Â鶹AV

Undergraduate Exhibitions & Conferences

Students in Art History and Communication Studies are active in curatingĚýexhibitions and organizing conferences through ,Ěý, AHCSSA, as well as AHCS courses. For future events, check back regularly or follow us on .


Winter 2023 - COMS 492 - The Politics of Care, Interdependency and Mutual Aid

collage of four student projects for COMS 492 winter 2023COMS 492: The Politics of Care, Interdependency and Mutual Aid is a seminar focused on contemporary theories of, and movements for, change centered around social relationships of care and interdependency. Based in collaborative project development, the seminar culminates in public-facing projects that translate what we have been reading and discussing into toolkits, guides, and resources for making needed change, whether interpersonal or collective, or both! You can learn more about the projects below, and access them via the links provided. Projects are being shared with the full consent of the students who made them.

View the projects here


Fall 2020 - COMS 492 - Politics of Care and Mutual Aid ProjectsFall 2020 - COMS 492 - Politics of Care and Mutual Aid Projects

During Fall 2020, students in COMS 492 examined how the politics of care and practices of mutual aid create new possibilities for making social change. Students collaboratively planned, wrote, designed, and published projects that explore these possibilities. They address pressing social issues in genres that are meant to be distributed and shared— from a zine that models harm reduction in the context of the COVD-19 pandemic to an online syllabus on how to advocate for people facing deportation, an advocacy campaign to address homelessness around Â鶹AV community, a guide for administrators on the student mental health crisis, a report for employers on the unseen gendered impacts of remote work during the pandemic, a manifesto that raises awareness about the gendered and racialized realities of many essential workers, and a curated guide for students on how to navigate social media activism.

View the projects here


Fridge Door Gallery Vernissage - In Present TenseNovember 22, 2019 - Fridge Door Gallery Vernissage - In Present Tense

Fridge Door Gallery hosted a fall vernissage for the student-run exhibition In Present Tense at Espace-8, exploring the dynamism of the historical present. To live in the present is to live in a state of radical uncertainty. At what point does our present become our past—rational rather than affective? Featured Artists: Liam Baker, Delaney Barth, Bengisu, Helen Du, Gemma Else, Chloe Gordon-Chow, Hassan Saab, Aidan Hepburn, Maddy Holton, Kelly Hu, Jillian Koudry, Sarah Krier, Mariah Lamont-Lennox, Lulu Lebowitz, Lydia McElroy, Grace Pooley, Marie Saadeh, Isabella Vella.


Canvas Colloquium & Launch PartyApril 5, 2019 - Canvas Colloquium & Launch Party

Canvas, Â鶹AV's undergraduate journal of Art History and Communication Studies, hosted their annual spring research colloquium and journal launch.

Presentations:In “Furnishing History,” Margaux Shraiman explores issues of authenticity and contemporary curatorial practice at the Palace of Versailles. Catherine LaRivière dealt with embodied experiences of viewing and art-making in the light and space installations of James Turrell. Hannah Deskin’s “What a City Remembers” addressed the histories presented by Montreal’s publicly-funded Cité Mémoire project.


Fridge Door Gallery Winter Vernissage - H A V E NMarch 29, 2019 - Fridge Door Gallery Winter Vernissage - H A V E N

Turning our focus to feelings of warmth and the solace of the genuine, this semester the Fridge Door Gallery seeks to bring you back to the comfort of home. We will be featuring artworks in various mediums that focus on the idea of what makes people feel at home, whether spatially or within themselves.


The Fridge Door Review Journal LaunchMarch 28, 2019 - The Fridge Door Review Journal Launch

The Fridge Door Gallery launched their first print journal. The print version of The Fridge Door Review features the best of the writing team's articles from the website, plus some student art!Ěý


April 5, 2018 -ĚýCanvas Journal's 2nd Annual Undergraduate Colloquium

Canvas Journal's 2nd Annual Undergraduate Colloquium​Four research presentations by published students, followed by a wine and cheese launch for the 17th printed edition of Canvas.Ěý

Alexa van Abbema - "Princess Nokia and AfroPunk: An Emerging Racial, Cultural, and Feminist Resistance through Hip-Hop Performance"
Laurence Charlebois - "Public Art and the Global in Montreal: A Case Study of Jaume Plensa’s Source"
Jacqueline Hampshire - "Doing Differently Now: Lubaina Himid and the Future of Britain’s Memorial Landscape"
Hannah Deskin - "Divergence & Fragmentation: Contemporary Indigenous Art in the Mapped 'Global' World"


March 23, 2018 - Growth // FDG x Art Souterrain

March 23, 2018 - Growth // FDG x Art Souterrain

In collaboration with the Art Souterrain festival, The Fridge Door Gallery presented its spring vernissage, Growth, as an examination of the multi-faceted nature of growth, touching on the many kinds of labor associated with the act of growing. As part of Festival Art Souterrain’s 2018 iteration, Labor Improbus, and taking inspiration from Â鶹AV’s motto “Grandescunt Aucta Labore”, FDG sought to examine the role of work and growth in our daily lives. How do we as individuals and communities grow through and because of work?


