Category: LISTING ARCHIVE

  • JOSEPH HARTMAN: The Road North

    Highway 69 Construction Cutline, Killarney, Ontario, 2008

    November 3 –  26, 2011
    Opening: Saturday, November 5, 2-5pm
    STEPHEN BULGER GALLERY
    1026 Queen Street West
    Toronto, Ontario M6J 1H6
    T: 416.504.0575
    E: info@bulgergallery.com
    www.bulgergallery.com  

    The gallery is pleased to present our first solo exhibition of work by Joseph Hartman.

    “The Road North” features work from Hartman’s two recent series “Highway 69” and “Collins and Heron Bay”, both of which explore notions of memory, the environment and our relationship to the landscape. Hartman’s “Highway 69” examines the interaction between humans and landscape, and the influences each has on the other. This work was inspired by the artist’s connection to this particular region as a result of travelling through it his whole life. Hartman documents this landscape in transition as it goes through a state of deconstruction and reconstruction via the longstanding expansion project of the highway.

    “Highway 69” is also the first leg of a journey that leads to two small native communities in Northern Ontario, Collins and Heron Bay, where Hartman spent the first three years of his life. Although he had no real memories of those early years, his first conscious memory being the day his family moved from the north to the house that his family still inhabits in southern Ontario, he did have images of those early years in his mind.

    Hartman’s first year psychology course at Laurentian University, taught him that the mind has the ability to create personal memories from stories heard repeatedly, and that these memories feel as genuine as a memory created from an actual experience. He felt that the images in his mind’s eye of those early years in Collins and Heron Bay were most likely created after listening to the stories that his parents told over the years.

    Floating through his thoughts just like concrete memories, made it hard to distinguish fabrications pasted together from stories and old photographs, with other memories and thoughts from his subconscious. Hartman’s series “Collins and Heron Bay” culminated out of a trip to the area 30 years after having left, to determine if his memories were fictional or concrete. Hartman made photographs of places that felt familiar to him, places that he had no doubt passed through 30 years earlier, yet he had no memory of having been there before.

    After receiving a Master’s degree in Kinesiology at the University of McMaster in 2004 and being accepted into Medical School, Hartman decided to pursue a career as an artist. He is a self-taught photographer and apprenticed with Canadian photographer Edward Burtynsky for over five years.

  • Dierlam & Dierlam

    October 30 – November 23, 2011
    Opening: Sunday, October 30, 12:30-2:30pm
    YORKMINSTER PARK GALLERY
    1585 Yonge Street,
    Toronto ON M4T 1Z9
    (at Heath, N of St Clair Avenue, on E side)
    Enter YP Centre door.
    T: 416-922-1167
    www.yorkminsterpark.com
     Hours: Mon  -Fri  10 – 2, Sat 12 – 4pm 
     
     
    Dierlam & Dierlam – A Legacy features the work of the late Howard C. Dierlam and his daughter Lois.

    Both artists have focused their works on traditional landscapes in oil, acrylic and watercolour. Mentored by her father, Lois typically works in acrylic, with smaller paintings in watercolour. Lois is well known as an artist and arts educator, as was her father, who served as the first Director of Art for the Toronto Board of Education. 

     The exhibition shows  of works by both artists. It is a sale of some works too.

  • THE MESSAGE

    November 2 – 13, 2011
    Opening: Thursday, November 3,  7 pm  
    Panel discussion Wednesday, November 9, 7pm
    GALLERY 1313 Main and Process Gallery
    1313 Queen Street West,
    Toronto, ON M6K 1K8
    T: 416 – 536-6778
    E mail: director@g1313.org
    www.gallery13131.org
    Hours: Wed – Sun 1- 6

    Gallery 1313 is pleased to present, THE MESSAGE, an exhibition of new media artists who explore the effects of technology on popular culture and society. The exhibition is also a celebration of the legacy of Marshall Mcluhan.

