Tuesday, January 13, 2026

January 8- Febuary 28: Posner Fine Art and Art Showroom Nyfadopoulos present "Art about the Here and Now", an exhibition exploring themes of vulnerability, resilience, and healing.

Posner Fine Art and Art Showroom Nyfadopoulos present "Art about the Here and Now", an exhibition exploring themes of vulnerability, resilience, and healing. Working across engraving, painting, photography, poetry, and sculpture, participating artists engage with the social, political, and environmental realities of our time through deeply personal and socially grounded approaches shaped by their cultural and lived experiences.


The exhibition is inspired by Anastasios Nyfadopoulos’s public artwork Crisis, a landmark of contemporary art and a powerful symbol of human resilience and social conscience. Over the years, the sculpture Crisis has drawn international attention, with coverage in major media outlets including the Associated Press, The New York Times, The Guardian, Público, and Xinhua. To celebrate the sculpture’s tenth anniversary, Nyfadopoulos and art consultant Dimitra Fotopoulou launched an international open call. Emphasizing inclusivity, all submissions were reviewed free of charge and considered solely on the basis of artistic merit.


The resulting selection of works presents a cross-section of emerging and established artists from Austria, Canada, the Cayman Islands, England, Greece, Italy, and the United States. This geographic breadth brings together distinct cultural vantage points, deepening the exhibition’s exploration of shared global challenges as they are lived and articulated locally.


Currently on view at Art Showroom Nyfadopoulos in Maroussi, Greece, and available online through Artsy, "Art about the Here and Now" carries forward the critical and human concerns initiated by Crisis, inviting collectors to live with works that balance vulnerability and resilience and sustain their relevance beyond the moment of their making.

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New Exhibition! Opening Reception, The Painted Word: Text, Gesture, and Expression in Contemporary Art - Wednesday, February 11, 2025, 5 - 8 pm

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Monday, January 12, 2026

Cooper Cole's Exhibition for Timothy Yanick Hunter Antecedent Conditions For A Landslide Closing January 17, 2026

Cooper Cole Gallery Logo
Timothy Yanick Hunter
Antecedent Conditions For A Landslide
Closing January 17, 2026
 
To view full exhibition and artwork documentation on our website click here.
 
 
For all other inquiries please contact the gallery:
info@coopercolegallery.com
+1.416.531.8000
 
 
COOPER COLE is pleased to announce Antecedent Conditions For A Landslide, a solo exhibition by Timothy Yanick Hunter that will run concurrently at Cooper Cole in Toronto and at Bradley Ertaskiran in Montreal.
 
Antecedent Conditions For A Landslide draws on the structural relationships between land, body, and technology, considering how these entanglements shape migratory movement and the transfer of knowledge across time and space. Taking inspiration from the writings of academics such as Édouard Glissant, Katherine McKittrick, and Clyde Woods, the exhibition reflects on notions of relation, geography, and collective memory as they inform diasporic experience. The exhibition will take place in two galleries in two different cities, with one iteration in Toronto and another in Montreal, a dual presentation that expands the project’s conceptual scope by highlighting movement, circulation, and translation, all key concerns in Hunter’s practice.

Processes of splicing, cutting, and rerecording guide the production of these works. Deconstruction operates as the central method, where fragments are isolated, repeated, and rearranged to generate new associations. Through this gesture, Hunter’s multimedia video, sound, and photography artworks resist linearity and coherence, instead centering ideas of adaptation and growth.

The imagery moves between infrastructural and organic registers: wiring systems appear alongside igneous foundations, biological traces of growth, and the human body. These material juxtapositions underscore how technological networks and environmental processes mirror one another in their fragility and capacity for transformation. The artworks take form as vessels for advertising, presented on commercial signage and screens, using the language of public display to question how images circulate, persuade, and shape collective understanding.

