project

Community 2025

Odes to Joyce

Odes to Joyce features two media works by artists influenced and inspired by the late Joyce Wieland.  more

Location

76 Geary Ave


 event

Artist Talk

Artist Talk w Munro Ferguson and Midi Ono


Closing Event

Sat 1 November 2025
6 - 9 pm

 ** Artist Talk w Munro Ferguson and Midi Onodera // Saturday, November 1st from 6pm to 8pm**

Odes to Joyce features two media works by artists influenced and inspired by the late Joyce Wieland.

The exhibition will showcase Munro Ferguson’s hand-drawn stereoscopic animation, “June” and Anna Feldman Gronau and Midi Onodera’s collaboration, “A Canadian Ghost Story: The Quilt for Joyce Wieland”. It joins the conversations and celebrations surrounding Wieland’s remarkable legacy, sparked by Joyce Wieland: Heart On, the major retrospective presented by the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts and the Art Gallery of Ontario.


 Exhibition Schedule:  October 9th to November 1st, 2025
  • Wednesday’s from 12noon to 4pm
  • Thursday and Friday from 6pm to 8pm
  • Saturdays from 12noon to 4pm
 About the Exhibit: 

June
June is a 6-minute long, hand-drawn stereoscopic animation. In two distinct sequences, vividly-coloured shapes undergo a pictoral metamorphosis, accompanied by the expressive sounds of Philip Glass’s String Quartet No. 5, as played by the Kronos Quartet. The film’s two parts have very different sensibilities, moreover. The “Alzheimer” sequence begins with a complex abstract structure, replete with curving and winding linear elements, some of them wound tightly into massed shapes. The animated action here is subtractive, as those shapes quickly disintegrate and disappear, until all that is left is a node of light that was initially hidden at the center of the structure. Within an expansive midnight-blue space, this hovering ball of light diminishes in size – suggesting not so much a point of finality but rather a star zooming off to join a new firmament. The second part, “Memory,” has a more exuberant layering of pattern, coils, networks, planes, round shapes and linear features – all moving and shifting. At times these elements overlap and collide, but each encounter seems to generate new phenomena. The erasure and loss implied by the Alzheimer section is compensated for here by a sense of unstoppable growth, invention, and connectivity.

June’s abstract schema can certainly be thought of in relation to the operations of the human mind, in line with the artwork’s dedication and linguistic cues. But abstraction is inevitably open to multiple connotations. Ferguson’s fantastical interconnected shapes might resemble a neurological system, but can equally be construed as a communications network, or a cosmological event. The stereoscopic effect of the installation seems to envelop us, but do we then find ourselves inside a brain, or perhaps astride an atom, charging around the universe?

In the hands of both Wieland and Ferguson, abstraction is wielded as a rich and complex visual language. Wieland first achieved recognition in the Toronto art scene when she was a young artist in her 20s, and it is easy to see why, since her early paintings show a masterful control of composition, colour, texture, and mark-making. The brash and irreverent Wieland soon showed, however, that unlike many fellow-artists of her generation, she wasn’t prepared to worship at the altar of abstract art. In her hands astract shapes were something to play with, even to make fun of. She began to interrupt her own abstract compositions with speech balloons, words, or erotic scrawls. This is the case with a painting such as Redgasm (1960), where the humorous title alerts the viewer that the energy activating this pictorial field is supposed to be libidinal. At times, June seems to echo the dynamism of early paintings like Redgasm and War Memories (also 1960).

If Ferguson’s June is mindful of Wieland’s trajectory as an artist, it is equally important to situate his film within a history of experimental animation at the National Film Board of Canada – going back to such remarkable films as Begone Dull Care (1949), where venerable NFB animators Norman McLaren and Evelyn Lambart choreographed painterly gestures as a visual counterpart to music by the Oscar Peterson Trio. Also, by making a film that experiments with technology and software, Ferguson carries the torch of NFB’s vanguard of technological innovators.

Munro Ferguson’s June will be playing on a continual loop, and this format seems appropriate and even necessary. The unravelling and erasure that are characteristic of the “Alzheimer” section trigger a sense of pathos, an emotional response that is shored up by the haunting quality of the Kronos string instruments. With the film looping, this sensation of loss does recur, but not traumatically so, because it is immediately followed by the pleasure and adrenaline rush of the “Memory” section. This ensures that the imaginative artistic journey begun by Joyce Wieland continues into the present day.


A Canadian Ghost Story: The Quilt for Joyce

A Canadian Ghost Story: The Quilt for Joyce Wieland is a tribute to the films and artwork of the late Joyce Wieland. A series of vignettes references the themes and motifs from her work. The hand-made analogue imagery is respectful of Wieland’s pioneering adoption of traditional “women’s work” in her practice.


 Artists’ Statement: 

This piece is a celebration of Joyce Wieland’s remarkable body of work and its continued importance – to us and to an ever wider public. Her work was an important part of the context in which both of us began to make art and films. Although we had worked on each other’s films in the past, we had never shared artistic control of a project. Working with artist Lewis Kaye on the soundscapes deepened the sonic resonance of the images, casting an uneasy aura over the story.

We agreed at the outset to use only analogue footage: shot for this project, taken from our personal archives, and from our own work – especially when either of us had appeared in the other’s film. The idea of using Wieland’s film titles and other work as an armature for our piece evolved rapidly into a kind of story, emerging from our personal memories, the connections we both made to Wieland’s art, and the remarkable relevance of her films today, some of which were made 60 years ago or longer. As Wieland had paid homage to Tom Thomson in one of her films, we wanted to acknowledge her legacy in our own work. In developing the piece over the past year, world events have made aspects of Wieland’s message increasingly pertinent. Her ability to combine serious political critique with formal rigour, a light touch, and a feminine eye continue to have the power to inspire and fortify.

For more information on this exhibit, CLICK HERE

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