    Curated by Gallery Director, Phil Anderson and is sponsored by Highland Park  Single Malt Scotch Whiskey. We would like to thank Highland Park Single Malt Scotch Whiskey for their generous support. 

    There will mix of installation, video works and  photo based works. The exhibition will take place in the Main and Process Galleries.

    They Live Small, photo based image from Daniel Borins and Jennifer Marman

    There will also be panel discussion Wednesday, November 9, 7pm which will address the future and effects of technology in artistic practise and society in general.  Panelists are to include Ed Slopek, Program Director for the New Media Option (Ryerson University), School of Image Works, Johanna Householder, Chair of Criticism and Curitorial Practice (Ontario College of Art and Design) and Judith Doyle, Chair of Integrated Media (The Ontario College of Art and Design) . The panel will be moderated by writer and cultural commentor, Russell Smith.

     Participating artists include:

    Zeesy Powers http://zeesypowers.com/   

    Jenn E . Norton http://jennenorton.blogspot.com/

    Myfanwy Ashmore http: http://www.myfanwy.ca/

     Robert Lendrum http://www.robertlendrum.com/index.php?/bio/

     Daniel Borins & Jennifer Marman http://www.marmco.com/

     Matthew Williamson http://www.matthew-williamson.com/

     Nicholas Stedman http://www.nicholasstedman.com/

  • Zora Anaya: Riconciliazione

    Senza Bussola (No compass), 2011, 3×4 feet, acrylic on canvas

    November 2 – 13, 2011
    Opening: Thursday, November 3,  7 pm  
    GALLERY 1313 Cell Gallery
    1313 Queen Street West,
    Toronto, ON M6K 1K8
    T: 416 – 536-6778
    E mail: director@g1313.org
    www.gallery13131.org
    Hours: Wed – Sun 1- 6

    Riconciliazione: molti anni di limbi (Reconciliation: many years in limbo)

    Works by Zoraida is a Colombian-born Canadian artist with little  formal art training. She has studied at Les Arts Décoratifs (Paris), and The Art Students League of New York (NY).

     This body of work attempts to deconstruct the negative nuance attached to the experiences felt in the unreal state and place called the limbo.  The structure of the limbo seems to be founded on the notions of directionless, nothingness and hopelessness. These, however, do not have to be bad encounters.  

    Does it not feel good to experience the reconciliation of opposing forces like the not here but not there …. not heaven but not hell…not right but not wrong?  These could be the points of reconciliation between oneself and the world.

    Thus these paintings hope to turn the limbo into a positive state and place where one can discover:  the free zone which is one’s own sacred space and it can be anywhere.    As well, the viewer could meet the still point which is known as the moment that changes us.

  • Dana Holst: Sometimes Rainbows are Black

    November 2 – 26, 2011
    Opening Thursday November 3, 6 – 9 pm
    THE RED HEAD GALLERY
    401 Richmond St. W., Suite 115.
    Toronto, ON M5V 3A8
    T:  416 504-5654.
    Email: art@redheadgallery.org.
    www.redheadgallery.org.
    Hours: Wed – Sat 12 – 5 pm

    Edmonton artist Dana Holst, in her solo exhibition, explores multiple feminine themes of ego, blossoming love, anxiety and self-loathing.   
    Sometimes Rainbows are Black is a retrospective exhibition including works from Prey and True Romance, two past Holst exhibitions.  As well there are new paintings, drawings and a fibre-based installation.
     
    The installation, Sometimes Rainbows are Black features a large rainbow rug in shades of mourning.  Made of antique wedding dresses painted black, then cut into thin strips, the silk was entirely hooked by hand using historical methods.  Monotonous, laborious, ominous, the black rainbow hangs on the wall flanked by June and April, two cut out drawings of girl heads, guardians of hope on a journey to the otherworld.
     
