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Ceci est un event archivé de la Fête de la Culture 2024.

  • A mosaic of a bear head mounted on a white wall.
    "Kyoto Bear" (2019) by Michel Dumont
  • A photograph of a dirt field parking lot with puddles.
    "Parking Lot Pandemic #12" (2020 / 2021) by Jeanne Randolph
  • A toy boat in water of a flooded park. In the reflection of the water, an adult figure and child are seen with a remote control.
    "Toy boat" (2017) by Stephen Andrews
  • A close-up of an illustration of a water surface.
    "Water" (2001) by Robert Wiens

Watershed

En personne

LGBTQIA2S Peinture Gravure Sculpture et Installation Arts visuels
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Date et heure

Lieu

Paul Petro Contemporary Art

980 Queen Street West

Toronto, ON

Directions: Please use door located on the left. Note that there is a step to enter the gallery. There is Green P parking only available between 11am to 2pm in front of the gallery.

Accès

Gratuit.

Offert en Anglais.

À propos

Watershed

Septmber 6 - October 5, 2024

Gallery hours: Wednesday-Saturday, 11am-5pm

Stephen Andrews, Marlene Creates, Francisco De la Barra, Michel Dumont, André Ethier, Gary Evans, FASTWÜRMS, Ron Giii, Sadko Hadzihasanovic, Jay Isaac, Zachari Logan, Olia Mishchenko, Pejvak, Jeanne Randolph, Mélanie Rocan, Su Rynard, Carol Wainio, Robert Wiens, Natalie Wood

"We all live on a watershed even if it's off a downspout or a tent flap. Watersheds are our connection to the ecosystem." -- Robert Wiens, May 2024

Paul Petro Contemporary Art is pleased to present the group exhibition Watershed.

This summer has seen a time of flash flooding in many parts of the world, including in Toronto where thunderstorm bursts unexpectedly flooded roads and basements. It was also the year that the mayor of Paris, in preparation for the summer Olympics, demonstrated to the world the somewhat-remediated water health of the river Seine by taking a swim.

Installed this summer in Ottawa at the National Gallery of Canada, in a permanent collection exhibition attuned to the environment, are photo-based works, a video and a memory map drawing by Marlene Creates and a pen and ink drawing, Ravine World (2014), by Olia Mishchenko. Comprised of eight sheets at 22 x 30 inches each, this continuous drawing maps a Lake Ontario shoreline fragment over its 240-inch length. I have always thought of this work as a primordial meeting place of land and water, enacted upon over time by humans at all ages, at play and at work, and by the effects of erosion and maintenance, and urban development.

The shoreline presents as a place of constant re-enactment. Rich in bio-diversity at its best, this junction of water and vegetation is known as the riparian zone, and functions as a barometer of lake health, supporting a vast array of animal, insect, bird, aquatic and, by extension, human life. Watershed looks at these relationships and considers bio-diversity in the balance of climate change.

Organisateur

Paul Petro Contemporary Art

Exhibiting Canadian and international artists by invitation since 1993.

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