Grounded
Artists: Kim Adams, Lise Beaudry, Greg Curnoe, Steve Driscoll, Suzy Lake, Nicholas Pye, Soko Negash and T&T
Oakville Trafalgar Memorial Hospital
An exhibition at the Oakville Trafalgar Memorial Hospital, titled "Grounded," considers the complex relationship between people and nature, and the importance of maintaining this connection. It resonates in photographs by Suzy Lake and Nicholas Pye, as well as in Steve Driscoll’s paintings, in terms of the need to slow down and take time to reconnect with nature. Lise Beaudry’s photo-based work derives from the landscape of her childhood—a touchstone for remembering the past, while Soko Negash reconnects to the healing methods used by her family and local community through still lifes of various traditional remedies gathered from nature. Through prints and sculpture, T&T and Kim Adams imagine future innovations for ecologically-minded lifestyles, while Greg Curnoe’s work celebrates an environmentally-friendly mode of transportation. Conscious of the realities of ever-increasing urbanization and climate change, Grounded suggests that our sense of self and well-being are intricately tied to the natural environment.
Publication: Art Tour Guide available for download on the OTMH Art Council webpage
Close to Home
Artists: Tonia Di Risio, Soheila Esfahani, Rafael Goldchain, Xiong Gu, Sanaz Mazinani, Sumaira Tazeen, Denyse Thomasos and Jeff Thomas
Oakville Trafalgar Memorial Hospital
Close to Home brings together artists from a range of cultural backgrounds, with works that speak to each artist’s connection to
their country of origin and to ideas surrounding home,migration, and what it means to belong. These familial connections come from near and far, such as Iranian-Canadian artist Soheila Esfahani’s focus on the translation and movement of cultural influences;Canada-based Pakistani artist Sumaira Tazeen’s research into the stories of recent immigrants; and Iroquois artist Jeff Thomas’s photographic investigations into Canada’s appropriation of Indigenous lands.Through these artworks, Close to Home highlights the unique and diverse cultural experiences that inform Canadian identity.
Sara Angelucci: Undergrowth
SPAO, Ottawa (2021); Art Gallery of Sudbury (2021-2022)
Visit our website: andersonwilsonprojects.org
Publication: visit our website: andersonwilsonprojects.org
Gros Morne Whirl, public art commission for Creative Gros Morne
Artists: Mary Ann Liu and Paul Slipper
Norris Point, Gros Morne, Newfoundland
Curator for Creative Gros Morne in Newfoundland, to oversee the commission of a piece of permanent, site-specific outdoor public art in the Gros Morne community. Paul Slipper and Mary Anne Liu's Gros Morne Whirl launched July 1, 2017 and is on display in the community of Norris Point from May to October annually.
Wanderings - An Exhibition of Contemporary Art
Artists: Kim Adams, John Armstrong, Panya Clark Espinal, Steve Driscoll, Neeta Madahar, P. Mansaram, Andrew McPhail, Monica Tap and David Urban
Oakville Trafalgar Memorial Hospital
Wanderings is a year-long display of contemporary artworks placed along the main public corridors of the Oakville Trafalgar Memorial Hospital. It focuses on art that meanders along places and ideas: an open suitcase that leads to unknown destinations; paintings that capture the sensation of being immersed in the wilderness or a hectic urban streetscape; a photograph that captures migratory birds in temporary flight; artworks that contemplate the changing seasons, or reflect on past events. Each piece is intended to open a space of contemplation and exploration for the visitors, patients and staff who travel these hospital hallways.
Crafted - An Exhibition of Contemporary Art
Artists: Kim Adams, Lizz Aston, Carmelo Arnoldin, Janet Morton, Monika Napier, Ed PIen, Breanna Shanahan, Jay Wilson, Xiaojing Yan
Oakville Trafalgar Memorial Hospital
Crafted brings together contemporary artworks that draw from traditional crafting methods with unconventional results. Whether weaving with pop cans, or piecing together words from hundreds of toothpicks, these artworks encompass a wide range of materials and techniques in order to emphasize the value of repetitive and labour-intensive practices. This kind of intricate hand-work has a long history of providing comfort in many forms, and these unexpected and highly individualized interpretations of the medium are intended to add vibrancy, energy, and intrigue to the hospital environment.
