art gallery Archives - News@91亚色 /news/tag/art-gallery/ Wed, 21 May 2025 12:53:46 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Exhibitions exploring ancestral knowledge and colonial legacy at 91亚色鈥檚 Goldfarb Gallery /news/2025/05/21/goldfarb-gallery-exhibitions-by-andrea-carlson-tuan-andrew-nguyen/ Wed, 21 May 2025 12:53:43 +0000 /news/?p=22250 The Joan and Martin Goldfarb Gallery is proud to present two solo exhibitions by international artists Andrea Carlson and Tu岷 Andrew Nguy峄卬.

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Andrea Carlson鈥檚 A Painting is a Coin and Tu岷 Andrew Nguy峄卬鈥檚 When Water Embraces Empty Space are on view from May 23 to Aug. 2

The Joan and Martin Goldfarb Gallery of 91亚色 is proud to present two powerful solo exhibitions by international artists: and . Both shows centre ancestral knowledge, legacy, and cultural continuity, offering politically resonant works that challenge colonial narratives.

Carlson explores land, language, and ancestral knowledge through layered paintings, drawings, prints, video and sculpture. Nguy峄卬 examines the legacy of colonial collecting through the story of a 19th-century canoe from Papua New Guinea, his work following the spiritual return of the boat to the descendants of its makers. In response to Nguy峄卬鈥檚 project, the University has also begun reassessing its collection of cultural belongings from Papua New Guinea, .

The exhibitions will share a public reception on Thursday, May 22, from 6 to 9 p.m., with both artists in attendance, along with Nguy峄卬鈥檚 collaborators from Papua New Guinea. When Water Embraces Empty Space and A Painting is a Coin will remain on display from May 23 to Aug. 2, 2025. For more information, visit .

Exit, 2018. Screenprint on White Coventry Rag paper. Published by Highpoint Editions, courtesy the artist.
Enji-zaagijiitimong, 2018. Mzinaakzigan eteg waabshi zhiiginoong. Gaa-mzinaakizang maaba Highpoint Editions, nji-sa Maaba gaa-tisiget.

Andrea Carlson: A Painting is a Coin

This exhibition, curated by Clara Halpern, is Andrea Carlson鈥檚 first solo exhibition in a gallery in Ontario. brings together a complex arrangement of recent works 鈥 paintings, drawings, prints, video and sculpture 鈥 exploring topics that have fueled the artist鈥檚 practice for two decades: land, language, ancestral knowledge, future visions, deep time, cinema, stories, memorials and refusals.

Known for her expansive, multi-panelled works on paper, Carlson brings a layered approach to visual storytelling. Landscape plays a central role in this exhibition, particularly in paintings that stretch across multiple sheets of thick, hand-worked watercolour paper. Rendered in gouache, watercolour, inks, and oil, these fragmented, prismatic scenes challenge the 鈥渆mpty鈥 vistas depicted in traditional landscape painting and their role in bolstering colonial justifications.

A Painting is a Coin also features a newly commissioned sculptural installation of wooden columns, continuing Carlson鈥檚 ongoing series inspired by effigy mounds 鈥 ancient Indigenous earthworks that can take the shape of lizards, turtles and cranes. Water too runs through the work and is the subject of a multi-screen video collaboration with Rozalinda Borcil膬 that explores Chicago鈥檚 wetland market and the monetization of these vital ecosystems.

Together, the art in this exhibition builds intricate matrices of meaning that are personal, politically charged and cosmologically expansive, reframing relationships and time, and highlighting traditions that have withstood colonialism.

Carlson is based in Gichi Bitobig (Grand Marais), Minnesota, and Chicago, where she is co-founder of the Center for Native Futures. Her research focuses on Indigenous Futurism(s) and the entanglement of cultural narratives and institutions. Recent exhibitions include solo shows at the MCA Chicago, the University of Michigan Museum of Art, and participation in Prospect.6 New Orleans, the Front Triennial and the Toronto Biennial. Her work is in the collections of the British Museum, the Walker Art Museum, the Whitney Museum of American Art and the National Gallery of Canada.

Tu岷 Andrew Nguy峄卬,聽When Water Embraces Empty Space, 2024. Single channel video, 5 min 30 sec. Courtesy the artist and James Cohan Gallery, NYC.

