Virginia Mak | Countenance

Virginia MakCountenance
June 18-30, 2022 
Opening Saturday, June 18th, 1-3PM | Artist in Attendance

350 Dundas Street West, Toronto

Bau-Xi Gallery is thrilled to present Countenance, a solo show by Toronto based photographer Virginia Mak. The photographer’s soft focus and light values have become characterizing elements of her unique visual language. Mak conducts a creative exploration process about the every-day, the inner world that individuals carry with themselves, and dreams.

The compositions that Virginia Mak presents project harmony and tension, oscillating between the real and the illusion; the dreamy and the objective elements of ourselves. Her latest work focuses on the human face as a symbol of identity. This series of work is continuously obscured through a blur that merges analog photography with pictorial elements creating nostalgic atmospheres.

Born in Hong Kong, Mak received her Philosophy Degree from the University of Calgary and her BFA in Photography from the Ontario College of Art. Her work has been written about in prominent national publications and featured in magazines such as Prefix and PhotoLife.

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Robert Marchessault | The Konyali Tree

Robert Marchessault | The Konyali Tree
June 18-30, 2022 
340 Dundas Street West, Toronto

Bau-Xi Gallery is pleased to present, The Konyali Tree, the highly anticipated exhibition by Canadian painter Robert Marchessault. The artist has devoted his practice to an ongoing exploration of the interconnection between the atmosphere and the self. His fascination with memory-based landscape painting is expressed through his extensive body of work depicting single trees that often hover in a timeless space.

Marchessault is a renowned visual artist who has been represented by Bau-Xi Gallery since the early 1990s. His latest work draws the viewer in to experience his fascination with space, light, texture, atmosphere, and distance. The paintings project a non-verbal understanding of the spectator as the subject and vice versa - a perception where boundaries are illusions.

Born in Montreal, he received his BFA at Concordia University, and his MA from University of Toronto. Robert Marchessault has received numerous grants and awards from the Ontario Arts Council, Swedish Institute, Brucebo Foundation, and the Canadian Scandinavian Foundation. His work has been exhibited across North America and Europe and is included in multiple private and public collections.

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Kim Keever | Underwater Photography

Kim Keever | Underwater Photography
June 4-16, 2022
350 Dundas Street West, Toronto

American photographer, Kim Keever will be exhibited at Bau-Xi Photo this June with a selection of artworks from both his abstract and landscape series. Keever is known for his colourful large-scale abstractions, which he creates by pouring paint into a 200 gallon tank of water in his studio.  He then uses a large-format digital camera to capture the resulting clouds of colour as they swirl into different forms and diffuse themselves through the water.
 
Keever’s moody landscape photographs are an illusion to the eye, in this earlier series by the artist, an artificial atmosphere of fog and misty rivers are created over miniature terrains. By submerging these fabricated landscapes in the tank in his studio, Keever has created dreamlike worlds reminiscent to the monumental paintings of the Hudson River School art movement.

Until the mid 1970’s, Keever worked as a thermal engineer for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) at which time he became a full-time artist. His previous vocation continues to inform his work today, lending scientific methodology and investigative process to his artistic process.
 
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Kathryn Macnaughton | Full Body

Kathryn Macnaughton | Full Body
June 4-16, 2022
340 Dundas Street West, Toronto

Bau-Xi Gallery is pleased to present, Full Body, the highly anticipated exhibition by Kathryn Macnaughton. Influenced by high Modernism, graphic design, vintage print media, and the human form, Macnaughton explores the intersection between freedom and precision as she translates her digital compositions to canvas.  

Regarding her process, the artist writes, “The washes are the most painterly inclusions in each composition. They anchor the work despite their sheerness and weightlessness. Moving paint around with water, it is necessary to be curious, yet remain undemanding and without expectation. Collisions will occur. As in the nature where the elements are beyond our control, so are the paints that crest and bleed on my canvas.

At the counterpoint of this visceral approach sits an extremely pragmatic process. Once the under layers are complete, I move from canvas to Photoshop. I have always been interested in digitally composing my paintings. Where the development of the washes seem lawless, the digital compositing of the flat elements find their foundation in a practice more regulated: colour theory, composition, and figure drawing.

The digital roots of Macnaughton's practice give way to painterly precision on the canvas, which beautifully demonstrates the artist's hand.  

A graduate of the Ontario College of Art & Design, Macnaughton has exhibited across North America and Europe since 2010. Her work has been widely collected and can be found in numerous public and private collections.

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Vicky Christou | The Gradient Gaze

Vicky Christou | The Gradient Gaze
May 19-31, 2022
340 Dundas Street West, Toronto

Christou’s sculptural paintings are constructed using gradient layers of acrylic paint. Her angled grid compositions allude to an ethereal light source and inject a dynamic and organic energy into the paintings. By merging a textile applicative process with her personal colour sensibility, Christou’s paintings marry a beautiful ambiguity of old and new.

