05/27/2026
â¨Join us for an opening reception this Friday, May 29, 6-8pm! We have multiple exhibitions opening. Suite 104, at 401 Richmond Street West.
MAIN GALLERY
Sylvat Aziz
Defiant Memory
In âDefiant Memoryâ, Sylvat Aziz uses printmaking and other media to explore how illegitimate power erodes cultural memory, identity, and tradition. Through layered visual storytelling, the work foregrounds the resilience and shared humanity that persist in the face of oppression and displacement.
PROJECT SPACE
Refraction: Translations of Japanese Landscape
Fumiko Goto, Fuki Hamada, and Yoshie Uchida
Three Japanese printmakers, Fumiko Goto, Fuki Hamada, and Yoshie Uchida, each bring a distinct visual language to âRefraction: Translations of Japanese Landscapeâ. From Gotoâs meditative forest stillness to Hamadaâs perception-bending flora and Uchidaâs colour-driven elemental fragments, the exhibition asks how urban life in Japan shapes an artistâs relationship with the natural world. Curated by Derek Michael Besant, RCA, and supported by Open Studio, it is an intimate and poetic journey through landscape as translation.
PROOFS & PROCESS VITRINES
Jenn Law and Mohammad Tabesh
The Proofs & Process vitrines present new work by Jenn Law and Mohammad Tabesh, focusing on the often-unseen stages of printmaking, from testing and revision to material and colour decisions. The display frames process as a visible part of making, with works shown as they develop over time.
Jenn Law is a Toronto-based artist and writer who uses letterpress printing to inscribe poetic language into plants. In her ivy-based works, the plant gradually alters and erases printed text, turning the work into a changing collaboration between language and living material.
Mohammad Tabesh is a Toronto-based interdisciplinary artist working across print, sculpture, and writing. His project âThe Book of Roaring Memoriesâ transforms oral histories from the Iranian diaspora into colour-based prints, shaped by systems of translation, memory, and his red-green colour blindness.
đ¸ Images in order of artists presented