Taken together, this body of work engages ideas of biology, biomimicry, and environmental shifts as they relate to diasporic experience. The works suggest that migration is not only a movement of bodies but also a circulation of materials, energies, and information that are constantly evolving. In doing so, Hunter situates the diasporic experience as both temporal and generative, a site where systems of land, body, and technology intersect, break down, and reassemble into new and provisional forms of continuity.

Timothy Yanick Hunter (b. 1990 Toronto, Ontario, Canada) is a multidisciplinary artist and curator. Hunter’s practice employs strategies of bricolage, video, and new media to examine non-neutral relationships relating to Black and Afro-diasporic experiences as well as concurrent strategies of decolonization. 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 and the intersections of physical space, digital space and the intangible.

Hunter received his BA from the University of Toronto, and has been artist in residence at the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto; PADA Studios in Barreiro, Portugal; and Black Rock Senegal, Dakar. He was included in the 2022 Toronto Biennial of Art, and longlisted for the 2022 Sobey Art Award. His artwork can be found in the institutional collections of The Studio Museum in Harlem, and The National Gallery of Canada. He has exhibited 
nationally and internationally at Cooper Cole, Gallery 44, A Space Gallery, Toronto; Oakville Galleries, Oakville; Centre Clark, Montreal; 92Y, New York; ILY2, Portland; Kendra Jayne Patrick, Bern; Art Gallery of Guelph, Guelph; and PADA Studios, Barreiro; Third Born, Mexico City; among others. Hunter lives and works in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
 
 
Timothy Yanick Hunter
Antecedent Conditions For A Landslide
Closing January 17, 2026
 

Cooper Cole

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Toronto, Ontario
M6H 2A2
Canada


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Saturday, January 10, 2026

Haines Gallery: Chris McCaw: Reversals and Revolutions Opening Reception: Friday, January 23, 2026 | 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM

Chris McCaw, Inverse #117 (Burnt, Anza Borrego), 2025

Chris McCaw: Reversals and Revolutions

Opening Reception: Friday, January 23, 2026 | 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM

Haines proudly presents Reversals and Revolutions, our second solo exhibition with renowned photographer Chris McCaw. This highly anticipated exhibition marks McCaw's first solo showing in San Francisco in nearly a decade, and debuts his newest body of work, Inverse, alongside a selection of his signature Sunburn prints. Join us for the opening reception on Friday, January 23 from 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM, in tandem with the Fort Mason Art Walk and SF Art Week 2026.

Preview the Exhibition

McCaw's singular artistic practice foregrounds photography's essential components — light and time, lenses and light-sensitive materials — to generate startlingly inventive photographic forms. From the tonally bifurcated landscapes in Inverse to the sun-scorched horizons in Sunburn, the works on view are singular photographic objects, direct prints rendered entirely in-camera through the artist's years long mastery of his analog tools and complex photographic processes. Across both bodies of work, McCaw pushes the medium beyond conventions, revealing landscapes shaped not only by geography and astronomy, but by his own experimental rigor.

Chris McCaw, Sunburned GSP #1155 (Eastern Sierras), 2025

Chris McCaw: Reversals and Revolutions is on view through March 7, 2026

Sales Inquiries: alexandra@hainesgallery.com

Press Inquiries: irene@hainesgallery.com

Chris McCaw’s (b. 1971, lives and works in Pacifica, CA) work is collected by such institutions as George Eastman Museum, Rochester, NY; Getty Museum, Los Angeles, CA; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, CA; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX; National Gallery of Art, Washington DC; Philadelphia Museum of Art, PA; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, CA; Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC; Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK; and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY, among many others. He is the recipient of awards including the Andy Warhol Foundation's New Works Grant and Southern Exposure’s Alternative Exposure Grant, as well as the Emerging Icon in Photography Award from the George Eastman House. McCaw’s work has been the subject of two monographic publications: Sunburn (Candela Books, 2012) and Marking Time (Datz Press, 2023).

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