March 30, 2017 -ĚýCanvas Undergraduate Colloquium & Journal Launch

Canvas Undergraduate ColloquiumThe first annual Canvas Undergraduate Colloquium, hosted by Canvas: Â鶹AV's Undergraduate Journal of Art History and Communication Studies, featured research presentations from AHCS students, followed by a wine and cheese. The event launched the 16th printed edition of Canvas.Ěý

Elena Lin -Ěý"L'Infiniment Petit and Monstrous Social Anxieties: Envisioning Disease in Fin de Siècle Culture Through the Eyes of Odilon Redon"
Sylvie Schwartz -Ěý"History and Social Consciousness in the Medium and Material of Kara Walker's Silhouette Installations"
Quinn Lazenby -Ěý"Zero Feet Away: How Grindr Has Impacted the Gay Community"
Erika Kindsfather -Ěý"Between Memory and Progress: Negotiating Infrastructure and Innovation in the Nottingham Contemporary Building"


March 18, 2016 -ĚýPerspectives / Perceptions -ĚýA Fridge Door Gallery Vernissage

March 18, 2016 - Perspectives / Perceptions - A Fridge Door Gallery VernissageIt seems almost clichĂ© to ask the age-old, ultimately rhetorical question, “What is art?”, and yet we continuously find ourselves in situations where we are confronted with a piece of work that turns our entire worldview totally on its head. In a general sense, it is safe to say that art deals with representation, and that representations are never pure reflections of reality. From documentary photographs to abstract paintings, works of art are always mediated by something, demonstrating varying degrees of separation from the real. Art thus provides us with infinite possibilities for envisioning the world around us, and artists have consistently been charged with the responsibility of challenging the accepted methods of representation. If we have learned anything from art history, it is that artistic representation refuses definition and avoids generalization. You never know what to expect.Ěý

In choosing the pieces for this exhibition, we looked for artists that continue to challenge how we perceive reality, art, and ourselves through their own unique artistic perspectives. Michael Rozen and Alejanda Morales present different ways of envisioning urban spaces through painting, revealing the potential beauty in underappreciated parts of the cities they live in. Collage artists Sarah Bentivegna and Hayley Mortin deconstruct and re-appropriate found images into their own creative visions, while Cody Lieberman, Anton Motivans, and Chloe Rowan show us different ways of envisioning ourselves through portraiture. In his dream-inspired illustrations, Iris Esquivel plays with perspective and different layers of reality. Jules Tomi, Jeff Dahdah, Ava Zwolinski, Roald Teffries, Kavya Anchuri and Adrianna Crisol Pineda offer new ways of looking at our environment through interesting uses of photographic perspective, and Jessie-Jamz Ozaeta questions the authority of the professional camera with his iPhone images.Ěý


March 27, 2015 -ĚýReveries - A Fridge Door Gallery Vernissage

Reveries - A Fridge Door Gallery VernissageFridge Door Gallery, Â鶹AV’s original student-run art gallery,Ěýpresented Reveries ´Ú´Ç°ůĚýNuit Blanche at Â鶹AV.

Jack Kerouac once wrote, “the fact that everybody in the world dreams every night ties all mankind together.” Whether it’s a daydream, a nightmare, a desire or a fantasy, dreams are the workings of an individual’s inner mind, a state in-between the real and unreal. In their darkest or their brightest state, dreams can become a true source of inspiration, a way to delve into one’s psyche in order to find deeper meaning or understanding. The Surrealists, inspired by psychoanalysis, used their dreams to tap into their subconscious in order to stimulate their art and writing. For them, the creative potential of someone’s deep, inner workings was much more powerful than that of conscious thought. While art can be used to depict the world around us, it can also be used to formulate and express one’s inner world and visions.Ěý


November 14, 2014 -ĚýEphemera - A Fridge Door Gallery Exhibition

Ephemera - A Fridge Door Gallery ExhibitionLife is short, yet the world goes on around us. We fill our lives with objects of value, prospects of accomplishment and fulfilment, and dreams of success, knowing all too well that at heart we are all just transient beings, that death is inevitable and that all earthly goods and pursuits are fleeting. The Dutch explored these facts with fascination during their golden age of art through painted studies of vanitas. Closer to our time, Damien Hirst’s diamond skull "For The Love of God" acts as a clear memento mori – a reminder of our own mortality. Be it the discovery of a house lost in the woods, the peculiar colour of a fading black eye, or a simple saltine cracker, things disappear to leave room for something new.

The cyclical return of these themes in art however, points to the potential of endurance. This exhibition combines a selection of artworks by Â鶹AV students, which puts into reconsideration transience and ephemera. Each attempt to capture a moment in time, which the artists felt deserved a second look. We aim for this exhibition to provide a space for viewers to contemplate on these matters, or simply to enjoy the fleeting moment captured by the artists through a variety of media. Viewers will find not only paintings and photography, but also drawing, collage, an audio mix and a performance. As humans, we all hope to one day leave our mark on this planet – to create, produce or do something which can be remembered as ours once we are gone. Art gives life to a lost moment, lets fame or fashion endure in our memories, ultimately reflecting life’s ephemeral yet cyclical nature.


ĚýMay 22, 2013 -ĚýLegacies Denied: Unearthing the Visual Culture of Canadian Slavery

Legacies Denied exhibition

This exhibition and the accompanying catalogue emerged from a fourth year undergraduate, Art History course, “Canadian Slavery and its Legacies: a Curatorial Seminar,” taught by Dr. Charmaine Nelson, Associate Professor of Art History. Working with the holdings of theĚýRare Books and Special Collections LibraryĚý(Â鶹AV), the students curated an exhibition, assembling a variety of extraordinary art and visual culture objects of direct relevance to Trans Atlantic Slavery. Like the course, the catalogue and exhibition contest the erasure of Canadian participation in the histories of Trans Atlantic Slavery, instead highlighting the role of Canadian art and visual culture in producing, sustaining and resisting the enslavement of people of African descent and Natives in the territories that became Canada.

For more images: Ěý


Back to top