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Lights On the Exchange 2026 Artworks

LOTE 2026 features 24 publicly viewable art installations, all within the iconic Exchange District.

LOTE 2026 Map Key

1. Claire Johnston
2. PLATFORM Centre 22×22
3. Sarah Ciurysek
4. Zoë LeBrun
5. Kai Bergen
6. Manufacturing Entertainment
7. Bret Parenteau
8. WFG Lights On the Catalogue
9. Katherine Boyer
10. Greg Hanec
11. Kaine McEwan
12. Zachery Cameron Longboy
13. Stephanie Kuse
14. Justine Proulx X
15. Yisa Akinbolaji
16. Jonato Dalayoan
17. Destiny Seymour
18. Natalie Mark
19. Takashi Iwasaki
20. The Poet Box (v.4)
21. Anna Binta Diallo
22. Jackie Traverse
23. KC Adams
24. Paul Robles

PROJECTIONS

A series of four newly commissioned large-scale digital projection works, exploring the boundaries of natural and technological worlds, invoking meditative reflections and transcendent states.
Curated by Manufacturing Entertainment.

Inflorescence II
Stephanie Kuse @sckuse
174 Market Ave. (Rorie St. side) (Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre)

Inflorescence II is the latest iteration of media artist Stephanie Kuse’s 3D-rendered floral explorations, this time borrowing inspiration from plant life that grows naturally in Treaty 6 territory and the prairie regions beyond.

Wandering softly through a vast and nebulous space, shimmering blossoms emerge and unfold, multiplying as they slowly blend into total abstraction. Adrift in a world of luminescence and hazy chromaticity, Inflorescence II invites the viewer into a realm of impermanence, reflecting the ever-changing temperaments of both our inner and outer worlds.

Stephanie Kuse (she/her) is a media artist and graphic designer based in Saskatoon, SK.
Utilizing 3D-animation and digitally produced abstract textures, Stephanie creates lush visual worlds that blend organic form and movement with vibrant synthetic colours and crisp digital elements. Equal parts nostalgic and technical, Stephanie’s work has been viewed across North America and beyond in the form of projections for live performance, interactive installations, visualizers and music videos. In addition to frequent audio/visual collaborations, Stephanie
plays a role in bringing audiences together through sprawling projection installations as the
creative director and artist for HYPERART, an annual multidisciplinary festival in the heart of St. Boniface in Winnipeg, MB.

Sutures
Zoë LeBrun @zo_lebrun
84 Albert St. (fka The Haberdashery)

Sutures is a visual love poem merging medical imagery with the action of machine embroidery, mixing the sterile and abstracted body with the softness of embroidered stitches.

Combined with the accompanying poem, this piece reminds us that metaphors of love can be both dark and dulcet—viscerally tied to the body while also pursuing a romantic vision of a chosen future. Just as embroidery needs the sharpness of a needle to puncture fabric and wounds need thread to hold them shut against the world to heal, Sutures utilizes these medical and sewing references to draw parallels between medicine, craft, and the work of loving another person.

Zoë LeBrun (she/they) is an emerging multidisciplinary artist of settler descent practicing on Treaty 1 Territory in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Their practice rests at the intersections of video, installation, and sound art. Through these durational mediums, LeBrun seeks to better understand the human condition and explore themes such as temporality, the perceptual body, and existentialism. LeBrun’s work is rooted in the exploration of materials and processes that embody metaphors of lived experience and bodily function.

In 2025, she was one of three recipients of the Video Commission Residency through Video Pool Media Arts Centre, and recently attended the Studio H International Artists Residency with the generous support of the Manitoba Arts Council.

Wonderland TWO * Kaleidoscope
Zachery Cameron Longboy @zacherycameronlongboy
457 Main St. (Confederation Building)

A poetic collage, a place called joy. Using a smartphone to capture and edit the digital film, Longboy has created a work that transcends its origins as discarded footage.