    Paintings in the show focus on fate as it befalls the lives of young girls caught in the transformation to womanhood.  For example, in Self-Loathing an adolescent girl stands with her back to the viewer on her stained and bare mattress, silently contemplating the wallpaper pattern, emanating feelings of loneliness and despair.
     
    Poignant and theatrical Holst’s new work looks at hope and desire as filtered through destiny and human cruelty/weakness.
     
    A catalogue for  Sometimes Rainbows are Black will be available the 1st of December 2011.  Contact Dana at info@danaholst.com to request a copy or visit www.danaholst.com for further information.

  • TRICHOPHILIA by Francis Luta

    Sunday, November 6, 2011
    starting at 7pm
    Wayla Bar
    996 Queen St East
    (Queen & Carlaw)
    Toronto, ON
    http://fmmlcollection.wordpress.com/

    An emerging Toronto artist, Francis Luta works in a wide range of media.

    He has developed a distinctive figurative style and his new works shows its refine version with a thematic focus on hair obsession and fetish.

    Please join us for a Sunday night at this fabulous venue with a great environment to view and celebrate the new work of Francis Luta.

    To learn more about Francis and his artwork, check out this link:
    http://fmmlcollection.wordpress.com/

  • Janet Bellotto: “The Lure”

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    November 3 –  November 27, 2011
    Opening: Thursday, November 3,  6 – 9 pm.
    De Luca Fine Art | Gallery
    217 Avenue Road
    Toronto, ON, M5R 2J3
    T: 416-537-4699
    E-mail: corrado@delucafineart.com
    www.delucafineart.com.
    Hours: Tuesday-Saturday 11-5pm

    The The Lure emerges from olfactory investigations borrowing from fact and fiction. Inspired by the mirage of aromas from perfume salons that attempt to seduce passers-by, Janet Bellotto entertains the gallery with an installation of illuminating and fragrant objects and scintillating video. At a time when illnesses travel instantaneously around the globe, scent emerges and vanishes like a mirage, and yet resonate memories and emotions. The objects in Bellotto’s work acts in the tradition of aromatherapy while entertaining how certain smells can conjure up memories of place. The Lure attempts to tap into the history of per fumum (Latin) – which translates as “through the smoke”, where aromatic smells have been used for medicinal and cosmetic purposes.

    Janet Bellotto is an artist from Toronto, who splits her time teaching in Dubai at Zayed University. She graduated from the Sculpture/Installation program from the Ontario College of Art & Design, Toronto, and received an MFA in Sculpture/Studio Arts from Concordia University. Her practice encompasses sculpture, installation, photography, video and performance. She continues to write and curate, while exhibiting both locally and internationally.

    Recent exhibitions include: 2011 Untitled Original, CDA Projects, Istanbul Contemporary Crosscurrents: Portraits and Electronic Arts, Streaming Museum in Dubai  (www.streamingmuseum.org); A Cozy Lie, Redhead Gallery, Toronto; 2010 – 12th Cairo Biennale, Cairo, Egypt; Drowning Ophelia, Stratford Gallery, Stratford; 2009 – Point of Encounter, Tashkeel, Dubai; 2008 – In-Situ, The JamJar, Dubai; WAVE, The LAB, New York City; 2007 – Dehisce, kkprojects, New Orleans, USA.

    De Luca Fine Art | Gallery, established in 2004, is now located at 217 Avenue Road. The gallery represents and introduces Italian and International Artists to Canadian audiences. In collaboration with select Italian Galleries, De Luca Fine Art | Gallery introduces established and emerging Canadian Artists to Europe.   For more information regarding this event and/or our services, consultation, and art rental program please visit www.delucafineart.com

  • Black & White Fundraising Gala


    Saturday, November 12th, 2011
    VIP RECEPTION: 6:00PM
    VIP Dinner: 7:00-9:30PM
    BINARY PARTY: 8:00PM – 2:00AM
    Design Exchange

