We can hardly believe Art Toronto 2022 has already come and gone! We can hardly believe Art Toronto 2022 has already come and gone! While last year’s fair was smaller in scale, this year The Metro Toronto Convention Centre was alive
Feheley Fine Arts is excited to return to Art Toronto for the fair’s 20th year anniversary. The gallery has proudly exhibited at the annual international art fair every year since its inception, showcasing the finest in contemporary Inuit prints, drawing, and sculpture. This year we look ...
as native cultural advisor and narrator for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Toronto, and as executive secretary of the land claims secretary of the Inuit Tapirisat of Canada. She also founded and served as manager-producer of the
Some of the items are sold locally to visitors, but the majority of sculptures are sent south to be sold through Dorset Fine Arts in Toronto. The WBEC is the only artist co-op in the Arctic that has his own marketing system. The other co-operatives work with Canadian Arctic Producers, ...
The Museum of Inuit Art, located within the historic Queens Quay Terminal at Toronto's Harbourfront Centre, is Canada's only public museum south of the Arctic to be devoted exclusively to Inuit art and culture. Officially launched in June 2007, the museum exists due to the efforts of David ...
dominate the Arms of Canada; there is no reference to Indigenous peoples. Yet one proposed design did spark a discussion with respect to featuring First Nations figures as supporters. It was a submission fromEdward Marion Chadwick, a Toronto lawyer interested in both heraldry and First Nations cul...
people. Their creative work is reflected in the gallery collections and in her deep involvement with the artists. Inukshuk Gallery (a division of Indigena) was established 15 years ago on Granville Island, Vancouver. Additionally, our Toronto Gallery continues to serve clients on a virtual platform...
This year, Art Toronto looked a little bit different. Like many large-scale events of 2020, Toronto’s annual and much-anticipated art fair went virtual for the first time ever. While adapting to a new digital platform was daunting at first, we were encouraged to think outside of the box...
Printer Paul Machnik had been trying to convince Terry Ryan, general manager of the Kinngait co-operative, to send him up north to experiment in the Kinngait Studios for years.[1] Finally, after knocking on the door of Ryan’s then-office in Toronto’s Cabbagetown around 1993, Ryan obli...