Kyle Scheurmann | Hold On

Kyle Scheurmann | Hold On 
April 16-30, 2022
OPENING Saturday, April 16, artist in attendance 12- 4 pm 
340 Dundas Street West, Toronto

Kyle Scheurmann’s vivid paintings share a strong ecological message. The paintings in Scheurmann’s all-new exhibition, Hold On, document the ‘front lines’ of climate change as experienced first-hand by the artist at the Fairy Creek blockade and scenes of contemporary life as ecological collapse approaches. Together, these portraits of the crisis form a cohesive narrative across paintings about the state of our environment. 

Artist's statement:

When an old-growth cedar naturally dies in an ancient forest, it turns white. These massive ‘Snags’ become the homes for countless species of wildlife while simultaneously feeding the forest around them. Bacteria, fungi and insects break down and utilize every last bit of the old tree’s resources. Sometimes, this process can take hundreds of years.

When an old-growth cedar is cut down and parts are left behind in a clearcut patch, they also turn white - but often in just a few seasons. These clearcuts create carbon sequester “dead zones”, totalling an area larger than Vancouver Island that pushes more carbon into the atmosphere from rabid decomposition and sun bleaching than newly planted trees can absorb.

“Over the past 20 years, BC forests were so heavily logged that net carbon emissions caused by the industry are now twice as large as Alberta’s oil sands.” (- David Broadland, Focus on Victoria)

On April 4th, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released its 2022 assessment. Or, as the UN Secretary-General António Guterres referred to it; "a litany of broken climate promises. It is a file of shame, cataloguing the empty pledges that put us firmly on track toward an unlivable world.”

On the unceded clearcut mountainsides along the pacific northwest coast, you can see these broken promises everywhere you look.

Broken promises that fall at the feet of the BC government. From refusing to implement the recommendations of its own “Old Growth Strategic Review Panel”, to claiming there is “no logging going on” at Fairy Creek, despite Pacheedaht Elder Bill Jones stating “The BC government has issued lies saying they’ve stopped logging while we can see trucks going by loaded with the trees we’re trying to protect.”

This track record has not stopped the government from continuing to make bold claims designed to feature well in press conferences. During the recent COP26 summit in Scotland, “the government of BC identified 2.6 million hectares [of deferrals] of the province’s most at-risk old-growth forests, but stopped short of announcing specific or permanent protections for the ancient, rare and large trees.” (- Stephanie Wood, The Narwhal)

These deferrals do not stop logging. In only the areas mentioned, they just postpone it for 2 years, allowing for old growth logging to continue at a rate of 50,000 hectares per year. The “annual allowable cut” doesn’t change, ancient trees will just be cut in different locations. Most of the forests protected by the Fairy Creek Blockades are not even on this deferral list.

So with less than 2.7% of productive ancient forest left in BC, as well as a “Talk and Log” policy firmly in place by the government, how can we Hold On to what we have left?

 At Eden Camp, one of several camps making up the Fairy Creek Blockades on unceded Pacheedaht territory - on Tree Farm Licence (TFL) 46 - the act of holding on took several literal forms.

Sometimes, it meant searching deep in the grove for signs of the endangered Goshawk - a rare bird that if found, would at least temporarily force the logging to stop.

Sometimes it meant locking yourself shoulder deep into the earth, physically preventing the logging trucks from going any further.

Sometimes it just meant cooking a warm meal for your fellow Forest Protectors.

I was scared when I first got to camp. I’d never been anywhere like that before. Not only because of the 1000-year-old cedars I now called my neighbours, but because of the persistent and swelling presence of RCMP. Their job was to forcibly remove us all in favour of short-term profit for the logging company, Teal Jones. At first, I was so scared, I sleep in my truck rather than setting up my tent just in case I needed to make a sudden late-night exit.

But the strength and power of the relationships between Forest Protectors quickly pulled me into the community. It is their conviction which has had the biggest lasting impact on me.

I had originally gone there as an ‘Artist in Residence’. I wanted to be witness to the realities on the frontlines of climate change. By the end of my four months, I’d also served as press on the RCMP media list, documenting enforcement in real time.

But most importantly, I grew into a Forest Protector too.

Canadian landscape painting is inseparable from the history of colonization. Although it has often played a role in the romanticization of a so-called frontier, in a contemporary context, I believe that landscape painting is required to take into consideration the reality of environmental destruction at the hands of colonialism while pursuing indigenous sovereignty as the primary step in healing.

