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Joyce Wieland: Heart On | Art Gallery of Ontario
2025年6月21日–9月21日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
Radical. Playful. Iconic. During the 60s, 70s and 80s, Joyce Wieland’s humorous and biting artistry helped give shape to this country’s changing ideas about gender, nationhood and ecology. An artist of great influence, whose work included textiles, collage, print, drawing and film, her legacy lives in the works of subsequent generations.
In this ambitious retrospective, the first since 1987, more than five decades of artistic output come together to highlight the breadth and originality of her practice and to position her as a key figure in 20th century art and film. In addition to situating Wieland’s work in its artistic, social and political context, the exhibition will highlight the many ways she anticipated current debates about feminism, social equity and ecology.
The exhibition is curated by Georgiana Uhlyarik, Fredrik S. Eaton Curator of Canadian Art, AGO and Anne Grace, Curator of Modern Art, MMFA.
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Def Leppard Rogers Concert Tour 2025|June 23 | WalmartAMP
Jun 23, 2025 (UTC-5)
Toronto
Def Leppard Rogers is set to electrify the stage at the WalmartAMP in Rogers, AR, on June 23, 2025, at 8:00 PM. This iconic rock band, renowned for its chart-topping hits and high-energy performances, promises an unforgettable evening for fans. With ticket prices ranging from $70 to $250, attendees can expect a night filled with classic anthems and spectacular showmanship. The WalmartAMP, known for its excellent acoustics and vibrant atmosphere, provides the perfect backdrop for this much-anticipated event. As Def Leppard Rogers gears up to deliver a powerful performance, rock enthusiasts are encouraged to secure tickets early for what is sure to be a sold-out show.
Picnics and Pastimes | Royal Ontario Museum
2024年11月26日–2025年11月1日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
What makes for a delightful picnic? Food and drink? Poetry? Music? A new installation offers a window into the pleasures, pastimes, and artistic heritage of Iran during the Safavid dynasty (1501-1736). A royal picnic, depicted on a large, treasured tile arch from the collections, is complemented by exceptional objects from the period.
Gracing the Osler Gate on Level 1, a colourful tiled archway made over 350 years ago in Isfahan, Iran takes centre stage, showing picnic-goers out for an afternoon of leisure and luxury. Individual tiles reveal immaculately dressed figures relaxing, enjoying delicious food and drink, and being entertained with music, poetry, and feats of archery. Lively and cheerful, the scenes on the arch offer a wonderful glimpse into the cultural vibrancy of Iran when it was ruled by the Safavids, a Shi'a Muslim dynasty, who were great patrons of the arts and architecture, and who fostered international trade and diplomacy from Isfahan, their newly built capital city.
The tile arch provides a magnificent focal point for the installation, which also showcases several stunning objects from the same period. A gorgeous lute with exquisite inlays and detail, an ornately decorated bow and arrow, a delicate swan-neck bottle, and beautifully crafted dishes - one of which carries words by medieval scholar Omar Khayyam (1048-1131) beginning with the lines: "This dish, which the intellect applauds, and on whose forehead it places a hundred kisses!" - bring the action on the tile arch to life. This beautiful collection of objects not only complements the arch scenes, but showcases the stunning artistry and intricacies of artisanal work iconic to the Safavid dynastic period.
One has only to take in the physical objects to be transported to the scenes in the arch, enjoying music, poetry, food, and entertainment.
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Picnics and Pastimes | Royal Ontario Museum
2024年11月26日–2025年11月1日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
What makes for a delightful picnic? Food and drink? Poetry? Music? A new installation offers a window into the pleasures, pastimes, and artistic heritage of Iran during the Safavid dynasty (1501-1736). A royal picnic, depicted on a large, treasured tile arch from the collections, is complemented by exceptional objects from the period.
Gracing the Osler Gate on Level 1, a colourful tiled archway made over 350 years ago in Isfahan, Iran takes centre stage, showing picnic-goers out for an afternoon of leisure and luxury. Individual tiles reveal immaculately dressed figures relaxing, enjoying delicious food and drink, and being entertained with music, poetry, and feats of archery. Lively and cheerful, the scenes on the arch offer a wonderful glimpse into the cultural vibrancy of Iran when it was ruled by the Safavids, a Shi'a Muslim dynasty, who were great patrons of the arts and architecture, and who fostered international trade and diplomacy from Isfahan, their newly built capital city.