Possible Worlds - An Exhibition of Contemporary Art
Artists: Kim Adams, Sara Angelucci, Jeremy Borsos, Edward Burtynsky, Susan Dobson, Marie Heintzman, Scott McFarland, Janice Mason Steeves, Naoko Matsubara, Julia Mori, Janet Morton, Tazeen Qayyum, David Rokeby, Jennifer Walton, Xiaojing Yan
New Oakville Trafalgar Memorial Hospital
This exhibition, installed throughout the public spaces of the New Oakville Trafalgar Memorial Hospital, takes its thematic cue from the building's architectural emphasis, notably its sensitive integration of elements from nature. Possible Worlds likewise brings this environment indoors, through artworks that create an expansive experience of nature. These contemporary pieces by artists of local and national renown use a range of media, including printmaking, painting, photography, video and sculpture. The artists adopt varied viewpoints, from a birds’ eye perspective that allows viewers to witness the environment at a distance, to creating near-microscopic worlds that require intimate viewing, to expressing more abstract interpretations of the landscape. The passage of time is conveyed through artworks that merge the past and the present, or interpret duration in unexpected ways. Possible Worlds invites visitors to take a moment to contemplate, discuss, and learn more about how these artists perceive and reimagine the world around them.
Circling the Inverse Square
Artists: Adam David Brown, Jessica Eaton, Karilee Fuglem, Marla Haldy, Richard Sewell, Charles Stankievech
Kitchener-Waterloo Art Gallery, 2013–14
Circling the Inverse Square presents artworks that derive from a particularly speculative approach to making work, drawing connections to the intricate processes behind observation and enquiry in physics. The six artists brought together for this exhibition share a scientific state of mind in their systems- and process-based approaches, yet the works they create are not illustrative of scientific principles or theories. Instead, they circle the language, concepts and the aesthetics of physics toward more suggestive ends.
In these works, the boundaries between the individual and the universal are brought to the fore, as they lend form to connections that are usually invisible. The shape of sound, the connection between microscopic pores and star constellations, and our methods for processing the visual world are some of the areas under investigation. Paradoxes and conundrums are often at the root of these explorations, which are just as often humorous and playful as they may be serious and speculative. Here, the methods and edges of human perception are under examination, in ways that often embrace systematic approaches, yet result in sculptures, installations, photographs and drawings that are, ultimately, poetic.
Publication: Available through KWAG or ABC books
(Da bao)(Takeout)
Artists: Sara Angelucci and Han Xu, John Armstrong and Paul Collins, Cathy Busby, Gang Chen, Brendan Fernandes, Nan Hao, Ming Hon, Knowles Eddy Knowles, Laiwan, Minjeong Oh, Ed Pien, Shen Yi Elsie, Laurens Tan, Xiaojing Yan, Zhang Zhaohui
Varley Art Gallery of Markham (2012) and circulated to the Art Gallery of Mississauga, PlugIn ICA in Winnipeg, and Surrey Art Gallery (2012–2014)
(Da bao)(Takeout) attempts to locate a type of pan-ocean dynamic between China and the West, specifically Canada, by focusing on artists who investigate, adapt and instill ideas from abroad into their practice, while appreciating the palpable slippages that occur in the transference of ideas from one ethnicity to another. An exhibition of international scope, (Da bao)(Takeout) brings together the work of 19 artists, largely from China and Canada. Two curators, living on either side of the globe, worked together to push beyond the traditional “exchange” format to create an exhibition that functions as a cohesive whole. It focuses on the artists’ shared experiences of being “taken out” of familiar contexts and encountering a strikingly different culture. Their individual experiences and the ways in which they discover areas of shared experience inform the work included in this exhibition. While their individual voices each occupy unique positions, collectively, they speak to issues of cultural transference, highlighting the gaps, distances and misunderstandings inherent in communication across cultural divides.
Publication: Catalogue, available through the Varley Art Gallery
Hyper Spaces: José Manuel Ballester, An Te Liu and Lynne Marsh
Oakville Galleries at Centennial Square, 2011–2012
In response to the white-cube, uniquely cavernous space of the Centennial Square location of Oakville Galleries, this group exhibition explores urban architecture and public space through the lenses of tension and anxiety. With a quasi-science-fiction approach, these artists turn the familiar space of the metropolis into unsettling, parallel worlds where dislocation and estrangement takes centre stage.