Tu岷 Andrew Nguy峄卬: When Water Embraces Empty Space

Curated by Goldfarb Gallery director Jenifer Papararo, is the first presentation of Tu岷 Andrew Nguy峄卬鈥檚 work in Canada. Known for multi-faceted video and sculptural installations that explore personal narratives of diaspora and post-colonial identity, Nguy峄卬 turns his attention to a singular, historically charged object for this exhibition: a 15-metre-long, late 19th-century canoe from the Island of Luf in Papua New Guinea.

Tu岷 Andrew Nguy峄卬, Left:聽Touching the Boat; Right:聽Tattooed Arm of Enoch Lun, both 2024. Digital prints on Dibond. Installation: Haus f眉r Medienkunst Oldenburg, Germany.

Held in the permanent collection of Berlin鈥檚 Humboldt Forum, the canoe鈥檚 provenance became the subject of a 2021 book, The Magnificent Boat (translated into English in 2023) by journalist and historian G枚tz Aly, who questioned the legitimacy of the canoe鈥檚 acquisition by a German trader. Nguy峄卬鈥檚 work positions this contested cultural belonging both as a relic and a vessel for intergenerational memory, survival and reclamation.

At the heart of the exhibition is The Encounter, a 72-minute video capturing a powerful moment: the reunion of three descendants of one of the canoe鈥檚 makers 鈥 Stanley Inum, his son Fordy, and nephew Enoch Lun 鈥 with the boat in Berlin. The film documents their emotional first encounter with the elaborately carved canoe, including a whispered critique of how the sails were incorrectly displayed, comments that lay bare colonial misunderstandings and misrepresentations.

The exhibition includes a multi-channel video installation, photographs, and hand-carved sculptures tied to the descendants鈥 ongoing project to build a replica canoe using measurements taken during their Berlin visit. A video offers insight into this reconstruction process. In these works, When Water Embraces Empty Space moves past documentation as it re-imagines pathways of return.

Nguy峄卬 is a recipient of the Joan Mir贸 Prize (2023). He has participated in major exhibitions including the Asia Pacific Triennial, the Whitney Biennial, the Sharjah Biennial and the Berlin Biennale. Recent one-person shows include The New Museum, Fundaci贸 Joan Mir贸 and Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa.

Unknown artisan from the Middle Sepik region, Papua New Guinea, Ritual Figure, before 1900. Wood, feathers, string, hair, and shells. Accession number A1979.012. Donated by Thomas Howarth.

From the Visible Vault 2: Papua New Guinea cultural belongings

In parallel to Tu岷 Andrew Nguy峄卬鈥檚 exhibition, Goldfarb director Jenifer Papararo is investigating 91亚色鈥檚 own holdings from Papua New Guinea 鈥 49 cultural objects donated in the late 1970s by architectural historian Thomas Howarth. A selection of these cultural belongings will be on view in the gallery鈥檚 as part of a broader inquiry into their provenance.

鈥淣guy峄卬鈥檚 project and research as a whole has fostered a deeper conversation about responsibilities of cultural stewardship and the role we can play in ensuring these objects came to us ethically and, if not, being a process of repatriation,鈥 says Papararo.

The objects were brought into the University鈥檚 collection as a significant gift, considered to be a valuable teaching asset with the stated intention of being displayed publicly. Since their exhibition in 1979, they have been presented only once in 2014,  until now.

The Goldfarb will host Nguy峄卬鈥檚 collaborators from Luf, Stanley and Fordy Inum, Enoch Lun, and Kireni Imwe Jean Sparks-Ngenge, for the reception of When Water Embraces Empty Space and hope to gain their knowledge of the belongings in 91亚色鈥檚 care. Creating new intersections of cultural dialogue, their visit includes studio exchanges with Indigenous artists in Toronto and Vancouver, and a meeting with curators at the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia. When Water Embraces Empty Space has opened a vital space for conversations around cultural stewardship, memory, and the ethics of museum collections, while centring the voices of those most directly connected to the stories these objects carry.

About 91亚色

91亚色 is a modern, multi-campus, urban university located in Toronto, Ontario. Backed by a diverse group of students, faculty, staff, alumni and partners, we bring a uniquely global perspective to help solve societal challenges, drive positive change, and prepare our students for success. 91亚色's fully bilingual Glendon Campus is home to Southern Ontario's Centre of Excellence for French Language and Bilingual Postsecondary Education. 91亚色鈥檚 campuses in Costa Rica and India offer students exceptional transnational learning opportunities and innovative programs. Together, we can make things right for our communities, our planet, and our future.

