Gallery TPW

Gallery TPW

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Photos from Gallery TPW's post 11/03/2025

✨ Gallery TPW is thrilled to present a special selection from PHOTORAMA, our bi-annual print sale fundraiser, at Donna’s from October 26th - December 13th, 2025. ✨

PHOTORAMA: B-SIDES + OUTTAKES draws on ideas of reflection and reinvention. Inspired by the concept of a B-side track—the lesser-known, experimental, or overlooked counterpart to a record’s main A-side — Gallery TPW invited artists to share their own interpretations of a lens-based B-side. The works derive from digital files, scans of test prints, behind-the-scenes images, phone photos, research materials, film stills, or happy accidents—each offering a rare glimpse into the creative process. 📸

Proceeds directly support the artists, curators, writers, and designers who make Gallery TPW’s programming possible, ensuring our ongoing commitment to Canadian artists and the future of independent creative practice.

👉 Explore the full list of available works through the link in our bio and swing by Donna’s before December 13th to see the PHOTORAMA prints in person!

Photos from Gallery TPW's post 10/09/2025

Join this Saturday from 1PM for an afternoon gallery crawl through some of Toronto’s galleries and artist run centres, including a stop at Gallery TPW! 🌇

Guest Curator, , will be giving a guided tour of the exhibition “Between grain, dune, salt, and sky”!

🔗 Click the link in our bio for more information


📸 Installation view of “Between grain, dune, salt, and sky”, exhibition at Gallery TPW, 2025. Photo: Darren Rigo

Photos from Gallery TPW's post 09/16/2025

Learn more about the artists in our upcoming exhibition “Between grain, dune, salt, and sky”, curated by Sarah Edo ⚡️

Adji Dieye is a visual artist living and working between Dakar, Milan, and Zurich. Her practice interrogates notions of representation and identity to examine the socio-political structures shaping our globalized world. By exploring the role of culture in advertising, architecture, and national archives, she scrutinizes the forms of aesthetics of self-determination within neoliberal contexts. Photography is central to her work, serving both as a versatile medium and as a means to question representational “knowledge” and processes of othering across Western and Non-Western societies.

Adji holds a BA degree in New Technologies of Art from the Brera Academy of Fine Arts (Milan) and an MFA from Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK). Her work has been exhibited internationally, with recent exhibitions including Our Rivers Share a Mouth at Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo (Torino, 2024), Aphasia at Fotomuseum Winterthur (2023), Cultura Persa e Imparata a Memoria at ar/ge Kunst (Bolzano, 2022), Culture Lost and Learned by Heart at C/O Berlin (2021), ...of bread, wine, cars, security and peace at Kunsthalle Wien (2020), A Matter of Time at the Cultural Summit (Abu Dhabi, 2024), and The Norval Sovereign African Art Prize at Norval Foundation (Cape Town, 2024). Her upcoming projects include a solo exhibition at Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo in 2026. She has taken part in several international biennales, including the 24th Biennale Arte Paiz (Guatemala, 2025), the 16th Lyon Biennale (2022), the 14th Dak’Art Biennale – Ĩ NDAFFA (2022), the 13th Bamako Biennale – Rencontres de Bamako (2022), and the Mediterranea Biennale – Schools of Water (San Marino, 2021).

📢 “Between grain, dune, salt, and sky” opens on Thursday!


“Between grain, dune, salt, and sky” is generously supported by the Ontario Arts Council and the Spring Grant.


📸1: Adji Dieye, “Untitled”, 2020, Metal and silk screen on silk twill. Photo courtesy of Cecile Fakhoury Galerie, Dakar.

02/21/2025

We’re excited to announce that Meera Margaret Singh’s exhibition, “What We Hold”, opens tomorrow at in Coquitlam, BC! 💫

🗓️ Join the Art Gallery at Evergreen for the opening reception and artist tour from 11:30am – 1:30pm.

Together with a series of photographic still lifes and sculptural work, “What We Hold” traces familial histories and memories through objects—some joyful, others haunted. Throughout the exhibition, objects become witnesses to both the quiet and loud punctuations that inform the lives of their bearers, and the ghosting quality that items of personal significance accrue over time.

Curated by Noa Bronstein () and co-presented with the Art Gallery at Evergreen, this exhibition invites us to reflect on stories of loss, migration, marriage, illness, healing, and love. Each object—books, shells, vases, rocks—becomes a portrait of the generations that shaped it.

“What We Hold” is co-presented in partnership with the Art Gallery at Evergreen, supported and circulated by the Ontario Arts Council and the Ontario Government. This exhibition is part of the 2025 Selected Exhibition Program.

📷 Image Credit: Meera Margaret Singh, "Birds of a Feather", 2023. Courtesy of the artist.

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