The tile arch provides a magnificent focal point for the installation, which also showcases several stunning objects from the same period. A gorgeous lute with exquisite inlays and detail, an ornately decorated bow and arrow, a delicate swan-neck bottle, and beautifully crafted dishes - one of which carries words by medieval scholar Omar Khayyam (1048-1131) beginning with the lines: "This dish, which the intellect applauds, and on whose forehead it places a hundred kisses!" - bring the action on the tile arch to life. This beautiful collection of objects not only complements the arch scenes, but showcases the stunning artistry and intricacies of artisanal work iconic to the Safavid dynastic period.
One has only to take in the physical objects to be transported to the scenes in the arch, enjoying music, poetry, food, and entertainment.
Buy Now
NATURE IN BRILLIANT COLOUR | Royal Ontario Museum
2024年12月14日–2025年8月17日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
MARVEL AT THE POWER OF COLOUR IN THE NATURAL WORLD.
Anywhere you look in nature, colour holds meaning. From the fiery reds of warning to the soothing blues of calm waters, Nature in Brilliant Colour will take you on a kaleidoscopic journey through the vibrant hues of our planet.
Awaken your senses, and have your perception forever altered, as you make your way through a series of spaces, each dedicated to a colour of the rainbow. Through over 200 specimens, photo-worthy projections, and shifting soundscapes, this exhibition promises to be a transformative experience that will deepen appreciation for the complex artistry of our world and celebrate its vivid and untamed beauty.
This exhibition was created by the Field Museum.
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"The Modernist Moment" Art Gallery of Ontario Exhibition | Art Gallery of Ontario
2025年1月1日–9月5日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
Moments in Modernismhighlights the diversity and high quality of the AGO’s modern art collection, which has been built over time by generations of museum curators and patrons.
This installation will show collection strengths from artistic movements such as Pop Art, Abstraction, Realism, and Minimalism. An international approach in artistic styles will be presented, including a body of work from the AGO holdings by Brazilian artists, recognizing the global nature of modernism. A selection of contemporary works that respond to modernist movements will also be shown.
Many of the artists, including Andy Warhol, Helen Frankenthaler, Jules Olitski, Gerhard Richter, and Mark Rothko are well known while others are still yet to be broadly recognized such as Tomie Ohtake, Rubem Valentim, Gene Davis and Kazuo Nakamura.A particular focus will be Canadian artists including Alex Colville, Rita Letendre, Jack Bush, Agnes Martin, Guido Molinari and Norval Morrisseau.
Moments in Modernismfeatures artworks that will form the cornerstone for the expansion of the new Dani Reiss Modern and Contemporary Gallery, starting construction in 2024. The new building is being designed by architects Diamond Schmitt, Selldorf Architects and Two Row Architect to showcase the AGO's growing collection of modern and contemporary art.
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"The Modernist Moment" Art Gallery of Ontario Exhibition | Art Gallery of Ontario
Jan 1–Sep 5, 2025 (UTC-5)
Toronto
Moments in Modernismhighlights the diversity and high quality of the AGO’s modern art collection, which has been built over time by generations of museum curators and patrons.
This installation will show collection strengths from artistic movements such as Pop Art, Abstraction, Realism, and Minimalism. An international approach in artistic styles will be presented, including a body of work from the AGO holdings by Brazilian artists, recognizing the global nature of modernism. A selection of contemporary works that respond to modernist movements will also be shown.
Many of the artists, including Andy Warhol, Helen Frankenthaler, Jules Olitski, Gerhard Richter, and Mark Rothko are well known while others are still yet to be broadly recognized such as Tomie Ohtake, Rubem Valentim, Gene Davis and Kazuo Nakamura.A particular focus will be Canadian artists including Alex Colville, Rita Letendre, Jack Bush, Agnes Martin, Guido Molinari and Norval Morrisseau.
Moments in Modernismfeatures artworks that will form the cornerstone for the expansion of the new Dani Reiss Modern and Contemporary Gallery, starting construction in 2024. The new building is being designed by architects Diamond Schmitt, Selldorf Architects and Two Row Architect to showcase the AGO's growing collection of modern and contemporary art.
