Studio1616 - 1616 Dupont Street
November 29, 2024-February 24, 2025
Public Hours: November 29, 4:00-8:00PM
Memories And Premonitions gathers the practice of three artists reflecting on physical and spiritual temporalities, autoscopic phenomena and transcending the body. Taking place offsite at Studio1616, this project is an extension of Shedding Heaviness, presented in the Main Gallery at Gallery 44 from March 28–June 1, 2024. Shedding Heaviness and Memories And Premonitions feature the work of Julianna A.S., Delali Cofie and Kourtney Jackson.
Facilitated by Studio1616, an emergent studio and exhibition space and collaborative endeavour of Aaron Jones and Timothy Yanick Hunter. In their collaborative project, Studio1616, Aaron Jones and Timothy Yanick Hunter merge their distinct artistic voices, creating a platform that is interested in multidisciplinary art making, the unorthodox, and peer-to-peer sharing and collaboration . This fusion embodies the essence of their artistic interests, where they aim to support experimental ambitions, new conceptual and material approaches, and the futurity of cultural dissemination.
Julianna A.S. is an Afro-Caribbean woman working at the intersection of art and scientific research. Her work reimagines the practice of art making and uses woodwork, photography and curriculum-based interventions to explore intuitive cognition, physics and cultural imprint. Through her work, she invites viewers to question and engage with the intricate connections between art, science, and the human experience.
Delali Cofie is a Ghanaian-Nigerian photographer currently living in Toronto, Canada. Through storytelling he engages in multiple genres of photography such as fine art, documentary, and fashion. His personal work presents subtle beauty whilst exploring themes of family, self-formation and community. Frequently creating work between his native city Accra and current city Toronto, his work tells a tale of two cities, linked by a diasporic thread. His work has been exhibited in galleries across Ontario, namely Gallery 44 (2021) and Gallery 101 (2022). He was featured in legendary Ghanaian photographer James Barnor’s exhibition catalogue at the Arles Photography Festival (2022). Delali had his first solo exhibition, A Place of Ours, included in the CONTACT Photography festival in Toronto (2022) and created commissioned work for the Royal Bank of Canada. He is currently completing a BFA in Photography at OCAD University.
Kourtney Jackson is a Toronto-based filmmaker and lens-based artist. Her artistic practice employs hybridized and experimental forms of storytelling that permeate interiorities of Black queer womanhood. In lieu of “representation” as a means for legibility, her work endeavours toward a repatriation of the self through somatic, spiritual, and ecological sensibilities. Her award-winning films have screened locally and internationally at festivals including TIFF Next Wave (Toronto), BlackStar Film Festival (Philadelphia), Sundance Film Festival, Ignite x Adobe (Utah), and the Rencontres Internationales du Documentaire de Montréal (Montréal).
Aaron Jones holds a BFA in Photography from OCAD University and he is represented by Zalucky Contemporary. His professional practice is interdisciplinary, involving photography, videography, collage, sculpture, drawing, installation and curation. He has collaborated with artists, galleries, universities and libraries, including the Toronto Public Library, Art Gallery of Ontario and Massey College. Literally and digitally, Jones weaves together diverse materials from archives, including books, magazines, newspapers and personal photos, to construct captivating characters and alternate realities. Embracing the possibilities of world-building and abstraction, his creations often centre on nature, embodying themes seemingly bizarre and peaceful. Infused with elements of surrealism and Black-Futurist ideals, Jones's art bounces between technocracy and spirituality, offering a reflective exploration of humanity's relationship with both the tangible and the ethereal.
Timothy Yanick Hunter is an artist and curator based in Toronto. Hunter holds a BA from the University of Toronto and has been an artist in residence at the Art Gallery of Ontario and PADA Studios in Barreiro, Portugal. Hunter employs methods and strategies of bricolage, archival exploration, reference, citation, remix and rearrangement within his practice. His approach alternates between exploratory and didactic, with a focus on the political, cultural and social richness of the Black diaspora. Hunter’s work often delves into speculative narratives at the intersections of physical space, digital space and the intangible.
Hunter was longlisted for the Sobey Art Award (2022) and has exhibited nationally and internationally at Cooper Cole (2022), Bamako Encounters – African Biennale of Photography, Bamako (2022), Toronto Biennial of Art (2022), Gallery 44 (2021), A Space Gallery (2020), Art Gallery of Guelph (2019) and PADA Studios, Barreiro (2019) among others.