Join us for an in-person walkthrough of Proof 32, featuring artists Tommy Keith, Dion Smith-Dokkie, Parumveer Walia, Long Xi Vlessing. Proof is Gallery 44's annual exhibition of work by emerging Canadian artists that reflects a range of current concerns and practices in contemporary lens-based media. Proof is often one of the first exhibitions in a professional context for an emerging artist.
Opening Reception to follow from 6:00-8:00PM.
Dion Smith-Dokkie lives and works in the Peace Region of northwest Alberta, Treaty 8. They hold an MFA in Visual Arts from UBC, a BFA in Painting and Drawing from Concordia, and a BA Humanities from UVIC. Dion’s work has shown at places like the Polygon, Gallery Gachet, The Bows, the Art Gallery of Grande Prairie, SUM, and Wil Aballe. He has taken part in residencies like CommonOpulence, the Banff Centre, New Media Gallery and Griffin Art Projects. Their practice has been supported by the BC Arts Council and Canada Council for the Arts and he has received awards like the Kwi Am Choi Scholarship Prize and a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Master’s scholarship for research on landscape painting. Dion received the PLATFORM Photography Award in 2025 and will present a solo show there in March 2026. They are a member of West Moberly First Nations.
Long Xi Vlessing is a photographer and visual artist born in East Van, Vancouver, British Columbia on unceded Coast Salish lands and living in Montréal on unceded Kanien’keha:ka territory. He graduated from Concordia University with a Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies, studying visual media and the moving image. His evolving practice centres the medium of photography in exploring intimacy and the lived-in body, the shared humanity of strangers, and quotidian scenes as sites of personal and collective transformation. His work often emerges from his intrigue, curiosity, and restlessness regarding the social contours underlying everyday life. This reflects in his circadian practice, playing with the photographic medium through a mix of digital, medium-format and phone cameras in the tradition of documentary. He realises mixed-media documents and installations akin to diaries, implicating himself as narrator and marker of time.
Parumveer Walia is a lens-based artist working in photography and film. His practice extends image-making into video, installation, and object-based forms, drawing on expanded media and queer aesthetics. Through archival research, Walia situates historical episodes within his lived experiences to construct hybrid narratives that remain deliberately unstable. He holds a BFA with a minor in Curatorial Studies from Emily Carr University of Art + Design and was a finalist for the Philip B. Lind Prize in 2024. He previously served as Executive Director and Curator of Unit 302, and his work has been exhibited at The Polygon Gallery (Canada), TRAPP Projects (Canada), Capture Photography Festival (Canada), BINNAR Arts Festival (Portugal), and the Paxos Biennale (Greece), among others. Walia was a finalist for the Audain Travel Award (2024) and the Inaugural Kirloskar Art Award (2025), and was recently appointed to the 2026 Fellowship by the Jeffrey Ahn Jr. Foundation. Upcoming projects include NOCTURNE, Halifax (October, 2026) and a public art commission with the City of Vancouver (June, 2026). His next publication, Shadow Fields, is currently underway.
Tommy Keith is a photographer based in Toronto, Ontario. He makes photographs of people and places close to where he lives, and his projects often involve returning to the same areas over extended periods of time. Tommy’s work has been featured in numerous publications including The New York Times, Fisheye Magazine, and Vogue Italia, among others. His self-published book “Don’t Forget to Wave” received an Honourable Mention for The Burtynsky Grant and was a Lucie Photo Book Prize finalist. He holds an MFA in photography from Columbia College Chicago.

