Precarious Joys
Toronto Biennial of Art 2024
September 19th - December 1st, 2024
Abraham Onoride Oghobase
Manuel Mathieu
Nicholas Galanin
Gallery TPW is thrilled to announce our partnership with the Toronto Biennial of Art (TBA) for our upcoming Fall exhibition featuring new works by Abraham Onoriode Oghobase, Manuel Mathieu, and Nicholas Galanin. Titled Precarious Joys, the third edition of TBA is curated by Dominique Fontaine and Miguel A. López.
"For the third edition of the Toronto Biennial of Art (TBA), titled Precarious Joys, we have been immersed in dialogues and active listening, a crucial element in our curatorial journey traversing national and international landscapes, numerous artist studios, and art encounters in Toronto, throughout Canada, and beyond. Our interactions have traced connections between artistic creations reflecting social and ecological imperatives, resulting in us identifying key directives drawn from the artists’ endeavours: “Joy,” “Precarious,” “Home,” “Polyphony,” “Solace,” and “Coded” are terms that encapsulate how TBA artists’ practices amplify political consciousness and reassert the power of aesthetics in shaping collective existence.
Some of the presented artworks address the various layers of history that define life in Toronto, while others reflect broader social and political structures of inequality and power under global neoliberal governance. Key issues that resonate across the exhibition include environmental justice, sovereignty, self-representation, belonging and migration, land dispossession, collective memory, feminist genealogies, diasporic sonic cultures, sacred plant wisdom, weaving as spiritual listening, resistance and resilience, ancestorship, and queer worldmaking. Rather than presenting a single theoretical assertion, however, Precarious Joys is organized around open dialogues and poetic connections. Together, these many works will conjure sparks that light a fire amidst the fragility of existence."
— Dominique Fontaine and Miguel A. López
Abraham O. Oghobase, Rock Anatomy, 2018. Art Twenty One, Lagos, 2018. Image Credit: Art Twenty One.
Manuel Mathieu, Pendulum (film still), 2023. Courtesy of the artist, Matenmidiswa Productions and Afro Dynamic Films. ©Manuel Mathieu
Nicholas Galanin, Never Forget, 2021. Photo: Lance Gerber
Programming
Happy Hour
Thursday, September 19th, 2024
5PM-7PM
Drop by the gallery on Thursday, September 19th between 5PM-7PM for happy hour drinks to celebrate the opening of Precarious Joys, the third edition of the Toronto Biennial of Art!
—
Exhibition Opening + Artist Talk
Sunday, September 22nd, 2024
Opening Reception: 12PM-3PM
Artist Talk: 3:30PM-5PM
Join us on Sunday, September 22nd for the opening reception of Precarious Joys at Gallery TPW, followed by a conversation with artists Abraham Onoride Oghobase and Manuel Mathieu, moderated by TPW curator Liz Ikiriko.
—
Artist Bios
Abraham Onoriode Oghobase (b. 1979 in Lagos, Nigeria; he/him) is a visual artist living and working in Toronto, Canada. For almost two decades, Oghobase has embraced photography as a way of exploring socio-economic, environmental and historic geographies – using his own body as a recurring subject. In more recent times, he has challenged and tested the limits of the photograph as well as conventional image-making by experimenting with the narrative and material potential of images and objects. From dissecting the lithographic printing process – monochrome prints on paper, metal plates and film transparencies – to, more recently, incorporating collage and photocopy techniques that combine and repeat images across time, Oghobase confronts issues around knowledge production, land, colonial history and representation, embracing the power of abstraction and revealing new possibilities in meaning and imagination. Oghobase’s work has been exhibited widely, including in the Nigeria Pavilion at the upcoming La Biennale di Venezia 60th International Art Exhibition; the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto; Museum of Modern Art, New York; The Polygon Gallery, Vancouver; Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg; Pace Gallery, London, KADIST, Paris; and Art Twenty One, Lagos. A recipient of the inaugural Okwui Enwezor Prize at the 12th Rencontres de Bamako African Biennial of Photography in 2019, his work is held in the permanent collections of institutions including MoMA; Art Institute of Chicago; Ackland Art Museum, University of North Carolina; and Museum of Contemporary Art, Kiasma, Helsinki. Oghobase holds an MFA in Visual Arts from York University, Toronto.
Manuel Mathieu (b. 1986; he/him) is a multi-disciplinary artist, working with painting, ceramics, film, and installation. Mathieu’s interests are partially informed by his upbringing in Haiti—just after the fall of the Duvalier dictatorship—and his experience emigrating to Canada at the age of 19. His art investigates themes of historical violence, erasure, resilience and cultural approaches to physicality, nature and spiritual legacy.
He is best known for his vibrant, colourful paintings, which deftly merge abstraction and figuration. His paintings materialize the instability of forms, perpetual movement and a sense of pareidolia – our urge to see patterns where none exist.
Mathieu suggests that global dynamics can manifest in a single place, with Haiti as the site of his own inquiries. He highlights the shared links and struggles that unite us despite national borders. When he approaches political themes, he does so from a personal perspective, through reflections on solitude, death, survival and desire.
His work explores our intertwined lives, in which the lines between past and present, personal and political, are often blurred. While he shares memories of his own life experiences, such as a convalescence following a serious accident, Mathieu also blends into his canvases a reckoning with the complex history of his homeland. He confronts questions that remain as urgent today as they have been throughout Haiti’s long history, unearthing the traumas of state violence. His work offers a space of reflection on Haiti’s history while inviting us to imagine its possible futures.
Mathieu’s concern for spatial organization, evident in his exhibitions at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts and The Power Plant (Toronto), has now become the work itself, allowing the artist to explore Haitian culture and the major themes of his artistic investigation.
Mathieu obtained an MFA Degree from Goldsmiths, University of London. He has had solo exhibitions at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, the Power Plant (Toronto), the Longlati Foundation (Beijing) and K11 Art Foundation (Shanghai). The Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami, De La Warr Pavilion (Bexhill-on-Sea, UK) and the Max Ernst Museum (Brühl) will present exhibitions by Mathieu in 2024 and 2025. Mathieu recently received the Best Short Film Award at the 2023 Festival International des Films sur l’Art.
Nicholas Galanin (b. 1979; Lingit/Unangax̂)’s work engages contemporary culture from his perspective rooted in connection to the land. He embeds incisive observation into his work, investigating intersections of culture and concept in form, image and sound. Galanin’s works embody critical thought as vessels of knowledge, culture and technology – inherently political, generous, unflinching, and poetic.
Galanin engages past, present and future to expose intentionally obscured collective memory and barriers to the acquisition of knowledge. His works critique the commodification of culture while contributing to the continuum of Tlingit art. Galanin employs materials and processes that expand dialogue on Indigenous artistic production, and how culture can be carried. His work is in numerous public and private collections and exhibited worldwide. Galanin apprenticed with master carvers, earned his BFA at London Guildhall University, and his MFA at Massey University, he lives and works with his family in Sitka, Alaska.