Media Contact: Nichole Jankowski, 91亚色 Media Relations and External Communications, 647-995-5013, jankown@yorku.ca

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The Joan and Martin Goldfarb Gallery unveils bold dual exhibitions /news/2025/01/23/joan-martin-goldfarb-gallery-unveils-bold-dual-exhibitions/ Thu, 23 Jan 2025 18:23:56 +0000 /news/?p=21614 The Joan and Martin Goldfarb Gallery of 91亚色 presents Maryam Taghavi's Unfolding Worlds and Charles Campbell鈥檚 An Ocean to Livity opening Jan. 31.

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Maryam Taghavi鈥檚 Unfolding Worlds and Charles Campbell鈥檚 An Ocean to Livity are on view from Feb. 1 to April 26

TORONTO, Jan. 23, 2025 鈥 The Joan and Martin Goldfarb Gallery of 91亚色 will celebrate the opening of two new exhibitions curated by Felicia Mings on Friday, Jan. 31 from 6 to 9 p.m. The artist Maryam Taghavi鈥檚 first institutional solo exhibition in Canada, , includes recent paintings, sculptures and an architectural installation. This will be an expanded iteration of , which includes sculpture and sound, after exhibitions in Surrey and Nanaimo, B.C.

Exhibition view of Lake Michigan 4 and Lake Michigan 5 (Horizon Series, 2023) from Chicago Works: Maryam Taghavi, MCA Chicago, Dec. 16, 2023 to Jul. 14, 2024. Photo by Shelby Ragsdale, courtesy MCA Chicago

Maryam Taghavi: Unfolding Worlds

In her practice, Taghavi is motivated by the unseen. She explores this concept through letter forms, particularly Islamic calligraphy, which expresses a reverence for the spiritual and a connection to the divine. 鈥淐alligraphy by its beauty becomes a portal to experience God,鈥 explains Taghavi in an interview with the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. 鈥淭he perfection of the form is a part of the message.鈥

Exhibition view, detail of Quadrilateral View (2023) from Chicago Works: Maryam Taghavi, MCA Chicago, Dec. 16, 2023 to Jul. 14, 2024. Photo by Shelby Ragsdale, courtesy MCA Chicago

But Taghavi is not practicing perfection, she says. Nor is she really practicing calligraphy. 鈥淚 am far away from the context this comes from,鈥 she explains. Part of the Iranian diaspora, she feels distant from the art form both physically and in its traditions. Much of the work in Unfolding Worlds derives from an interest in the noghte, which serves as a unit of measurement in calligraphy. Represented by a diamond-shaped point, the noghte is the most essential diacritical mark in Arabic and Persian script. In her paintings noghtes delineate horizon lines. In Taghavi鈥檚 sculptures and installations, the noghtes are peepholes to mesmerizing reflections of light. When placed on the gallery's windows, translucent noghtes reflect ultraviolet light that can be seen by birds but is invisible to the human eye, opening up the exhibition to the natural world.

The diamond shape is also suggestive of her longstanding engagement with abstraction and deft knowledge of Islamic and Euro-American art history. In the exhibition, Taghavi manipulates light, language, and architectural space to emphasize the simplicity and beauty inherent in colour and geometric forms.

Taghavi is a Tehran-born, Iranian-Canadian artist and educator based in Chicago. She earned her Master of Fine Arts from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and her Bachelor of Fine Arts from Emily Carr University of Art and Design. Taghavi has received numerous awards and grants, including support from the Canada Council for the Arts and the 2022 Artadia Award. Her work has been displayed at the Brick (formerly LAXART) in Los Angeles, Queens Museum in New 91亚色, Ex Teresa Arte Actual (EXTAA) in Mexico City, Sazmanab Gallery in Tehran and Chicago鈥檚 Driehaus Museum, Chicago Cultural Center and Chicago Artists Coalition. She has had solo exhibitions at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago and Blanc Gallery, Chicago.

Parallel programs inspired by this exhibition include the artist in conversation, exhibition tours, and a response to Unfolding Worlds choreographed and performed by dancer . Working at the intersection of performance and dance, Zins-Browne extends his choreographic practice into encounters with dancers, non-dancers, singers, students, objects and texts. The performance by Zins-Browne will take place on Saturday, March 15 at 3 p.m.