Buy Now
Tissot, Women and Time | Art Gallery of Ontario
2025年1月1日–6月29日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
Exploring the many ways that the French artist James Tissot represented modern women and envisioned their relationship to time during the last decades of the nineteenth century, this exhibition presents two of the AGO’s most beloved Tissot paintings alongside a selection of more than 30 works on paper donated by Allan and Sondra Gotlieb. The contradictions of the period come alive in these works, as the quickness of modernity, exemplified by the newfound speed of travel, fashion and commodity culture, is juxtaposed against the constrained pace of women’s everyday lives, characterized by the wait to find a husband, caregiving, tending to customers or recovering from illness.
Curated by Mary Hunter, Associate Professor, McGill University and by Alexa Greist, AGO Curator and R. Fraser Elliott Chair, Prints & Drawings, and Caroline Shields, AGO Curator of European Art, this exhibition illustrates the many ways that time, and a gendered understanding of it, shaped women’s identities.
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Light Years: The Phil Lind Gift | Art Gallery of Ontario
2025年1月1日–11月2日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
A prodigious collector of contemporary art, the late Phil Lind (1943-2023) was drawn to artworks that illuminated social and political histories. An enthusiastic supporter of what has since come to be known as the Vancouver school of conceptual photography, this exhibition features works by noted Vancouver-born artists Stan Douglas, Rodney Graham, Ron Terada and Jeff Wall. Complementing these lens-based works – some intimate, some large-scale light boxes, some multimedia - are paintings, photographs and sculptures by Thomas Demand, William Eggleston, Antony Gormley, Philip Guston, William Kentridge, Thomas Ruff, Laurie Simmons, Wolfgang Tillmans and Ai Weiwei. This exhibition is curated by AGO's Curator of Modern Art Adam Welch.
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"The Modernist Moment" Art Gallery of Ontario Exhibition | Art Gallery of Ontario
2025年1月1日–9月5日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
Moments in Modernismhighlights the diversity and high quality of the AGO’s modern art collection, which has been built over time by generations of museum curators and patrons.
This installation will show collection strengths from artistic movements such as Pop Art, Abstraction, Realism, and Minimalism. An international approach in artistic styles will be presented, including a body of work from the AGO holdings by Brazilian artists, recognizing the global nature of modernism. A selection of contemporary works that respond to modernist movements will also be shown.
Many of the artists, including Andy Warhol, Helen Frankenthaler, Jules Olitski, Gerhard Richter, and Mark Rothko are well known while others are still yet to be broadly recognized such as Tomie Ohtake, Rubem Valentim, Gene Davis and Kazuo Nakamura.A particular focus will be Canadian artists including Alex Colville, Rita Letendre, Jack Bush, Agnes Martin, Guido Molinari and Norval Morrisseau.
Moments in Modernismfeatures artworks that will form the cornerstone for the expansion of the new Dani Reiss Modern and Contemporary Gallery, starting construction in 2024. The new building is being designed by architects Diamond Schmitt, Selldorf Architects and Two Row Architect to showcase the AGO's growing collection of modern and contemporary art.
Buy Now
Painted Presence: Rembrandt and his Peers | Art Gallery of Ontario
2025年1月1日–2026年2月1日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
From the Bader Collection at the Agnes Etherington Art Centre, the AGO welcomes a remarkable selection of seventeenth century Dutch paintings. Shown in dialogue with paintings from the AGO’s European Collection of Art, at the centre of this focused installation are seven artworks attributed to Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-1669), shown together for the first time. Featuring intensely observed still life paintings, detailed interiors and mesmerizing portraits, these striking artworks offer a rare glimpse of Dutch artistry at work. This exhibition is co-curated by Adam Harris Levine, AGO Associate Curator European Art and Suzanne van de Meerendonk, Bader Curator of European Art, Agnes Etherington Art Centre.
This exhibition is co-organized by the Art Gallery of Ontario and the Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Queen's University.
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Light Years: The Phil Lind Gift | Art Gallery of Ontario
Jan 1–Nov 2, 2025 (UTC-5)
Toronto
A prodigious collector of contemporary art, the late Phil Lind (1943-2023) was drawn to artworks that illuminated social and political histories. An enthusiastic supporter of what has since come to be known as the Vancouver school of conceptual photography, this exhibition features works by noted Vancouver-born artists Stan Douglas, Rodney Graham, Ron Terada and Jeff Wall. Complementing these lens-based works – some intimate, some large-scale light boxes, some multimedia - are paintings, photographs and sculptures by Thomas Demand, William Eggleston, Antony Gormley, Philip Guston, William Kentridge, Thomas Ruff, Laurie Simmons, Wolfgang Tillmans and Ai Weiwei. This exhibition is curated by AGO's Curator of Modern Art Adam Welch.
