Finalist Séamus Gallagher’s beguiling art draws our gaze closer into queerly uncanny worlds unburdened by traditional boundaries of gender, sexuality and societal expectations.
With remarkable skill, finalist Anahita Norouzi explores sensitive subjects of human experience and displacement, subtly transposing them into a formal aesthetic where material and technique are charged with...
Informed by grief, loss, resistance and humour, finalist Michèle Pearson Clarke’s photography, video and installation work has created an intimate and immersive visual language for the queer, Black, female...
The 2023 Scotiabank New Generation Photography Award exhibition at the National Gallery of Canada presents the works of the three winning artists – Hannah Doucet, Wynne Neilly and Gonzalo Reyes Rodriguez.
Artist Paul P. comments on the juxtaposition of his work and prints, drawings and paintings by artists who belonged to the often-overlapping worlds of the homosexual, the dandy and the aesthete.
The display of seven ancestral belongings of historical Indigenous art seeks to redress some of the knowledge gaps surrounding these works, their cultural and practical purposes and their communities of origin.
Capturing the dramatic changes of the interwar period, the works of a group of extraordinary women artists illustrate their great contribution to the visual arts in Canada.
The installation "Pulling their Weight: Dog Teams in Indigenous and Canadian Art " takes dog sledding in historical and contemporary images as its theme.
Through her work, Katherine Takpannie honours the lives of the missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, exposing the ongoing vulnerability and threat.