The artist’s colour palettes are inspired by daily walks where she observed the subtle gradients of the atmosphere and how light grazes upon the natural elements. Christou noticed these gradient patterns are also common in technology and print media, mimicking the natural environment. Her palettes are evocative of nature and pleasurably reference a promising futuristic ambience.

The exhibition title, The Gradient Gaze, subtly highlights the underlying feminist premise ever-present in Christou’s work. As textiles and handicrafts have traditionally been associated with women, they historically have been considered a lesser artform. Christou sees these paintings as material symbols of a reclamation of our gaze; drawn away from the female figure towards the female artistic practice.

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Whitney Lewis-Smith | Biophilia

Whitney Lewis-Smith | Biophilia
May 5-28, 2022
Opening Saturday, May 7, 2022 | Artist in Attendance, 12 PM-3 PM
350 Dundas Street West, Toronto

Bau-Xi Gallery is pleased to present, Biophilia, an inagural exhibition by the photographer Whitney Lewis-Smith.

Using 8 X 10 glass plate negatives, Lewis-Smith documents her highly detailed set constructions exploring the nuanced ways plants, animals, and people interact within the context of contemporary globalization. Having previously worked in ecological fieldwork, her staged tableaus are layered with scientific, historic, and cultural chronicles.

Born in Ottawa, Ontario, in 1985, Whitney Lewis-Smith completed her Diploma in Photography at The School of Photographic Arts, Ottawa, in 2011. She is now based in Mexico City and Jordan River, BC.

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Steven Nederveen | Golden Glimmer

Steven Nederveen | Golden Glimmer
May 5-17, 2022
Opening: Saturday, May 7, 2022, 12 PM-3 PM
340 Dundas Street West, Toronto

Bau-Xi Gallery is pleased to present a new body of work by Toronto-based artist Steven Nederveen in the solo exhibition, Golden Glimmer. The exhibition is a showcase of Nederveen’s signature practice, capturing the serenity of northern landscapes, the passage of time through the forest and the spirit of an ocean wave. By blurring the lines between photography and painting, Nederveen develops a magical realism that inspires us to see the natural world with new eyes.

Q&A with the Artist:

Could you speak to the power of color in your work and how it changes/inspires the narrative within a piece?

I’m deeply affected by colour and I am quite specific with it. Colour is a very subjective thing and I rely heavily on the intuition that colour takes us places. They are emotional journeys, specific to each of us but somehow universal as well.

It was Mark Rothko’s work that really influenced me in this regard. His big colourfields are so luscious while also inducing the viewer into transendental states. I experienced his Seagram paintings at Tate Britain when I was in my twenties, backpacking around Europe (as one does after University). Flashback to 1996, sitting in the stillness of the Rothko room, surrounded by huge colourfields that transported me to a profound and lasting feeling of peace unlike anything I had ever experienced. I bring this into my own work with the intention to create a place of solace. Immersed in the darkness of the ocean sky or dancing in the vibrant colours of trees, we are taken to a place where we can reflect.

 
Many viewers respond to the ethereal light in your work. In a way, it feels as if the light represents a presence or arriving of something mystical. Can you talk about what it means to you?

For me, personally, these golden glows have to do with the healing that comes through being in contact with nature. You don't get to be several decades old without a few bumps along the way, and finding ways to unburden ourselves is key. I find something wonderful happens when I'm walking through the woods or standing at the waters edge, there is an opening of my heart and mind. A significant event unfolds, the letting in of something new and letting go of something old. It is burning the old to come out anew. And so the light is just that. A burning, a letting go and a golden glow of setting free.

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CORI CREED | PLAYLIST

 

Cori Creed | Playlist
3045 Granville Street, Vancouver
May 7-21, 2022

Vancouver artist Cori Creed’s new solo exhibition, Playlist, offers a collection of West Coast landscapes, created as a playlist of familiar songs. Creed notes that songs change as you learn the lyrics by heart, and the same goes for your imagination when forms become familiar. Her decisive brushstrokes depict our forests, bringing a new rhythm of graphic elements into the landscape.


Artist Statement:


“The show is a continuation of a theme - using landscape and its patterns as a vehicle to tell stories of place and process. I was thinking about the value in repeated exploration of a particular subject or method. Elements become etched in memory and yet transmuted to become original forms each time. There is a fluidity and an increase in imagination that can come when forms become so familiar that there is less time looking at physical reference and more time working from memory and looking within. I was thinking about the parallels between painting certain subjects or stories again and again and listening to a musical playlist over and over. The songs change as you learn the lyrics by heart, as you notice chord changes or vocal variations that you hadn’t been aware of initially. There is a different feeling and focus that comes with listening to a song for the first time compared to the feeling of experiencing a song that you have become intimately connected to. These musings led to the naming of paintings in this series using some of the songs on the playlist that I have been listening to in the past year.”

- Cori Creed, 2022

 

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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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