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Reality & Reverie: Canadian and European Painting Beyond Impressionism | Art Gallery of Ontario
2025年1月1日–7月27日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
At the dawn of the 20th century, on both sides of the Atlantic, the human mind was of great interest to scientists, scholars, and artists alike. What does it look like, they wondered, to learn and to dream? What is the shape of imagination?
This installation of 13 beloved paintings from the AGO collections of European and Canadian Art brings together dream-like landscapes, portraits of children reading, and adults lost in thought, to consider the many ways artists gave form to that intangible thing – one’s interior thoughts. Featuring examples of Realist, Impressionist, Expressionist and Symbolist art, the installation demonstrates how this pursuit helped push the bounds of traditional representation.
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Reality & Reverie: Canadian and European Painting Beyond Impressionism | Art Gallery of Ontario
Jan 1–Jul 27, 2025 (UTC-5)
Toronto
At the dawn of the 20th century, on both sides of the Atlantic, the human mind was of great interest to scientists, scholars, and artists alike. What does it look like, they wondered, to learn and to dream? What is the shape of imagination?
This installation of 13 beloved paintings from the AGO collections of European and Canadian Art brings together dream-like landscapes, portraits of children reading, and adults lost in thought, to consider the many ways artists gave form to that intangible thing – one’s interior thoughts. Featuring examples of Realist, Impressionist, Expressionist and Symbolist art, the installation demonstrates how this pursuit helped push the bounds of traditional representation.
Buy Now
Louise Noguchi: Selected Works, 1986-2000 | Art Gallery of Ontario
Jan 1–Jul 27, 2025 (UTC-5)
Toronto
For more than five decades, distinguished Toronto artist Louise Noguchi has been working in sculpture, installation, photography, and video. Unifying her work is a conviction that identity is not given—but constructed—shaped by events, beliefs, and circumstance. Spotlighting Noguchi’s work in video and sculpture, the AGO’s Associate Curator of Canadian Art Renée van der Avoird brings together three works from the AGO collection.
Reverberating with sound, Noguchi’s looping video workCrack(2000) sees the artist performing as an assistant in a wild-west act, holding out flowers only to have them suddenly cut down mid-air by the lash of whip.
Noguchi’s large sculptural installationFruits of Belief: The Grand Landscape(1986) brings together a head, a cornucopia, and a photographic reproduction of Thomas Gainsborough’s 1770s painting,A Grand Landscape, to examine our shared relationship to nature—as something real, constructed, and imaginary.
By contrast, the third work in this exhibition, Noguchi’s 1990–91 mirror sculptureEden,addresses themes of surveillance and freedom, asking: are we approaching paradise, or withdrawing from it?
Buy Now
Louise Noguchi: Selected Works, 1986-2000 | Art Gallery of Ontario
2025年1月1日–7月27日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
For more than five decades, distinguished Toronto artist Louise Noguchi has been working in sculpture, installation, photography, and video. Unifying her work is a conviction that identity is not given—but constructed—shaped by events, beliefs, and circumstance. Spotlighting Noguchi’s work in video and sculpture, the AGO’s Associate Curator of Canadian Art Renée van der Avoird brings together three works from the AGO collection.
Reverberating with sound, Noguchi’s looping video workCrack(2000) sees the artist performing as an assistant in a wild-west act, holding out flowers only to have them suddenly cut down mid-air by the lash of whip.
Noguchi’s large sculptural installationFruits of Belief: The Grand Landscape(1986) brings together a head, a cornucopia, and a photographic reproduction of Thomas Gainsborough’s 1770s painting,A Grand Landscape, to examine our shared relationship to nature—as something real, constructed, and imaginary.
By contrast, the third work in this exhibition, Noguchi’s 1990–91 mirror sculptureEden,addresses themes of surveillance and freedom, asking: are we approaching paradise, or withdrawing from it?
Buy Now
Tissot, Women and Time | Art Gallery of Ontario
2025年1月1日–6月29日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
Exploring the many ways that the French artist James Tissot represented modern women and envisioned their relationship to time during the last decades of the nineteenth century, this exhibition presents two of the AGO’s most beloved Tissot paintings alongside a selection of more than 30 works on paper donated by Allan and Sondra Gotlieb. The contradictions of the period come alive in these works, as the quickness of modernity, exemplified by the newfound speed of travel, fashion and commodity culture, is juxtaposed against the constrained pace of women’s everyday lives, characterized by the wait to find a husband, caregiving, tending to customers or recovering from illness.