In this way, the act of painting became my method of residence - documenting not only the act of ‘Holding On,’ but also reflecting on what we have left to ‘Hold On’ to.

As the repercussion of climate change seep deeper into our daily lives - heat domes, atmospheric rivers, fires, floods, and drought - we must urgently take stock of what’s at stake. Because cutting those trees affects us all, in every corner of the globe.

I am grateful for the support of the Forest Protectors I now call friends. Their assistance on the ground made my job as an artist considerably easier. Their continued encouragement and consultation in the days since camp was destroyed has been crucial to the realization of this new work. Now, it is their written reflections of experiences from the frontlines that breathe life into images they helped create.

Looking back, I now think of Eden Camp as one giant piece of art: A collaborative installation of determination.

I remember the first time I met Chickweed, just a few hours after arriving at Eden. Across the campfire, she very confidently said to me, “I’m here to put my body between those saws and these trees. What are you here to do?”

Exactly one year later, it’s now clear that what I went there to do was to make these paintings.”    -- Kyle Scheurmann

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ISABELLE MENIN | FLOATING GARDENS

Isabelle Menin | Floating Gardens
3045 Granville Street, Vancouver
April 16-30, 2022

Bau-Xi is proud to present selected works by the acclaimed Belgian photographic artist Isabelle Menin, including two new pieces from her most recent series, Le Capitaine In Love (2020-2021) and My Secret is Safe with You (2020-2021). Isabelle’s self-described “disordered landscapes” are comprised of numerous original photographs which showcase her skillful use of digital manipulation. They juxtapose lush, baroque-tinged light and composition with fragmented flora, punctuated by acidic shades for an ultramodern and sophisticated yet playful effect.

Menin is a graduate of the Graphic Research School (ERG) in Brussels and has exhibited internationally in art fairs and museums. Menin's works can be found in numerous private and corporate collections.

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David Leventi | Intermission

 


David Leventi | Intermission
April 16 - 30, 2022
RECEPTION: Saturday, April 23, 2-5 PM. Artist in Attendance.
350 Dundas Street West, Toronto

Bau-Xi Gallery presents Intermission, a collection of photographs from New York–based photographer, David Leventi. Expanding on his seminal series, Opera—the title and contents of the artist’s first monograph—Leventi now turns his gaze to the world’s rare trompe-l’œil painted curtains.

The tradition of hanging a curtain in the liminal space between performance and spectator—art and reality—has existed for centuries. The curtain has become a fourth wall that both veils in-house preparations and heightens the desire to see the action that is about to unfold.

The painted theatre curtain takes on a particular magic by conflating that separation and presenting another layer of trickery. These deceptive masterpieces derive from an ancient Greek tale of two artists, Parrhasios and Zeuxis. In competition to show who had more illusionary skill, the two artists each created their own distinct trompe-l’œil paintings. While Zeuxis’ depicted a still life with grapes that fooled nearby birds, Parrhasios triumphed by painting a curtain that appeared so real it needed to be drawn back to reveal the still life partially concealed behind.

In his signature typographic style, Leventi has lensed architectural portraits of these curtains, fashioning yet another mask over the theatrical box of illusions. Captivated by the rich hues that occupy these spaces, this series of color studies is a microcosm of his opera houses and a restaging of the palpable anticipation felt prior to the curtain’s initial pull.

 

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About the Artist

David Leventi is an established American photographer, recognized for his ability to capture meticulously detailed architectural interiors. Leventi is best known for his acclaimed series OPERA, which has been exhibited internationally.

Leventi's photographs have been widely published in TIME, The New York Times Magazine, ESPN The Magazine, FT Weekend Magazine, Condé Nast Traveler, among others. In 2007, Leventi was selected by Photo District News as one of their Top 30 Emerging Photographers. His work has been included in the 2008 Communication Arts Photography Annual and in the 2008, 2012 and 2013 editions of American Photography. Leventi is the recipient of two Graphis Gold awards, has been a two-time Photolucida Critical Mass Top 50 Finalist and was a participant at Review Santa Fe in 2010. 

Leventi's photography is included in prestigious private and public collections including The Sir Elton John Collection and The Cleveland Museum of Art.