José Manuel Ballester, An Te Liu, and Lynne Marsh each conjure unsettled spaces, micro-worlds on the cusp of transition. In all instances, they are triggered by public architecture, from the epic scale of a German sports stadium to a conference centre in China to the gallery itself. Each of these artists fabricate a view of reality where nothing is certain, suggesting the psychological impact of all public architecture, however muted the desired effect.
Publication: Pdf download available through Oakville Galleries
Viva Voce
Artists: Dorian FitzGerald, Alison S.M. Kobayashi, Richie Mehta, Johnson Ngo, Denyse Thomasos, Carolyn Tripp, Jessica Vallentin, Rhonda Weppler/Trevor Mahovsky, Andrew Wright, Robert Zingone
Blackwood Gallery (Mississauga), 2011
This exhibition marks the 40th anniversary of the Art & Art History Program (University of Toronto Mississauga and Sheridan). Given the occasion, the curatorial method focused on the complex relationships between students and professors, as the participating alumni were selected through recommendations from past and present faculty members.
The Latin phrase “viva voce,” meaning “with the living voice,” is playfully adopted here to highlight the celebratory nature of an anniversary, while making reference to the outspoken professors who responded to the curator’s invitation to participate in the process. It connects to the notion of sharing information by word of mouth, or through reputation. By relying on the experiences of the program’s professors (in keeping with the anniversary date, 40 past and present faculty were contacted for recommendations), the selection process became a collective effort. This exhibition brings the connection between student and teacher to the forefront, underscoring the ongoing support that occurs after graduation, in the transition from student to colleague.
Therese Bolliger: Four Echoes
Oakville Galleries in Gairloch Gardens, 2009–2010
Since the mid-90s, Therese Bolliger’s practice has focused on the gaps between image and language, between abstraction and representation, and between object and viewer. Four Echoes surveys her recent work, bringing together a selection of drawings and sculptures. Throughout the four rooms of the gallery at Gairloch, Bolliger’s work explored the essence of form, consistently evoking shapes that lie beyond the world of objects.
The word choice “echo” in the title of this exhibition is significant. An echo reaches out from its originating object into space. Untethered from its source, it occupies a tenuous state of existence. Bolliger’s practice is occupied with these fragile spaces: articulating memory’s place between past and present, translating mathematical and philosophical constructs into form, and exploring the outer reaches of the animate. In doing so, she continuously hovers on the line between abstraction and representation, creating objects from the figments of imagination.
Publication: Pamphlet, pdf version available
Burrow: Janice Kerbel, Adriana Kuiper, Liz Magor and Samuel Roy-Bois
Oakville Galleries at Centennial Square (2007) and circulated to Saint Mary’s University Art Gallery, Nova Scotia; and Musée d’art de Joliette, Quebec (2007–2009)
Burrow focuses on the human desire for comfort and escape, and how it can breed isolation and paranoia in an impossible search for absolute safety. It investigates the need for shelter while alluding to its potential to become a barrier to the outside world. The works in this exhibition speak to a yearning for extreme personal boundaries; to become invisible in the hopes of achieving safety and security. More importantly, they suggest the vicious cycle of this process and the relative absurdity of believing that people are capable of self-sustainability, particularly within the conditions of contemporary civilization.
Adriana Kuiper, in her Snack Bar Shelter, built a recreational facility out of cinder blocks, based on a drawing from a brochure on fallout shelters. Absurd and disturbing, it suggests how the nuclear family might pass the long hours while the world is coming to an end. Samuel Roy-Bois’ Ghetto presents the viewer with a claustrophobically enclosed living space visible through a plexiglas window, raising questions about the minimum requirements for human shelter and the loss of privacy associated with homelessness. Two sculptures by Liz Magor (Burrow and Carton II), and her photographic Deep Woods Portfolio, blur the line between human and animal shelters in the forest. Floor-plan drawings by Janice Kerbel from the series Home Fittings generate a cryptic visual pattern from calculations arising from a fearful and obsessive inventory of living spaces.
This exhibition draws attention to a universal, timeless and complex human condition, pointing to individual attempts at refuge in the face of unknown threats. The mindset of Burrow represents a state of ongoing internal conflict at its most basic, human level.
Publication: Catalogue available through Oakville Galleries or ABC books