The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery Announces New Exhibition Season Featuring Two Immersive Installations
The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery is delighted to announce its upcoming exhibition season with two solo presentations of works by Swedish visual artist Lap-See Lam and Canadian multidisciplinary artist Charles Campbell. Through immersive installations, both artists reflect on concepts relating to memory, movement, and the ocean. The exhibitions run from September 21, 2024, to March 2, 2025. Admission is free.
“This season, we are delighted to present two extraordinary exhibitions that invite us to consider diverse narratives that inform our current historic moment. From a profound engagement with nature and its healing powers to a personal exploration of the diasporic condition, the themes of these two exhibitions will undoubtedly captivate the imagination of our visitors.” — Adelina Vlas, Head of Curatorial Affairs
The exhibitions will be accompanied by a vibrant lineup of free public programs, encouraging visitors to engage through artist talks, workshops, and tours. We look forward to welcoming families to a series of creative Power Kids workshops designed for children aged 7–12. Join us on select Sundays to partake in art activities that include natural materials, theatre, and play. Visitors are also invited to enjoy our Creative Hub for reading, drawing, and reflecting. For programming details go to the Event Calendar page on The Power Plant’s website.
Lap-See Lam, still from Floating Sea Palace, 2024. Courtesy the artist; Galerie Nordenhake, Berlin/Stockholm/Mexico City; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; The Vega Foundation; Studio Voltaire, London; The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, Toronto.
Lap-See Lam: Floating Sea Palace
Curators
Julia Paoli, Director & Curator, The Vega Foundation
Kate Whiteway, Assistant Curator, The Vega Foundation
Adelina Vlas, Head of Curatorial Affairs, The Power Plant
Frances Loeffler, Curator of Exhibitions, The Power Plant
Lap-See Lam creates mythical video installations that draw on traditional storytelling forms such as Cantonese opera and shadow play puppetry. Her work takes a magic realist approach, creating alternative representations of Chinoiserie as defined by imperialist history, while simultaneously reflecting on her own family history of migration from Hong Kong to Sweden, to both claim and complicate cultural heritage. This exhibition, her first in Canada, presents her newest film, Floating Sea Palace (2024), in which Lam draws on the folklore tale of Lo Ting, a mythical human-fish hybrid who is believed to be the ancestor of the Hong Kong people. The film is presented within an immersive environment built of bamboo scaffolding, which has been used for centuries as an integral material in the celebrated art form of Cantonese operas. Floating Sea Palace reflects on transformation, translation, and the longing to return to an ever-shifting home that remains out of reach.
Floating Sea Palace is co-commissioned by The Vega Foundation, Studio Voltaire, and The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery. Produced in partnership with Moderna Museet. Floating Sea Palace is concurrently on view at Studio Voltaire in London from September 18 to December 15, 2024.
The exhibition at The Power Plant is organized and developed in partnership with The Vega Foundation. The Vega Foundation provides critical support for artists’ film and video through meaningful investments in the production of ambitious new work, collaborations with Canadian and international institutions, and the stewardship of a growing collection. For more information, visit thevegafoundation.com.
Charles Campbell, Breath Portrait series, 2024. C-print on aluminum composite panels, 20 in x 144 in. Courtesy the artist.
Charles Campbell: How many colours has the sea
Curators
Dominique Fontaine, Curator, Toronto Biennial of Art
Miguel A. López, Curator, Toronto Biennial of Art
Adelina Vlas, Head of Curatorial Affairs, The Power Plant
Frances Loeffler, Curator of Exhibitions, The Power Plant
Charles Campbell is a multidisciplinary artist whose diverse body of work challenges traditional notions of time and delves into possibilities arising in the aftermath of colonization. For How many colours has the sea (2024), he creates a portal into a realm where the spirits lost in the Middle Passage—the harrowing journey of enslaved Africans across the Atlantic—find solace. The exhibition consists of newly commissioned works, including a large-scale sculpture that recreates the submerged terrain where African and North American tectonic plates converge, and nine monolithic panels, or “Breath Portraits” that visualize the breath of members of the Black community. It also includes an audio installation capturing the tranquil and tumultuous atmospheres of the sea using hydrophones (underwater microphones), and filling the gallery with the sounds of an ocean journey, both stormy and calm. An additional work available on headphones offers personal reflections on reconnecting with the lost. With these deeply resonant works, Campbell creates a sanctuary for private contemplation and collective healing that confronts the profound consequences of systems designed to divide and oppress.
How many colours has the sea is co-commissioned by the Toronto Biennial of Art and the National Gallery of Canada and co-presented with The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery. The Toronto Biennial of Art is on from September 21 to December 1, 2024 at 11 venues across the city. For more information, visit torontobiennial.org.
Save the Date
Press Preview: Friday, September 20, 2 PM–4 PM
Public Opening: Saturday, September 21, 3 PM–6 PM
About The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery is Canada’s leading public gallery devoted to contemporary art, ideas, and conversations. Located at Harbourfront Centre on Toronto’s waterfront, The Power Plant is a vital forum for the creative culture of our time, sharing inspiring and transformative experiences with audiences through free admission to exhibitions and public programs. The Power Plant is guided by the commitment to provide a platform for artists from diverse backgrounds, drawing attention to pressing issues and connecting communities in Canada and worldwide through contemporary art.