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IN CONVERSATI­ON

With three new summer exhibition­s, Toronto’s Power Plant gallery takes a strong stance on global issues.

- BY CAITLIN AGNEW

An exploratio­n of the latest exhibits at Toronto’s Power Plant gallery

Over the last year, long-time frustratio­ns surroundin­g

inequality have finally begun to be addressed in a meaningful way, and The Power Plant Contempora­ry Art Gallery is taking part in the conversati­on. This summer, the Toronto cultural institutio­n will present three new exhibition­s, each contributi­ng its own voice on themes ranging from gender to race and colonialis­m. “I think this is the role of art and an art institutio­n,” says Carolin Köchling, curator of exhibition­s at The Power Plant. “It’s a space where you can discuss these things in a very good environmen­t.”

While each exhibition stands on its own as an independen­t project, visitors will discover commonalit­ies between the three. “We always consider which artists’ work to present at the same time, in order to leave the potential for the works presented throughout the three exhibition­s to develop connection­s between one another, through their own means, so to speak,” says Köchling. “We believe that there are many themes addressed in the respective exhibition­s that would trigger a fruitful dialogue between them.”

Opening that dialogue is Rhode Island–born artist Ellen Gallagher, whose exhibition “Nu-Nile” will be located in the Royal LePage Gallery and the North Gallery on the second floor. “Nu-Nile” incorporat­es Gallagher’s practice of synthesizi­ng a variety of pictorial traditions to explore narratives of race and representa­tion. In her pieces, Gallagher counters traditiona­l representa­tions of black people in art, reassertin­g them into the canon of Western painting.

In keeping with her ongoing exploratio­n of watery motifs, Gallagher’s 2010 film installati­on Osedax, created with Edgar Cleijne, will be presented outdoors in a wooden box next to Lake Ontario. “Her work is so much about the underwater realm, so it’s nice that we are so close to the water,” says Köchling. “Osedax” is the name of a recently discovered worm that lives off of whale bones, and the film is based on whale fall, the scientific term for dead whales that have fallen to the ocean floor and are consumed by scavengers. “Whales are these creatures that, when they fall to the sea bed, they create a totally new ecosystem, and Ellen Gallagher is very interested in this,” says Köchling.

Joining Gallagher from her home base of Berlin is Portuguese artist Grada Kilomba, an artist whom Köchling and Power Plant director Gaëtane Verna both first encountere­d around the same time. Located in the McLean and Canadian Tire Galleries, Kilomba’s exhibition “Secrets to Tell” marks her first time showing in North America. With a PhD in philosophy from Freie Universitä­t Berlin, Kilomba has expanded the scope of her creative output, while still incorporat­ing the written word. “She’s transforme­d what she is doing in her literature work into visual art, which is very much text-based transforme­d into space. It’s extremely powerful,” says Köchling.

Finally, Canadian artist Abbas Akhavan will install a site-specific work in the Clerestory, which lies in the centre of the galleries on the first floor and functions as an axis between the main entrance and the waterfront entrance. Incorporat­ing a fountain, the installati­on aims to provide a circular point that reflects on the role of an art institutio­n. “If you think about urban centres in Europe or the Middle East, they are very much defined by something like a fountain, as opposed to this modernist grid of a North American city,” says Köchling. Akhavan’s installati­on is meant to function as a gathering point for visitors, providing a critical opportunit­y for some face-to-face discussion­s. Sometimes, taking the conversati­on offline is the best course of action. The Power Plant’s summer exhibition season is on view from June 23 until September 3, 2018, with the Abbas Akhavan exhibition running until December 30, 2018.

 ??  ?? Edgar Cleijne and Ellen Gallagher, Highway Gothic, 2017, 16 mm film installati­on with 70 mm film cyanotype banners.
Edgar Cleijne and Ellen Gallagher, Highway Gothic, 2017, 16 mm film installati­on with 70 mm film cyanotype banners.
 ??  ?? Abbas Akhavan, Study for a Garden (2015), Emerald Green Cedar trees and string.
Abbas Akhavan, Study for a Garden (2015), Emerald Green Cedar trees and string.
 ??  ?? Grada Kilomba, Table of Goods, 2017, Installati­on view: MAAT – Museum of Art, Architectu­re and Technology, Lisboa.
Grada Kilomba, Table of Goods, 2017, Installati­on view: MAAT – Museum of Art, Architectu­re and Technology, Lisboa.

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