Small Artworks Exhibition: Group Show
Feb 17 – March 7, 2023
Our group exhibition of small artwork for small spaces! Here you’ll find dozens of Canadian artists who master the mini!
Feb 17 – March 7, 2023
Our group exhibition of small artwork for small spaces! Here you’ll find dozens of Canadian artists who master the mini!
Jan 5 – 24, 2023.
Testifying to the impact of a simple splash of colour, “Harmony & Hues” is a striking group exhibition from the gallery’s contemporary artists.
Dec 8 – 23, 2022.
Solo exhibition by Fahri Aldin focuses on gatherings of people in moments of ‘togetherness’, measured against the heroic ‘self’, who stands alone.
Nov 17 – Dec 6, 2022.
With thick impasto, Petley-Jones’s solo show constructs the essence of the ‘estuary’, a place of confluence and convergence.
Nov 3 – 16, 2022.
Featured Contemporary artists uplift us, using naivety, childhood symbols and self-discovery in our exhibition, “Whimsy in a Time of Chaos”
Oct 7 – 28, 2022
This new collection highlights the currency of water’s intrinsic value, presenting the concept of water as more than a mere material asset, Alcock-White renders perspective on decisions that trade pristine nature for economic gain.
Sept 22 – Oct 6
The work reflects on the identity and displacement of young adults after long periods of isolation. Contemporary Hungarian-born Canadian visual artist, Brigitta Kocsis is best known for her large-scale paintings investigating the shifting concepts of the human body and its environment.
Sept 1 – 20th, 2022
This joint exhibition brings together Michael Hermesh and Fahri Aldin, Canadian contemporary artists who utilize the flattened human form within a tableau, shaping snapshots of human foolishness and intimacy.
Their investigation of humanity through symbolism and abstraction ignores representationalism in favour of highlighting narrative. The artists place their characters in a flat world, in which the hero is comparable to an actor on a stage. A collector of Hermesh’s work might purpose his subject isn’t a human figure at all, but rather the overarching experience of humanity and its follies. Expanding on these narratives, Hermesh explains, “Our functional narratives come from agreements, habits, misunderstandings and fears as well as rational insight. I am not saying we are all confused madmen; I am saying we are human to a fault.”
Complimenting the almost purely symbolic dramas of their two-dimensional works, the artists present multiple bronze sculptures. The bronze pieces remain both lighthearted and deceivingly lightweight, as the artists manipulate the medium in their documentation of humanity.
Enter paradise beyond the garden wall. In this group exhibition the sensation of a summer’s stroll through idyllic lands takes you over.
July 5 – 26th, 2022. Llewellyn Petley-Jones honed his craft in Europe, bringing his Impressionist landscapes from Parisian streets to the prairies of Alberta.