Curated by Mary Hunter, Associate Professor, McGill University and by Alexa Greist, AGO Curator and R. Fraser Elliott Chair, Prints & Drawings, and Caroline Shields, AGO Curator of European Art, this exhibition illustrates the many ways that time, and a gendered understanding of it, shaped women’s identities.
Buy Now
Reality & Reverie: Canadian and European Painting Beyond Impressionism | Art Gallery of Ontario
Jan 1–Jul 27, 2025 (UTC-5)
Toronto
At the dawn of the 20th century, on both sides of the Atlantic, the human mind was of great interest to scientists, scholars, and artists alike. What does it look like, they wondered, to learn and to dream? What is the shape of imagination?
This installation of 13 beloved paintings from the AGO collections of European and Canadian Art brings together dream-like landscapes, portraits of children reading, and adults lost in thought, to consider the many ways artists gave form to that intangible thing – one’s interior thoughts. Featuring examples of Realist, Impressionist, Expressionist and Symbolist art, the installation demonstrates how this pursuit helped push the bounds of traditional representation.
Buy Now
Louise Noguchi: Selected Works, 1986-2000 | Art Gallery of Ontario
2025年1月1日–7月27日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
For more than five decades, distinguished Toronto artist Louise Noguchi has been working in sculpture, installation, photography, and video. Unifying her work is a conviction that identity is not given—but constructed—shaped by events, beliefs, and circumstance. Spotlighting Noguchi’s work in video and sculpture, the AGO’s Associate Curator of Canadian Art Renée van der Avoird brings together three works from the AGO collection.
Reverberating with sound, Noguchi’s looping video workCrack(2000) sees the artist performing as an assistant in a wild-west act, holding out flowers only to have them suddenly cut down mid-air by the lash of whip.
Noguchi’s large sculptural installationFruits of Belief: The Grand Landscape(1986) brings together a head, a cornucopia, and a photographic reproduction of Thomas Gainsborough’s 1770s painting,A Grand Landscape, to examine our shared relationship to nature—as something real, constructed, and imaginary.
By contrast, the third work in this exhibition, Noguchi’s 1990–91 mirror sculptureEden,addresses themes of surveillance and freedom, asking: are we approaching paradise, or withdrawing from it?
Buy Now
Reality & Reverie: Canadian and European Painting Beyond Impressionism | Art Gallery of Ontario
Jan 1–Jul 27, 2025 (UTC-5)
Toronto
At the dawn of the 20th century, on both sides of the Atlantic, the human mind was of great interest to scientists, scholars, and artists alike. What does it look like, they wondered, to learn and to dream? What is the shape of imagination?
This installation of 13 beloved paintings from the AGO collections of European and Canadian Art brings together dream-like landscapes, portraits of children reading, and adults lost in thought, to consider the many ways artists gave form to that intangible thing – one’s interior thoughts. Featuring examples of Realist, Impressionist, Expressionist and Symbolist art, the installation demonstrates how this pursuit helped push the bounds of traditional representation.
Buy Now
"The Modernist Moment" Art Gallery of Ontario Exhibition | Art Gallery of Ontario
2025年1月1日–9月5日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
Moments in Modernismhighlights the diversity and high quality of the AGO’s modern art collection, which has been built over time by generations of museum curators and patrons.
This installation will show collection strengths from artistic movements such as Pop Art, Abstraction, Realism, and Minimalism. An international approach in artistic styles will be presented, including a body of work from the AGO holdings by Brazilian artists, recognizing the global nature of modernism. A selection of contemporary works that respond to modernist movements will also be shown.
Many of the artists, including Andy Warhol, Helen Frankenthaler, Jules Olitski, Gerhard Richter, and Mark Rothko are well known while others are still yet to be broadly recognized such as Tomie Ohtake, Rubem Valentim, Gene Davis and Kazuo Nakamura.A particular focus will be Canadian artists including Alex Colville, Rita Letendre, Jack Bush, Agnes Martin, Guido Molinari and Norval Morrisseau.
Moments in Modernismfeatures artworks that will form the cornerstone for the expansion of the new Dani Reiss Modern and Contemporary Gallery, starting construction in 2024. The new building is being designed by architects Diamond Schmitt, Selldorf Architects and Two Row Architect to showcase the AGO's growing collection of modern and contemporary art.