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UHN | EXPOSURES: EARLY DAYS ON THE FRONT LINES OF THE PANDEMIC

 

Megan Landes & Brant Slomovic | Exposures: Early Days On The Front Lines Of The Pandemic
350 Dundas Street West, Toronto
April 2-14, 2022

Bau-Xi Gallery is proud to partner with the University Health Network (UHN) to present Exposures: Early Days on the Front Lines of the Pandemic, a two-person exhibition featuring works by clinician-artists Megan Landes and Brant Slomovic. Exposures is on view from April 2-April 14 at Bau-Xi Photo. ⁠

Exposures consists of distinct bodies of work from two emergency physicians on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic. For Megan Landes and Brant Slomovic, the strangeness, fear, and uncertainty that characterized the early days of the pandemic prompted them, for the first time, to integrate their medical and creative practices. This two-person exhibition brings together both intimate impressions of their experiences, but also reveals a rare glimpse into the vulnerability of those moments. By engaging both the medical and the visual arts community, the artists wish to invite a conversation about how visual arts can harness ways of seeing, expressing, and ultimately, healing on the front lines. 

When speaking of her return to works on paper, Megan Landes states:

“In my off hours, I began drawing portraits of my colleagues in full personal protective equipment (PPE). Soon after, other images spilled onto the paper, images haunting us on the front lines: opacified x-rays, overrun health systems spilling into field hospitals, moments of exhaustion, rage and despair. Along with my colleagues, I wrestled with being warrior and human, resolute and broken, okay and not okay. Drawing became an outlet for that tension.”⁠

Reflecting on this new body of work, Brant Slomovic states:

“I felt a need to document this time, if not to make sense of it, then simply to record that it happened in this way. All images were shot on my iPhone through a protective Ziploc® bag — a hack to limit contamination and spread of the virus and to ease disinfection. In effect, the resulting images evoke the strangeness and visceral experiences of working in a time that was anything but normal.”⁠


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MEGAN LANDES
BRANT SLOMOVIC
UHN FOUNDATION
EMERGENCY AT UHN

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Anda Kubis | Aura of Days

Anda Kubis | Aura of Days
April 2-14, 2022 
OPENING Saturday April 2nd, 1-3PM
340 Dundas Street West, Toronto
 
Bau-Xi Gallery presents, Aura of Days, an exhibition of exciting new oil paintings by Anda KubisKubis, who has shown widely across North America and Europe, engages the viewer through energetic compositions rich in colour.

Artist Statement:

"Observing seasonal shifts in light and atmosphere preoccupy me. I have no intention of depicting these scenes directly, yet I know that I’m influenced by them. Through the varied intensities and the wild colours of a sunrise, to the dizzying motion of clouds, or the feeling of vastness while standing in an open landscape, I am driven to reminisce with nature and contemplate time. Yet, my work is not quiet nor retiring. Vibrant compositions throw the viewer slightly off balance with layered perceptual effects. Painted quickly and vigorously, my painting process eventually slows to an excruciating pace where subtle decisions on colour tonalities and spatial relationships draw out over weeks. Ultimately my paintings are an indulgence in looking and seeing to discovering colour, light and formal plays – all tinged by the experience of a recent rural life."
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Numerous public and private collections have acquired Kubis’ work, including RBC, TD Bank, BMO, Cenovus Energy, Aimia, The Westaim Corporation, and the Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development. Kubis currently holds the position of Director of the Haliburton School of Art + Design at Fleming College.

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ANDRE PETTERSON | HORIZON

Andre Petterson | Horizon
3045 Granville Street, Vancouver
April 2-14, 2022

Bau-Xi Gallery presents Horizon, a new and timely series from celebrated Vancouver artist Andre Petterson. Working in his signature mixed media format integrating photography and paint, Petterson continues to explore the reality of climate change, this time focusing on the elements of rebirth and hope. Traditionally understood markers of calm - trees, flowers, fountains and charming house fronts - are digitally placed dissonantly beyond the shoreline or at the foot of frothing waves, yet continue to bloom and gleam in the sun despite the rising waters. The compositions are then dappled with brushstrokes, further suggesting  the amorphous realm of thought and "What If".  

 

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Gavin Lynch | The Seasons Reverse

Gavin Lynch | The Seasons Reverse
March 19-31, 2022

340 Dundas Street West, Toronto

From March 19-31, Bau-Xi Gallery presents the inaugural exhibition for Gavin Lynch, in his highly anticipated show The Seasons Reverse.

Featuring new artwork by the artist, The Seasons Reverse observes Lynch’s signature contemporary, texturally nuanced paintings. Drawing on various movements in art history, fiction, environmental degradation, and nature itself for inspiration, the artist challenges the traditional landscape with his collage-inspired approach and exceptional visual presentation. By employing subtle pixelation within his work, Lynch considers the increased consumption of the natural world through digitized means, rather than the physical experience.