    234 Bay Street,TD Centre,
    Toronto. ON
    dx.org/gala


    DESIGN EXCHANGE (DX) TO HONOUR CANADIANS BEHIND TWO UNIQUE GLOBAL PRACTICES, DESIGNER KARIM RASHID AND ASYMPTOTE ARCHITECTURE: HANI RASHID AND LISE ANNE COUTURE AT ANNUAL BLACK & WHITE GALA NOVEMBER 12th, 2011 

    Design Exchange (DX) is proud to announce its 2011 Canadian Honourees, Karim Rashid, Hani Rashid and Lise Anne Couture, whose works and achievements will be celebrated at Binary, the Design Exchange’s annual Black & White Fundraising Gala being held on November 12, 2011 at the DX. Each year the Design Exchange honors exceptional Canadian designers who are advancing the world of design.

    Karim Rashid is recognized as one of the most accomplished Industrial Designers in the world. Karim has over 3,000 projects in production in over 35 countries and his work is featured in 20 permanent museum collections. In addition to being a prolific industrial designer, Karim has participated in various design fields including interior, fashion, exhibit and urban design, and has published many successful books including I Want to Change the World (Rizzoli 2001.) Karim has been profiled in thousands of articles and was named the most famous industrial designer in the world by Time Magazine. He has received over 300 prestigious awards for his creativity and innovation in the design field.

    Architects and professional partners Hani Rashid and Lise Anne Couture founded Asymptote Architecture (ASY), and have produced powerful and innovative architecture around the world. Projects range from experimental spatial installations and digital architecture, to some of the world’s newest iconic buildings such as the HydraPier in the Netherlands and the 85,000 sqm YAS hotel in Abu Dhabi. Hani Rashid and Couture have also explored art installation, object design and master planning. Works include master plans for the center of Prague and the Yongsan district in Seoul, Korea, as well as special edition art and design works for Knoll, Meta (London) and Phillips de Pury and Company in New York.

    “Design Exchange has chosen to honour these three Canadian designers for their individual and collective achievements that have propelled them to international acclaim and helped brand Canada as a design-led nation,” says Design Exchange Chairperson, Tim Gilbert. He also notes that “Karim, Hani, and Lise Anne are role models for all aspiring young architects and designers, but especially to young women and newcomers to Canada.”

    The Design Exchange opens its doors to four lavishly decorated rooms inspired by the word BINARY and the works of the Honourees. The gala will also host the Ontario launch of Dan Aykroyd’s much anticipated Crystal Head Vodka, known for its trademark skull bottle design.

    Proceeds from the annual gala raise funds for DX youth programs. For more information visit www.dx.org/gala

    ABOUT THE DESIGN EXCHANGE
    Design Exchange (DX) is Canada’s Design Centre and Museum with a mission to promote the value of design. We are an internationally recognized non-profit educational organization committed to promoting greater awareness of design as well as the indispensable role it plays in fostering economic growth and cultural vitality. We improve communication between various design disciplines, educators, businesses and the general public through programs, exhibits, lectures, and workshops. For more information visit www.dx.org

    INFORMATION TO THE PUBLIC
    Event: 2011 DX BLACK & WHITE FUNDRAISING GALA
    VIP RECEPTION: 6:00PM
    VIP Dinner: 7:00-9:30PM
    BINARY PARTY: 8:00PM – 2:00AM
    Location: Design Exchange, 234 Bay Street, TD Centre, Toronto Canada
    Date: Saturday, November 12, 2011
    Honouring Karim Rashid, Hani Rashid, Lise Anne Couture
    Proceeds Support Youth Programs

    GALA WEBSITE
    dx.org/gala

    TICKETS
    Exclusive VIP Reception and Dinner
    Platinum Tables – $7,500
    Gold Tables – $5,000
    Individual Tickets – $500
    DX Members receive a 10% discount

    BINARY PARTY
    DX Member – $150
    Non-Member – $175

    TO PURCHASE TICKETS
    dx.org/gala, 416.216.2119 or tickets@dx.org

    SPONSORSHIP and DONATION INFORMATION
    Cindy Grenke
    Director of Development
    cindy@dx.org
    416.216.2134