Buy Now
AUSCHWITZ.Not long ago. Not far away. | Royal Ontario Museum
2025年1月10日–9月1日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
An unprecedented exhibition that examines the history and legacy of Auschwitz.
Created by Nazi Germany, the most significant site of the Holocaust, Auschwitz, was not a single entity. It gradually became a system of camps that combined two functions: a concentration camp and a killing centre in which some 1 million Jews— and tens of thousands of others, including Poles, Romani people, and Soviet POWs — were detained and murdered in a systematic and industrialized fashion. This powerful exhibition, which arrives in Toronto just ahead of the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz on January 27, 2025, explores the dual identity of the Auschwitz camp as a physical setting — the largest documented mass murder site in human history— and as a symbol of the borderless manifestation of hatred and human atrocity.
Buy Now
AUSCHWITZ.Not long ago. Not far away. | Royal Ontario Museum
Jan 10–Sep 1, 2025 (UTC-5)
Toronto
An unprecedented exhibition that examines the history and legacy of Auschwitz.
Created by Nazi Germany, the most significant site of the Holocaust, Auschwitz, was not a single entity. It gradually became a system of camps that combined two functions: a concentration camp and a killing centre in which some 1 million Jews— and tens of thousands of others, including Poles, Romani people, and Soviet POWs — were detained and murdered in a systematic and industrialized fashion. This powerful exhibition, which arrives in Toronto just ahead of the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz on January 27, 2025, explores the dual identity of the Auschwitz camp as a physical setting — the largest documented mass murder site in human history— and as a symbol of the borderless manifestation of hatred and human atrocity.
Buy Now
AUSCHWITZ.Not long ago. Not far away. | Royal Ontario Museum
Jan 10–Sep 1, 2025 (UTC-5)
Toronto
An unprecedented exhibition that examines the history and legacy of Auschwitz.
Created by Nazi Germany, the most significant site of the Holocaust, Auschwitz, was not a single entity. It gradually became a system of camps that combined two functions: a concentration camp and a killing centre in which some 1 million Jews— and tens of thousands of others, including Poles, Romani people, and Soviet POWs — were detained and murdered in a systematic and industrialized fashion. This powerful exhibition, which arrives in Toronto just ahead of the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz on January 27, 2025, explores the dual identity of the Auschwitz camp as a physical setting — the largest documented mass murder site in human history— and as a symbol of the borderless manifestation of hatred and human atrocity.
Buy Now
Louise Noguchi: Selected Works, 1986-2000 | Toronto
2025年1月18日–7月27日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
Japanese-American artist Isamu Noguchi is one of the most famous sculptors of the 20th century and one of the first to try to combine sculpture and landscape design. He studied under Constantin Brancusi and Qi Baishi, and his works not only transcend national boundaries, but also transcend the dimension of time.
Renée van der Avoird, associate curator of Canadian art at the Art Gallery of Ontario, focuses the exhibition on the artist's video and sculpture works, and combines three works from the Art Gallery's collection: Fruit of Faith: Large Landscape (1986), Eden (1990-91) and Cracks (2000).
Louise Noguchi: Selected Works, 1986-2000 | Toronto
Jan 18–Jul 27, 2025 (UTC-5)
Toronto
Japanese-American artist Isamu Noguchi is one of the most famous sculptors of the 20th century and one of the first to try to combine sculpture and landscape design. He studied under Constantin Brancusi and Qi Baishi, and his works not only transcend national boundaries, but also transcend the dimension of time.
Renée van der Avoird, associate curator of Canadian art at the Art Gallery of Ontario, focuses the exhibition on the artist's video and sculpture works, and combines three works from the Art Gallery's collection: Fruit of Faith: Large Landscape (1986), Eden (1990-91) and Cracks (2000).
Louise Noguchi: Selected Works, 1986-2000 | Toronto
2025年1月18日–7月27日 (UTC-5)
Toronto
Japanese-American artist Isamu Noguchi is one of the most famous sculptors of the 20th century and one of the first to try to combine sculpture and landscape design. He studied under Constantin Brancusi and Qi Baishi, and his works not only transcend national boundaries, but also transcend the dimension of time.
Renée van der Avoird, associate curator of Canadian art at the Art Gallery of Ontario, focuses the exhibition on the artist's video and sculpture works, and combines three works from the Art Gallery's collection: Fruit of Faith: Large Landscape (1986), Eden (1990-91) and Cracks (2000).