Charles Campbell's Maroonscape 3 Finding Accompong (2021). Photo by Ian Lefebvre

Charles Campbell: An Ocean to Livity

In An Ocean to Livity, the immersive works on view consider what breath carries of our experiences, and how breath connects us to the past and present, to each other and our natural environment. At the height of the Black Lives Matter movement protesting anti-Black racism and state-sanctioned police brutality and the killing of Black people, Campbell developed a work that focused on bringing Black life into galleries through breath. In a performance at the Vancouver Art Gallery, Campbell had 20 Black artists and curators roam the rooms disseminating the sound of their recorded breath through speakers. The recordings became the beginnings of Campbell鈥檚 Black Breath Archive.

Charles Campbell's Breath Portraits (2023). Photo by Dennis Ha

鈥淔or each iteration of this exhibition, Campbell works with community organizations to host intergenerational gatherings and facilitate breath recording sessions that guide participants through meditative prompts encouraging them to connect with their ancestors,鈥 says Mings. The process of creating these recordings shapes the final form of the sculptural and audio elements that Campbell exhibits in An Ocean to Livity.

To expand his Black Breath Archive in the Greater Toronto Area, Campbell collaborated with the Afrosonic Innovation Lab, 91亚色鈥檚 Making and Media Creation Lab, local poets David Delisca and Joshua 鈥淪cribe鈥 Watkis, and emerging sound artist Chibuzor Igwilo to facilitate a new iteration of breath recordings. The Joan and Martin Goldfarb Gallery presentation of An Ocean to Livity was also made possible with support from Canada Council for the Arts Explore and Create project grant.

Campbell is a Jamaican-born multidisciplinary artist, writer and curator. He holds a Master of Fine Arts from Goldsmith College and a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Concordia University. His body of work includes sculptures, sonic installations and performances. Campbell is the recipient of the 2022 VIVA Award and the 2020 City of Victoria Creative Builder Award. His work has recently been on display at the Remai Modern in Saskatoon, the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto and P茅rez Art Museum Miami. Campbell lives and works on l蓹k虛史蓹艐蓹n territory, Victoria B.C.

Parallel programs inspired by this exhibition include the artist in conversation, exhibition tours, and a night of poetry and music featuring David Deliscia, Joshua 鈥淪cribe鈥 Watkis and DJ Grumps. will take place in the gallery's pavillion on Thursday, Feb. 27 from 7 to 8:30 p.m.

Unfolding Worlds and An Ocean to Livity are on view from Feb. 1 to April 26. The Goldfarb Gallery is located at 83a 91亚色 Blvd., Toronto. It is free and open to the public Tuesday to Saturday from 12 to 5 p.m. The new gallery is a one-storey accessible building metres away from 91亚色 Station on Line 1 where there is a Wheel-Trans on the north entrance. For those who drive, there is paid street parking on Fine Arts Rd. or at the Student Services Parking Garage (84 James Gillies St.). For more information, visit .

Parallel Programming

Wednesday, Feb. 12 from 12:30 to 1 p.m.: An Ocean to Livity with Allyson Adley, education and community engagement coordinator, The Joan and Martin Goldfarb Gallery

Allyson Adley develops educational programs that bolster the work of youth-led and youth-serving organizations engaged in hip hop, music, and performance. The programs she designs provide enriching arts employment, mentorship and professional development experiences that help artists build and sustain their practice. For the Toronto iteration of Charles Campbell: An Ocean to Livity, Adley has been integral in developing the poetic component, inviting poets to co-facilitate the expansion of the Black Breath Archive and to create poetry in response to their experiences.

Exhibition view Drape 1 and Drape 2 (Horizon Series, 2023) from Chicago Works: Maryam Taghavi, MCA Chicago, Dec. 16, 2023 to Jul. 14, 2024. Photo by Shelby Ragsdale, courtesy MCA Chicago

Wed. Feb. 26 from 12:30 to 1 p.m.: Unfolding Worlds with Mehraneh Ebrahimi, associate professor, Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies

Mehraneh Ebrahimi is an associate professor of English whose area of specialization encompasses Middle Eastern diasporic writing with an emphasis on aesthetics, ethics and politics. Ebrahimi is the author of Women, Art and Literature in the Iranian Diaspora. Her forthcoming book project is titled Refugee Literature: Dignity, Agency, & Voice in Iranian Exilic Life Writing.

