wake of Progress will embark on a global tour beginning Autumn 2022.

FLOWERS GALLERY
21 Cork Street, London W1S 3LZ

12/01/18

2018 Interior Design Show - IDS18 - Toronto

2018 Interior Design Show - IDS
Metro Toronto Convention Center
January 18 - 21, 2018




Since opening its doors in 1999, the Interior Design Show (IDS18) has become a design authority showcasing the latest design trends and innovations from Canada and internationally. Combining hundreds of exhibitors, a line-up of international speakers and a full schedule of expert-lead seminars, IDS18 doesn’t follow the trends – it premiers them. As the show prepares to celebrate its 20th anniversary this January 18-20, 2018, IDS18 has compiled the trends that are shaping the industry in the year to come. From floor tiles to ceiling fixtures, 2018 promises to be a year of leading-edge innovation. 

“As we enter our milestone 20th year, we are paying homage to Canada’s past and the culture that has shaped IDS for the past two decades,” Karen Kang, National Director, IDS Canada. “This year’s theme, Future Forward, will look ahead with predictions on how design will change how we live.”


Modern and contemporary furniture living area created 
by Quebec furniture company Huppé 
Crédit photo : Huppé

Canada by Design
IDS18 is celebrating Canadian designers in a big way. The show will explore the commonalities that could define what Canadian design is: a sensibility that favours restraint over excess, an appreciation of a rationalist and minimalist approach, and a respect for function, materials, and craftsmanship. This year Canadian work will be highlighted by many native design companies. Trends from modern day living, handcrafted hardwood and affordable home furnishings will all be on display.


Dining chair by Bonaldo, 
available at Suite 22 Interiors 
Crédit photo : Bonaldo


The Ultimate Kitchen
As the old saying goes, “the kitchen is the heart of the home.” In thinking about the future of this space, IDS18 will focus on the innovation, high tech appliances and quality finishes found. New materials and textures will add that extra slick finish the kitchens of the future.


Caesarstone’s Cloudburst Concrete provides 
a quartz quality concrete look 
Crédit photo : Caesarstone

Refined Ruggedness
Hard surfaces with a harsher mixed stone look will be the go-to-trend for homeowners looking to make a statement. Expect to see unconventional materials, such as concrete, take over everything from flooring to countertops. 

Light it Up
Lighting continues to shine at IDS18! Designers from all corners of the globe are debuting fresh interpretations and innovative ideas to bring more than just light to a room.


Lambert & Fils’ IDS debut will dazzle with innovative feature lighting 
Crédit photo : Lambert & Fils

ANONY, winner of last year’s best studio north collection returns to IDS 
Crédit photo : ANONY

Curves
The new shape trending this year is modern curves which add soft lines to contemporary spaces. Exhibitors will showcase distinctive artistic shapes, detail craftsmanship and inspiring ideas for living spaces.

Modern Wood
Gone are the days of live edge. This year’s wood pieces are sophisticated and sleek – a true testament to the relationship between 2018 craftsmanship and contemporary design.


Kastella has mastered the art of utilizing wood for a modern finish
Crédit photo : Kastella


Statement Details
Like statement jewelry pieces in fashion, jewelry inspired details are popping up in the home. Lighting, furnishings, tiles and hardware are all taking on geometric cut-outs and peeks of metal detailing. 

For more information: toronto.interiordesignshow.com

27/05/11

Robert Bourdeau, Stephen Bulger Gallery, Toronto - The Station Point

Robert Bourdeau: The Station Point 
Stephen Bulger Gallery, Toronto
Through June 11, 2011

Exhibition of work by artist ROBERT BOURDEAU  is on view in Toronto at Stephen Bulger Gallery. THE STATION POINT presents a survey of Robert Bourdeau's work in conjunction with the release of a major monograph co-published by the Stephen Bulger Gallery Press and the Magenta Foundation. This exhibition also marks the first time in his career that Robert Bourdeau has shown enlargements of his large format negatives.