  • Tara Coopers “Weather Girls Field Guide to Lightning”

    October 27 ­– November 26, 2011
    Artist talks: Thursday, October 27, 6-7 pm
    Opening: Thursday, October 27, 7-9 pm
    Open Studio Gallery
    George Gilmour Members Gallery
    401 Richmond Street West, Suite 104
    Toronto ON,  M5V 3A8
    T/F: 416-504-8238
    E-mail: sara@openstudio.on.ca
    W: http://www.openstudio.on.ca

    2010-11 Scholarship/Fellowship Exhibitions

    Each year, Open Studio awards three scholarships/fellowships,
    providing artists working in print media with both professional support and
    access to studio facilities to create new work during a one-year period. All
    three artists will give illustrated talks about their work and the progress
    of their projects over the year on Thursday, October 27 at 6 pm at Open
    Studio, followed by an opening reception. As London, ON-based artist, writer and academic Patrick Mahon points out the common thread between these three exhibitions is that all three artists are engaged in complex practices of making art generated in response to living/thinking experiences, which ultimately point to the artists themselves.

    Derived from true stories documenting recent encounters with lightning, Tara Cooper’s “Weather Girls Field Guide to Lightning” (Open Studio Gallery) depicts a myriad of subject matter from meteorological equipment, weather patterns and cloud formations to the quotidian ‹ a light bulb, a metal chair, a bottle of Jack Daniels and a lottery ticket.

    Combining print with film and sculpture, the exhibition conflates the impersonal language of the statistic with the impact of the personal experience, a place where both the weather and the viewer share the role of witness, impartial bystanders to the events of everyday.

    Open Studio thanks The Catherine and Maxwell Meighen Foundation and the
    Donald O¹Born Family for their kind support of the 2010-11
    Scholarship/Fellowship Program

  • Flora Shum: “RLPA2011THF”

    October 27 ­– November 26, 2011
    Artist talks: Thursday, October 27, 6-7 pm
    Opening: Thursday, October 27, 7-9 pm
    Open Studio Gallery
    George Gilmour Members Gallery
    401 Richmond Street West, Suite 104
    Toronto ON,  M5V 3A8
    T/F: 416-504-8238
    E-mail: sara@openstudio.on.ca
    W: http://www.openstudio.on.ca

    2010-11 Scholarship/Fellowship Exhibitions

    Each year, Open Studio awards three scholarships/fellowships,
    providing artists working in print media with both professional support and
    access to studio facilities to create new work during a one-year period. All
    three artists will give illustrated talks about their work and the progress
    of their projects over the year on Thursday, October 27 at 6 pm at Open
    Studio, followed by an opening reception. As London, ON-based artist, writer and academic Patrick Mahon points out the common thread between these three exhibitions is that all three artists are engaged in complex practices of making art generated in response to living/thinking experiences, which ultimately point to the artists themselves.

    Flora Shum’s “RLPA2011THF”, an acronym for The Rules of Life ­ Project A: To Have Face, 2011 (George Gilmour Members Gallery), explores identity and the need to save face and conceal personal weakness. The work reflects the artist’s compulsion to dissect and analyze identity. While science allows us to split something open and magnify it to find answers which are understood as facts, in matters of identity, we are left to explore the confusion of boundaries we are given, the expectations of others and of oneself, the scramble to always advance and the desperation of finding a sense of belonging.

    This series of etchings explores the possibilities, blurring the boundaries, creating new bodies, new bones, new organs, new tissues, new cells, inserting information into nuclei.  The idea is to create, alter, clone and construct new super-cyborgs ‹ technology fixing what technology created.

    Open Studio thanks The Catherine and Maxwell Meighen Foundation and the
    Donald O¹Born Family for their kind support of the 2010-11
    Scholarship/Fellowship Program.