Natalie Castellino: I think this is for you. Through a series of photographs, Castellino captures the shifts that take place in people's lives due to miscommunication ... more
Natalie Castellino: I think this is for you. Through a series of photographs, Castellino captures the shifts that take place in people's lives due to miscommunication.
WIRED – Susan Carr. Captivated and captured by wire. Books, necklaces, sculptures, and paintings are presented to create a "wired" environment ... more
WIRED – Susan Carr. Captivated and captured by wire. Books, necklaces, sculptures, and paintings are presented to create a "wired" environment.
The One I Love The Most – Propeller's annual Valentine's Day exhibition features both gallery members and a juried selection of non-members ... more
The One I Love The Most – Propeller's annual juried Valentine's Day exhibition. In honour of Valentine's Day, Propeller Center for the Visual Arts presents The One I Love the Most, a group exhibition featuring both gallery members and a juried selection of non-members. Each artist displays one piece (any medium) which they feel connects to the theme of "The One I Love the Most". It could be a favourite piece of artwork, or a representation of a person, place, item, moment etc. that the artist loves more than any other. The theme is open to interpretation.
Propeller Centre for the Visual Arts (T.O. Downtown)
Nancy Oakes: Drawing in Ten Seconds or More – vigorous yet sensitive line drawings in pen and graphite ... more
Nancy Oakes: Drawing in Ten Seconds or More – vigorous yet sensitive line drawings in pen and graphite. Portraits as well as studies of people in the urban environment, including "walking drawings" whereby the artist walks and draws simultaneously, letting the motion of her own body animate the lines.
Frances Thomas: but wait.Working within the traditions of modernist painting, Barrie artist Thomas employs and advances the language of gestural abstraction | Jude Norris: a horse called Memory. Video combines documentation of painted horse and voice-mail messages, creating a personal glimpse into the social life of the artist's community in Edmonton ... more
Frances Thomas: but wait. Working within the traditions of modernist painting, Barrie artist Frances Thomas employs and advances the language of gestural abstraction. Using fluid acrylics on wood panel, she relies on an improvisational playing out of materials and ideas to arrive at a poetic distillation of thought and sensation. Curator: Carolyn Bell Farrell. Catalogue with an essay by James D. Campbell.
Jude Norris: a horse called Memory. This video by Norris, a multi-disciplinary Cree / Métis artist, combines documentation of painted horse and voice-mail messages, creating a personal glimpse into the social life of the artist's community in Edmonton. Curator: Sandra Fraser.
Free Public Exhibitions Tour at 1pm. Family Sunday 1:30-3pm: Valentine's Day activity in Rotary Education Centre ... more
Free Public Exhibitions Tour at 1pm. Family Sunday 1:30-3pm: Valentine's Day activity in Rotary Education Centre; admission: $5 per child; free to Family Membership holders.
Fibred Optics. Curated byAndrea Fatona. Artists: Frances Dorsey (Halifax), Jérôme Havre (Montreal), Ed Pien (Toronto), Michèle Provost (Gatineau) ... more
Fibred Optics.Curated byAndrea Fatona. Artists: Frances Dorsey (Halifax), Jérôme Havre (Montreal), Ed Pien (Toronto), Michèle Provost (Gatineau). Fibred Optics is a group exhibition that explores the multi-sensorial nature of visual narration and perception. The artists employ natural and synthetic fibres as well as technologies to engage the viewer in an open-ended discussion about the ways in which narratives are layered and sutured together in an attempt to produce coherent meaning.