New Events


Foraging for Toronto's Lost Rivers
Apr
16
to Apr 22

Foraging for Toronto's Lost Rivers

Foraging for Toronto’s Lost Rivers explores the intersections of history, environmental awareness, and artistic representation, aiming to revitalise a sense of connection with Toronto’s lost waterways and their impact on the city’s evolution. Ink sourced directly from the land is painted onto photographs to create a multidimensional exploration of memory, history, and place that works to recontextualize our understanding of past and present. Through reintroducing foraged materials found at each site, the exhibition reinforces the connection between land, memory, and human experience.

Visitors are invited to engage with colouring sheets on the walls using the inks, introducing a direct transfer of the environment into the artwork. Takeaway maps guide visitors to the 17 original artworks displayed across the city, near the depicted sites in community spaces. In this fluid interplay of past and present, the ink paintings serve as both witness and storyteller, bridging generational gaps and connecting us to the ever-evolving narrative of collective memory.

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Too Big to Fail
Apr
6
to Apr 13

Too Big to Fail

This exhibition brings together diverse backgrounds and creative approaches to build a strong collective voice. These 32 artists and designers compose a pluralist ensemble in which there is challenge, contemplation, revision, distortion, nostalgia, softness and trauma – a scope of concepts that is almost overwhelming. As we continue our journey through these unique interdisciplinary explorations, we grab on to the hope that, just as the themes we take on, we are TOO BIG TO FAIL.

This show consists of 32 artists and designers with an interdisciplinary practice working towards their MA/MFA/MDes degrees.

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Meraki
Apr
18
to Apr 27

Meraki

  • The Studio Gallery, Duncan McArthur Hall (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

This retrospective exhibit features paintings, film, ekphrastic poetry, fused glass, sketches, and encaustic work by students of the Artist in the Community Education program at Queen's University.

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