Artist Statement:

“The Seasons Reverse began with a simple idea: to create a cast of fictional landscapes that existed beyond the effects of humans, in which nature was left to its own accord to recover, rebound and even flourish. A post human speculative fictional, if you will. However, unlike much of the literary speculative fiction being written today, I was interested in eschewing depictions of the dystopian in favour of hopeful, meditative spaces. Perhaps there is yet some agency in the notion of beauty acting as an inspiration for humans to have urgency in meeting the climate crisis head on. Naturally all of this was just a departure point, the pieces inevitably took on a life of their own.

Narratively, the show begins and ends with paintings of the sun, rising and setting, which provide pictorial bookends to the exhibition, while referencing the natural solar cycle to which we are all tethered. I thought of the show as embodying a half rotation of the Earth, from dusk till dawn.

Individually, many of the paintings were composed as digital collages (a first for me), which cobbled together multitudes of images of varying forested areas in North America: snippets of the California Redwoods are grafted with the West Coast Rainforest and then inserted into the woods surrounding my home in Western Quebec, for instance. Source imagery ranged from pictures from my personal database, to photos donated by close friends, to stock imagery from the internet.

As such, these paintings are hypothetical-hybrid spaces, contained pictorial spaces wherein nature has cloned and grafted itself, sometimes containing multiple light sources, impossible perspectives and otherworldly palettes. As with a lot of my work, collage is front and centre as a working methodology, in both the preparatory and final works. Parts of one motif repeat and morph into another, almost as though being cut and pasted across space-time.

Leading up to the production of the show I read both non-fiction and fiction that address these ideas of how nature will respond to a decline in human pollution and destruction. Namely Cal Flyn's book Islands of Abandonment: Nature Rebounding in the Post Human Landscape resonated with me, in which she poetically examines real environments that have been severely damaged by humans and then have been subsequently abandoned. Remarkably some of the most ecologically devastated spaces in the world are now, after being abandoned by humans, amongst the most biodiverse in the world.

By no means a justification for our impact on the planet, but a hopeful sign that nature could in fact prosper, if we can only right our course.”

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Works by the artist can be found in collections including Royal Bank of Canada; Toronto Dominion Bank; Scotiabank; City of Ottawa Public Art Collection; University of Toronto; Simon Fraser University Permanent Collection, B.C. Hall; Air Canada; among others.

 

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ANNE GRIFFITHS | FROM THIS PLACE

 

Anne Griffiths | From This Place
3045 Granville Street, Vancouver

Inaugural Exhibition with Bau-Xi
March 5-19, 2022

Anne Griffiths’ unique and intuitive expressions of nature represent a new chapter in the established lexicon of Canadian landscape art. Through gestural line work, a sophisticated colour palette, and varying levels of abstraction, she visually interprets the visceral feeling of being amongst and communing with nature, giving equal attention to the ordinary and extraordinary elements that she encounters in any given landscape.

Artist Statement:

Nature in all forms is the subject that speaks loudest to me. I draw so much from it: pattern, the language of line, contrast, colour and form. From that I paint from memory and attempt to channel the visual and emotional language of nature. My work begins intuitively with colour choices, and then I let the structure of my first marks on the canvas lead me to the place the painting wants to go. Each painting is a completely new and surprising adventure for me.

-Anne Griffiths 2022

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MEL GAUSDEN | A FAIRYTALE FOR THE END OF THE WORLD

Mel Gausden | A Fairytale for the End of the World
3045 Granville Street, Vancouver
Upper Gallery

March 5-19, 2022

Toronto-based painter Mel Gausden explores the deep and rich atmosphere of nightscapes in her new series. Always with hints of wistfulness and nostalgia, she captures the differences in light and colour that the falling of dusk reveals, as well as the feeling of uneasiness that can often accompany the darkness. A rare display of Gausden's watercolour and mixed media working sketches accompanies the final finished counterparts.

Gausden's work combines symbols and markers of Canadiana with painterly gesture, mark-making, and bold highlights. Neon touches add a contemporary freshness and highlight the inherent distortion of personal perspective.

Her process is significantly determined by the time it takes for her source material to become tinged with nostalgia. Once memories are bound to her source images, the narrative emerges and is rendered in paint. Gausden’s diluting of the oil paint and allowing it to drip with controlled precision augments the contemporary feel and alludes to the amorphous nature of memories.

