Anthony Cudahy: metronome yawned
January 24 - April 26, 2026
Opening: Friday 23 January, 6-9pm. Anthony Cudahy paints narratively elusive images of queer intimacy and tenderness within everyday life.
Opening: Friday 23 January, 6-9pm. Anthony Cudahy paints narratively elusive images of queer intimacy and tenderness within everyday life.
Opening: Friday 23 January, 6-9pm. Justin de Verteuil’s paintings appear as images in the midst of becoming: compositions that have been coaxed slowly into focus, as if tuned across radio frequencies until a signal emerges and begins to take shape.
Opening: Friday 23 January, 6-9pm. Magalie Guérin’s paintings often begin with what remains: she carries forward yesterday’s pigment, a trace of past works and decisions, as a provocation to begin a new composition.
Opening: Friday 23 January, 6-9pm. Alexandre Pépin’s paintings locate fleeting instances of connection, desire, or joy within the everyday.
Jana Sterbak: “Dimensions of Intimacy” is a large-scale retrospective celebrating the groundbreaking Canadian artist with over 50 works spanning sculpture, performance, and photography from the past 46 years.
Kristine Zingeler pursues an inter-disciplinary art practice that involves photography, collage, drawing, painting, & sculpture. Addressing themes of interconnectedness, time, and the relentless state of flux that both humanity and our planet experience, Kristine’s work is subtle yet impactful.
We Are The Lodge showcases ribbon skirts and shirts created by youth ages 17–20 during a series of workshops held at Esker Foundation in collaboration with Discovering Choices alternative high schools. Guided by Indigenous mentor Pearl White Quills, and supported
“Compositions for Mouths, Face and Hands” presents a deeply sensorial investigation into the body as a vessel for sound and exchange.
“When Sound Becomes Unsound” presents a series of interactive sculptural works that operate at the threshold of catharsis and containment.
Exploring territory from the perspective of cultural attachment & ancestral memory, “Pizandawatc” articulates visions that harken to Indigenous legacies & futures.