Wednesday, March 12 from 12:30 to 1 p.m.: An Ocean to Livity with Ola Mohammed, assistant professor, Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies

Ola Mohammed specializes in interdisciplinary research exploring Black cultural production, Black social life, and Black being as sites of possibility. Her manuscript, 鈥淭he Black Nowhere: The Social and Cultural Politics of Listening to Black Canada(s),鈥 examines the sonic dimension of anti-Blackness in Canada. Her research interests include Black Popular Music, Black Studies, Sound Studies, Diaspora Studies, Performance Theory, and Digital Culture.

Wednesday, March 26 from 12:30 to 1 p.m.: Unfolding Worlds with Felicia Mings, curator, The Joan and Martin Goldfarb Gallery

Felicia Mings is a curator at The Goldfarb Gallery. She focuses on interpreting and presenting modern and contemporary art with an emphasis on arts of Africa and the Caribbean, along with their diasporas. Mings鈥 recent curatorial projects include the Toronto iteration of Charles Campbell鈥檚 An Ocean to Livity, Maryam Taghavi鈥檚 Unfolding Worlds, Dele Adeyemo's From Longhouse to Highrise: The Course of Empire (2023), and Meleko Mokgosi鈥檚 Imaging Imaginations (2023).

The Joan and Martin Goldfarb Gallery of 91亚色 is a socially minded, not-for-profit contemporary art gallery. A supported unit of 91亚色 within the President鈥檚 Division, it is a space for the creation and appreciation of art and culture. The Goldfarb Gallery is externally funded as a public art gallery through the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, the Toronto Arts Council, local and international foundations, embassies, and members who support its programs.

About 91亚色

91亚色 is a modern, multi-campus, urban university located in Toronto, Ontario. Backed by a diverse group of students, faculty, staff, alumni and partners, we bring a uniquely global perspective to help solve societal challenges, drive positive change, and prepare our students for success. 91亚色's fully bilingual Glendon Campus is home to Southern Ontario's Centre of Excellence for French Language and Bilingual Postsecondary Education. 91亚色鈥檚 campuses in Costa Rica and India offer students exceptional transnational learning opportunities and innovative programs. Together, we can make things right for our communities, our planet, and our future.

Media Contact: Nichole Jankowski, 91亚色 Media Relations and External Communications, 647-995-5013, jankown@yorku.ca

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Hariri Pontarini Architects wins bid to design new stand-alone Art Gallery of 91亚色 /news/2020/11/25/hariri-pontarini-architects-wins-bid-to-design-new-stand-alone-art-gallery-of-york-university/ Wed, 25 Nov 2020 13:49:43 +0000 https://news.yorku.ca/?p=15684 TORONTO, Nov. 25, 2020 鈥 The Art Gallery of 91亚色鈥檚 (AGYU) new, stand-alone art gallery, to be designed and constructed by winning architectural firm Hariri Pontarini Architects, will embrace a vision of art and connectedness. The bold new winning design will help the art gallery magnify its reach into the local community and the […]

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TORONTO, Nov. 25, 2020 鈥 The Art Gallery of 91亚色鈥檚 (AGYU) new, stand-alone art gallery, to be designed and constructed by winning architectural firm Hariri Pontarini Architects, will embrace a vision of art and connectedness.

The bold new winning design will help the art gallery magnify its reach into the local community and the world beyond, enhancing its visibility and prominence, as well as increasing its accessibility.

(HPA) was one of three shortlisted firms out of a wide show of interest from the architecture community. The online design competition invited community members from 91亚色 faculty and students to extended community members to attend and comment on the shortlisted proposals before a committee selected the winning design.

The new stand-alone art gallery is possible through a five-million-dollar donation in October 2019 by philanthropists and art collectors Joan and Martin Goldfarb, igniting this expansion and re-centering the arts on campus. The gallery will also carry their name, the Joan and Martin Goldfarb Gallery, in honour of their long history of supporting the arts at 91亚色.

鈥淭he new, stand-alone art gallery at 91亚色 will be an important hub for artistic engagement and the pursuit of creative excellence at the University, in our community and beyond. The new design reflects our vision of an accessible and collaborative art gallery that serves as a space for creation, exhibition and appreciation of diverse art and culture. I would like to thank the Goldfarbs for their generosity and unfaltering commitment to the arts, which made this project possible,鈥 says President & Vice-Chancellor Rhonda Lenton.

