In her floral paintings, Christi Belcourt depicts the beauty of the natural world, while also commenting on the human condition, ecosystems and cultural knowledge.
Although Lynne Cohen's images are devoid of people, her disorienting photographs are filled with their presence – whether funny, surreal or, at times, even bizarre.
Arriving in New York City around 1938, Nathan Petroff became Paul Petroff, and turned away from canvas painting to mural painting, set design and, later, photography.
Joe Fafard’s “Running Horses” are on view at their outdoor site at the Gallery, reflecting the artist's life and memories of growing up on a farm in Saskatchewan.
The large-scale installation "Moving off the Land II" by Joan Jonas investigates biodiversity and ocean life, while also addressing dangers related to climate change.
One of the most influential abstract artists of his generation, Sam Gilliam pushed his experiments in colour and abstraction beyond the confines of pure painting on canvas.
Regarded as one of the best portrait photographers in England at the time, Antoine Claudet photographed several members of the Hamilton and Hozier families.
At his summer home on Lake George, Alfred Stieglitz explored connections between nature and his own thoughts about human existence through his photographic studies of clouds and trees.