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Hugh Mackenzie | The Figure: Seen and Unseen

Hugh Mackenzie | The Figure: Seen and Unseen
March 3-17, 2022
340 Dundas Street West, Toronto

This March, Bau-Xi Gallery honours distinguished Canadian artist Hugh Mackenzie (1928-2021) in "The Figure: Seen and Unseen", the first exhibition since the artist’s passing which celebrates his illustrious career and impactful contributions to Canadian art.

Upon visiting Hugh's residence after his passing, it was as imagined: paint sketches pinned to the walls, framed works resting thoughtfully along the windowsill, and folios of works on paper at his desk. Hugh was always surrounded by his creations: evidence of how the artist and educator thought deeply about his work in an endlessly pragmatic, yet romantic, way. Examining his folio for the exhibition further highlighted his dedication to revisiting, reflecting, and continuously distilling his chosen subject matter over his decades long career.

When imparting these ideals to his students at the Ontario College of Art (now known as OCAD U) Hugh is remembered for his uncompromising authenticity: “You are searching out your vision which you will discover in the marriage of the figurative and the abstract. So, you need to work with both. That's why the short work is necessary. I am asking you to do the impossible. At the rational level, it is impossible but not if you work from the heart. Only the heart permits you to reconcile the irreconcilable."

The Figure: Seen and Unseen examines Mackenzie’s signature techniques and familiar balance of figurative and abstract compositions. An ode to his legacy, family, and his impact on countless colleagues, students and contemporaries, the show celebrates the brilliance and discipline of the artist’s impeccable craft. We are honoured to celebrate Hugh’s legacy and impression on Canadian art.

Hugh will be greatly missed and remembered fondly by those at Bau-Xi. We will cherish the memories of Hugh stopping in to say “Hello” when he was in the neighbourhood. In 2019, during one of Hugh’s regular check-ins, he asked us about a specific piece, and if we still happened to have it at the gallery. When we brought the piece to him, Hugh gently took it into his hands, looking at it inquisitively, focused eyes examining the surface of the board. After a few pensive minutes, he asked softly, “Would you mind if I took it home with me? I’ve been thinking about this one for a while and I don’t feel that it’s quite done”.

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Born in Toronto and raised in London, Ontario, Hugh Mackenzie studied at the Ontario College of Art (now known as OCAD U) from 1947 to 1950. He continued his studies at Mount Allison University under the teaching of Alex Colville and would meet Dorothy (Dot) Johnson who would become his wife and mother of their children: Charles, Mary, and Patrick. Mackenzie was a well-known Canadian painter, draftsperson, printmaker, and educator for many years. He began his career as a technical artist (working on the Avro Arrow) and spent his professional career as an art educator (working at Ontario College of Art from 1968 until 1991). Mackenzie began as a high realist painter before turning more to abstraction. He pivoted between the figure and industrial landscape, from the representational to almost pure abstraction, and from painting to his other great passion, etching.”

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Alex Cameron | The Crashing Plane & Other New Paintings

Alex Cameron Paintings at Bau-Xi Gallery Toronto and Vancouver

Alex Cameron | The Crashing Plane & Other New Paintings
February 5-19, 2022
340 Dundas Street West, Toronto

In his first exhibition since 2020, Cameron continues his celebration of the Canadian landscape through pure pigment, this time welcoming a lighter palette to complement the rich, chromatic, works for which the artist is known. Cameron’s application is controlled with an impossibly tactile three-dimensionality that is a hallmark of his energetic canvases and his complex visual lexicon.

Alex Cameron’s paintings have been collected extensively in Canada and abroad. Notable collections include the Art Gallery of Ontario, the Royal Bank of Canada, and The Queen’s Silver Jubilee Art Collection.

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Alex Cameron Paintings at Bau-Xi Gallery Toronto and Vancouver

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Lori Nix & Dan Dubowitz | Spaces

Lori Nix & Dan Dubowitz | Spaces
350 Dundas Street West, Toronto
February 5-19, 2022

This February, Bau-Xi Photo Gallery presents Spaces, a dual exhibition featuring the works of photographers Lori Nix and Dan Dubowitz.

Examining the relationship between the viewer and built environments, both Nix and Dubowitz evoke raw emotion and contemplation through their respective collections. Through masterful interpretation of intricate lighting and complementary textures, both artists uniquely capture powerful settings and the dynamism they convey.

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