Rendering of Hariri Pontarini Architects鈥 winning design, fa莽ade

Rendering of Hariri Pontarini Architects鈥 winning design, fa莽ade

 

The new building will sit at the heart of the School of Arts, Media, Performance & Design and become a centerpiece at 91亚色鈥檚 Keele Campus. Just steps away from the 91亚色 subway station and adjacent to the Harry W. Arthurs Common, between the Accolade East Building and the Centre for Film & Theatre, the gallery will stand out as an icon with Hariri鈥檚 signature curves.

The three-storey building will highlight architectural innovativeness and define a space for the exhibition of contemporary and historic art, including a ground level event space with four separate gallery spaces set within a redefined xeriscape garden.

鈥淭he AGYU has a long history as a leader in presenting and supporting artists. As a contemporary art gallery, it strives to serve an aesthetic and social function,鈥 says AGYU director/curator Jenifer Papararo. 鈥淥ur goal with this ambitious new building is to establish both liveness and legacy by maintaining a critical contemporary art program and giving prominence to the University鈥檚 collection.鈥

The gallery will be a versatile yet distinctive space for a multiplicity of artistic voices and forms. It will also enhance the gallery鈥檚 ability to continue its advocacy of underrepresented communities, contribute to artistic production and help amplify artists鈥 voices.

鈥淲e are thrilled to be working with 91亚色 to build upon the AGYU鈥檚 rich history and help reimagine its future,鈥 says Siamak Hariri, founding partner at Hariri Pontarini Architects. 鈥淭o signify this transformation, we were inspired by metaphor and nature. Like a butterfly, each of the five wings of the new gallery extend their reach out to the campus and of course beyond. Responding to the AGYU鈥檚 aspiration to expand the social and civic role of the gallery, the building will have a powerful presence, a new presence, embracing the full University Common, and welcoming and attracting visitors to all the wonder it has to offer."

Rendering of Hariri Pontarini Architects鈥 winning design, aerial view

Rendering of Hariri Pontarini Architects鈥 winning design, aerial view

 

HPA鈥檚 design, led by Hariri, was selected for its visual strength and magnetizing draw with a vision to generate flow and connection while centering the arts on campus. The design expressed a nuanced understanding of art, its role in society, and the framework needed to support art and the curatorial process.

HPA has worked with many Canadian universities and cultural organizations, most recently opening the Tom Patterson Theatre in Stratford, which has received high accolades. In addition, Hariri has received international praise for his design for the Bah谩鈥櫭 Temple of South America, which won several awards including the RAIC International Prize.

and were also on the shortlist for their designs for the gallery. All three firms have received Governor General Medals in Architecture.

Combined with the AGYU鈥檚 current spaces, the new building will form a unified art institution that will magnify the breadth of the gallery鈥檚 scope, with a re-envisioning of the University鈥檚 art collection.

The AGYU opened in 1988 and moved into its current 3,000-square-foot space in 2006.

The art gallery鈥檚 collection currently contains 1,700 works, including a donation by the Goldfarbs of 76 artworks in the early 2000s. It includes prominent donations of works by Norval Morrisseau and Andy Warhol, 200 prints and sculptures by renowned and influential Inuit artists including Kenojuak Ashevek and Kananginak Pootoogook, as well as paradigmatic work by Canadian 鈥淎utomatistes鈥 Jean-Paul Riopelle and Paul-Emile Borduas. American Modernists such as Helen Frankenthaler and Kenneth Noland are also part of the collection, as is the recent acquisition of RISE, an internationally acclaimed film by B谩rbara Wagner and Benjamin de Burca, featuring performances from some of Toronto鈥檚 most influential spoken word and rap artists.

Images of new design: and

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91亚色 champions new ways of thinking that drive teaching and research excellence. Our students receive the education they need to create big ideas that make an impact on the world. Meaningful and sometimes unexpected careers result from cross-disciplinary programming, innovative course design and diverse experiential learning opportunities. 91亚色 students and graduates push limits, achieve goals and find solutions to the world鈥檚 most pressing social challenges, empowered by a strong community that opens minds. 91亚色 U is an internationally recognized research university 鈥 our 11 faculties and 25 research centres have partnerships with 200+ leading universities worldwide. Located in Toronto, 91亚色 is the third largest university in Canada, with a strong community of 53,000 students, 7,000 faculty and administrative staff, and more than 300,000 alumni. 91亚色 U's fully bilingual Glendon Campus is home to Southern Ontario's Centre of Excellence for French Language and Bilingual Postsecondary Education.

Media Contact:

Sandra McLean, 91亚色 Media Relations, 416-272-6317, sandramc@yorku.ca

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