Maru Aponte
Bio
Maru Aponte is a Puerto Rican artist working in Canada and the USA. Her practice explores the ecological, cultural and psychological aspects of water. New paintings begin in Puerto Rico, where she sketches en plein air on small scraps of paper. In her studio she scales up details of these images, highlighting the saturated colour and vivid light that the island expresses. Her recent installation The Sea is a House (2025), which was created and presented at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto, explores memory as a water-based phenomenon.
Aponte graduated with an MFA from Emily Carr University of Art and Design in Vancouver, BC (2023) and a BFA from the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp (2021). She recently completed residencies at the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto (2025); Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture, Madison, ME (2024); and Griffin Art Projects, North Vancouver, BC (2023).
Exhibitions
Salt Stains, 2024
Available Works
Khadra Ahmed, “Maru Aponte on Pushing the Boundaries of Watercolour” . Foyer, May 8, 2025.
Rhys Edwards, “The Earthen Ocean: Maru Aponte at Pale Fire” for Peripheral Review
Viewing Room
Available Works
Press
Khadra Ahmed, “Maru Aponte on Pushing the Boundaries of Watercolour” . Foyer, May 8, 2025.
Rhys Edwards, “The Earthen Ocean: Maru Aponte at Pale Fire” for Peripheral Review
Available Work
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Graham Landin
Bio
Graham Landin (b. 1982) is a visual artist and carpenter who lives and works in Richmond, BC. Drawing influence from classical antiquity, off-grid culture, folk art and a variety of modernisms, Landin makes pavilions, sculptures, furniture objects and wall reliefs. Since relocating his studio to agricultural land in 2018, he has employed a chainsaw to work swiftly at the scale of the human body. His work has been exhibited in Canada and the United States, and he has created over thirty sculptures for Stüssy International’s flagship stores.
Exhibitions
Tania Willard
Bio
Tania Willard’s practice activates connection to land, culture, and family, centring art as an Indigenous resurgent act though collaborative projects such as BUSH Gallery and support of language revitalisation in Secwépemc communities. She is the Director of the Morris and Helen Belkin Gallery, University of British Columbia.
Willard’s recent solo exhibitions include Photolithics (2026) at the Polygon Gallery in Vancouver; Practices of Suffusion (2024) at the Southern Alberta Art Gallery in Lethbridge; and Sensitized (2023) at Pale Fire in Vancouver. Her work is featured in rememory (2025) the 25th Edition of the Biennale of Sydney; Soundings:An Exhibition in Five Parts (2019–25), at Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Queens University in Kingston, the Walter Phillips Gallery, Banff Centre, 516 Arts in Albuquerque, et.al; and Ceremony (Burial of an Undead World) (2022) at HKW, Berlin.
Her artworks are included in the collections of the Vancouver Art Gallery, Morris and Helen Belkin Gallery, Forge Project, Kamloops Art Gallery, and the Anchorage Museum, among others.
She is the winner of the 2025 Sobey Art Award, Canada’s highest honour for contemporary artists. In 2022 she was named a Forge Project Fellow for her land-based, community-engaged artistic practice. In 2020, the Shadbolt Foundation awarded her their VIVA Award for outstanding achievement and commitment in her art practice; and In 2016, she received the Hnatyshyn Foundation’s Award for Curatorial Excellence in Contemporary Art.
Willard’s independent curatorial work includes, Exposure: Native Art and Political Ecology co-curated with Dr. Kóan Jeff Baysa, Satomi Igarashi, Erin Vink, and Manuela Well-Off-Man at the IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts in Santa Fe (2022-ongoing); Nanitch: Early Photographs of British Columbia from the Langmann Collection, co-curated with Heather Caverhill and Helga Pakasaar at Presentation House Gallery (now The Polygon Gallery) in North Vancouver (2016); and Beat Nation: Hip Hop and Indigenous Culture, co-curated with Skeena Reece at grunt gallery online, which became the major touring exhibition Beat Nation: Art, Hip Hop and Aboriginal Culture, co-curated with Kathleen Ritter at the Vancouver Art Gallery (2012–2014).
Exhibitions
Nicole Ondre
Bio
Nicole Ondre (b. 1986) draws inspiration from knots as practical tools, expressive forms, and mathematical objects. Her work in ceramic sculpture contemplates underlying structures in the material world. Recent solo exhibitions include Torsion (2024) at Tanya Leighton Gallery, Berlin; Heatwork (2023) at Tanya Leighton Gallery, Los Angeles; and Pirl (2022) at CSA Space, Vancouver. Ondre’s work was included in the two-person exhibition The Eyes Have Walls (2020) with Mina Totino at the West Vancouver Art Museum. Other group exhibitions include As Blue As Devotion (2024) at Two Seven Two Gallery in Toronto; And down below the earth shown bright (2023) at ILY2, Portland; and Heart View Knot Bird (2022) at Tanya Leighton Gallery, Los Angeles. Since 2010, Ondre has also worked collaboratively with Vanessa Disler as Feminist Land Art Retreat. She is also represented by Tanya Leighton Gallery.
CVExhibitions
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Sergio Suarez
Bio
Sergio Suárez (b. 1995) is a Mexican-born, Atlanta-based visual artist and printmaker. His practice is informed by baroque intricacy, theological iconography and traces of Mesoamerican material cultures. Suárez’s forthcoming solo exhibitions will be presented at Casa Wabi Sabino, Mexico City; Sargent's Daughters, New York City; and MoCA GA, Atlanta. His recent solo exhibitions were at KDR305, Miami, FL; Stove Works, Chattanooga, TN; THE END Project Space and Whitespace Gallery, Atlanta, GA. Suárez attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, ME; and has held residencies at The Penland School of Craft, NC; The Hambidge Center, Rabun Gap, GA; The Bemis Center, Omaha, NE; and the Studio Artist Program at Atlanta Contemporary, GA. He is a recipient of a 2024 Working Artist Project Fellowship at MoCA GA and a 2024 Artadia Atlanta prize.CV
Exhibitions