Robert Bourdeau (b. Kingston, On, 1931) spent several years photographing before being drawn into a deeper understanding of the medium by his discovery of Aperture Magazine. This led to a crucial encounter with Minor White in 1958, and a spiritual, decade-long friendship. The tie with the school that emerged from Camera Work was further enhanced by Robert Bourdeau's friendship with Paul Strand in the late 1960s and 1970s.

Taken over the past four decades throughout Europe and North America, these large format photographs are of age old landscapes, historical treasures of architecture nestled in the countryside and inactive industrial sites reclaimed by nature. Robert Bourdeau is deeply interested in how certain structures lose their identity and take on other feelings and ambiguities, and at other times become guardians or sentinels of physical and emotional space.  He is also fascinated by the dark mysticism of mediaeval architecture and by brooding landscapes; the exactness of his photography disclosing the hidden geometry of nature.

Working with a large-format view camera, Robert Bourdeau favours long exposures. Most of his photographs are contact printed, either from an 11 x 14 inch or an 8 x 10 inch negative, a method that allows for a minimal loss of definition in reproduction. Robert Bourdeau has exhibited internationally since 1967.  His work is in the collections of the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Illinois;  University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois; The Renaissance Society, Chicago, Illinois;  Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas;  Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts; George Eastman House, Rochester, New York; National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario; Canadian Centre for Architecture, Montreal, Quebec; Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver, B.C. and the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, Ontario.

STEPHEN BULGER GALLERY, TORONTO

12/05/08

Winners of Sigma Canadian Winter Dreams photo contest

Winners are Tom Chandler, Jennifer Carroll, Linda Verishine and Dominic Cantin

(c) Tom Chandler - Winter Fox - Grand Prize Award

Joel Seigel, President and CEO of Gentec International, is pleased to announce the winners of the Sigma Canadian Winter Dreams photo contest. The contest, which ran from December to March, asked photographers to capture a Canadian winter scene using a Sigma lens.
The quality and variety of the photos submitted was truly impressive,” stated Mr. Seigel. “It was rewarding to have seen so many Sigma users participate in the contest; it demonstrates the talent of Canadian amateur photographers, and the ability of Sigma lenses to help them bring their photographic vision to life.”
Judging was done by two highly respected photographers: Peter Burian and Crombie McNeill. Peter Burian is a well-known freelance photographer, writer, and instructor based in Toronto. He has written many books on photography and is a regular contributor to several photo magazines. Crombie McNeill has been photographing for over thirty years on assignments that have taken him around the world for numerous international magazines. He is also a respected instructor, offering workshops near his home in Ottawa.
Both judges carefully reviewed all entries and finally selected a grand prize winner, plus three additional winners. Tom Chandler’s “Winter Fox” was awarded the grand prize, which included a Sigma SD14 digital SLR camera, plus two Sigma lenses, a Sigma flash, Sigma digital filters, a Roots DSLR system backpack, a SanDisk memory card, and Sony rechargeable batteries. The complete grand prize package totals a retail value of $3,899.
Jennifer Carroll won a Sigma 50-500mm lens with her first place entry. In second place, Linda Verishine was awarded a Sigma 50-150mm lens. And Dominic Cantin earned the award-winning Sigma 70mm macro lens for his third place entry. All entrants received an Optex LensPen for their submission.
About Gentec International
Gentec International is Canada's leading consumer accessory products company supplying a complete range of photo, video, digital, sport optics, home theatre, electronics, wireless and mobile audio products to the Canadian retail marketplace. Gentec offers prominent brand names such as Optex, Sigma, Velbon, Roots, SanDisk, Sunpak, Bushnell, Tasco, Zeiss, Planet Wireless, Energy, Sony, Electrohome, Prolink, Stinger, Peripheral, and Best Kits & Accessories.
Gentec International - Media Release - 12.05.2008