Posts Tagged ‘Harbourfront Centre’

The previous blog post featured a wall that was covered with ceramic tiles that created an image of a Tree of Life –  It is part of “Elaborate”, a group exhibition, at Harbourfront Centre’ s Gallery 235.   This blog post takes a look at some of the other art in that exhibit as well as a few more ceramic art pieces that can be seen in display in cases in the halls of the Harbourfront building.

First, in the hall, Joon Hee Kim’s wonderful busts of fanciful whimsical characters.

ceramic busts by Joon Hee Kim on display on blue and white checked background, three characters, all female, with orange hair,

ceramic busts by Joon Hee Kim on display on blue and white checked background, female, with orange hair, yeloow flowers in hair, and big rimmed glasses that match hair

ceramic busts by Joon Hee Kim on display on blue and white checked background, three characters, all female, with orange hair,

Also in the hallway, round pieces by Jess Riva Cooper where flowers bloom from mouths, noses, and ears of the central subject(s) swirling to form wreaths around them.  The series is titled “Pullulate”

below: “Helleborus viridis” 2024, 45 cm in diameter

round ceramic art, by jess riva cooper, on wall, white plaster face in center, with tulips growing from her face, the flowers make a wreath around her face

below: Some of pieces have hands in the central position, hands that rip the flowers from the ground and/or tear them apart.

round ceramic art, by jess riva cooper, on wall, white plaster pair of hands on watery blue in center, with with flowers making a wreath around the hands

below: Large droopy flowers in weird colour combinations on a table, sculptures by Julie Moon,

in an art gallery, on a table are some large ceramic droopy looking flowers, in the background is a group of people looking at another table with more ceramics on display

below: On the table in the background in the above photo are little sculptures by Lindsay Montgomery.  This is a close up of one of them.  Maybe someone spilled its cup of tea?

part of a sculpture by Lindsay Montgomery, a male character crawling towards a blue and white teapot sitting on the ground, a matching tea cup is lying on its side

Montgomery’s work is in two sections.  The above figurine is a newer piece from the series “Despairware” “which references books of demonology and iconographies of feral femininity with Staffordshire figurines from the 19th century” (from the words on the wall at the gallery).  She is also showing some of her older work here, a series called “Neo Istoriato” which re-imagines paintings  and pottery from the Renaissance.  Two examples:

double handled vase or urn, pottery, painted with many macabre figures, by Lindsay Montgomery, in an art gallery

All together in a big pot in the fiery mouth of Hell while the demons dance with glee.

close up of a painting on the side of a pottery vessel, many people inside mouth of a red cat-like creature, with frog head on top, many eyes, little demon figures play beside red head

below: Kaley Flowers, cracked and broken glass to mimic water within a frame of ceramic shells, rocks and marine forms.

small ceramic artwork hanging on a wall, center is spiral of broken glass, outer layer is shells and rocks but made of ceramics

below: Marissa Alexander, eight women hanging on the wall.  Hung up, hanging about, hanging out….

small figurine of people in different positions, hanging on a wall

And last, there are a few individual tiles by Marc Egan that are very similar to the flowers and leaves in his Tree of Life.

2 ceramic tiles mounted on a wall, in an art gallery, floral pictures

For the nest few months, three big, bold, and colourful images are on display at Ontario Square on the waterfront. These are “Joy in Resistance” by Frizzkid aka Hana Shafi.

painting by Hana Shafi in bold colors, two people, one on the left and one on right

This is one exhibit where the “words on the wall” work well! This is how Frizzkid describes her work: “They are celebrations of diversity and of LGBTQ+ joy, where we envision a bright future; where people can flourish and dream wildly, and be wholly themselves without danger or hate. I have a love of 60’s and 70’s popular culture aesthetics, which spans from the golden age of Bollywood, to Studio 54 disco fever, appearing throughout my work to convey a warm nostalgia amidst the psychedelia. I believe in the beauty of reinvention and fluidity, and to make each piece feel transformative. My chaotic use of colour is meant to invoke powerful emotions that jolt people out of apathy and the exhaustion of doom-scrolling on their phones and to invite them to imagine their ideal future, one where they feel at home in their own skin and beloved by their communities.”

painting by Hana Shafi in bold colors, a group of diverse people

painting by Hana Shafi in bold colors about changing every year and becoming true self eventually

On display until 5th Nov 2023