It has morphed into a search for the beauty and joy in the mirrored symmetrical patterns, angles and layers of a kaleidoscope, a testament to the power of artistic vision. 

“He stands in the garden
distracted by beauty.
Pulling his focus closer to his heart
Beauty, Beauty,
What a beast am I?”

Video maker, performance and installation artist Zachery Cameron Longboy, born in Churchill, Manitoba, of the Sayisi Dene lineage, brings a deeply felt, hybridity-layered perspective to his work. His videos often use his complex performance and installations as a departure point. Longboy is nationally honoured and widely shown in Private and public venues and public collections. Surrey Art Gallery, The National Gallery of Canada (Ottawa), Glenbow Museum (Calgary), and The Canada Council Art Bank (Ottawa).

Regress Bloom
Manufacturing Entertainment @manufacturing_entertainment
85 Arthur St. (Cake-ology)

Regress Bloom is a multilayered representation of open data interpretations covering fifteen years of nitrogen and phosphorus testing on the Red River (GPS Coordinates: 50.1411, -96.86861) in Selkirk, Manitoba.

It is a research project that represents a specific set of data points, filtered through technologies, human decision-making, creative translation, and audience observations.  Peripherally, Regress Bloom is an exploration of algorithmic reinforcement, ‘filter bubbles’, and the human biases in digital systems development.

Through the interpretation of data, Regress Bloom explores confirmation bias and single-source scientific conclusions. Here, “bloom” can refer to the growth of cyanobacteria, but it can also point to our unfounded groupthink exacerbated by social media algorithms. And “regress” draws attention to the research conducted to prove what one already believes is a foregone conclusion.

Manufacturing Entertainment are artists Julie Gendron + Emma Hendrix. Collaborating for over 19 years, they use multiple mediums, including video, sound, installation, analog/digital technologies, the internet, and performance.

Using sound, installation and visual forms, Hendrix + Gendron take every day actions, objects and environments, and manipulate them in order to conjure multiple meanings in an unending exploration within themselves and, in turn, form new points of view for their audiences.

INSTALLATIONS

Lights On the Exchange presents a program of installation artworks, ranging handmade craft and beadwork, photographic works, sound and visual arts, and literary readings, live and on video. Curated by Artspace Inc. and the Exchange District BIZ.

Light Beast
Kai Bergen @madeofbeasts
93 Albert St. (Cordova Tapas & Wine)

Kai Bergen is a multidisciplinary artist whose work focuses on myth making, emotions, and the natural world.

They work in textiles, paper, wire, lights, painting, and many other things.

Three Horses for Three Ponies
Katherine Boyer
100 Arthur St. (Artspace Building)

Katherine Boyer (Métis/Settler) is a multidisciplinary artist, whose work is focused on methods bound to textile arts and the handmade—primarily woodworking and beadwork.

Boyer’s art and research encompasses personal family narratives, entwined with Métis history, material culture, architectural spaces (human made and natural). Her work often explores boundaries between two opposing things as an effort to better understand both sides of a perceived dichotomous identity. This manifests in long, slow, and considerate laborious processes that attempt to unravel and better understand history, environmental influences, and personal memories.

Boyer has received a BFA from the University of Regina (Sculpture + Printmaking) and an MFA at the University of Manitoba. She currently holds a position as an Assistant Professor at the University of Manitoba, School of Art.

TITLE TBA
Sarah Ciurysek
52 Albert St. (Gregg Building)

Sarah Ciurysek (MB) (she/her) is a Canadian settler artist exploring the relationships we have with the ground.

Most often, soil, roots, and branches figure prominently in large-scale photo installations, though Sarah’s photo practice intersects more broadly with audio, film and video, and most recently, glass.

Sarah’s work has been exhibited across Canada, in the US, UK, Austria, and in South Africa, and she has completed residencies nationally and internationally at Radar and the Centre for Contemporary Art and the Natural World (both England), Textílsetur Íslands (Iceland), and MASEREEL (Belgium). Sarah grew up in northern Alberta in Treaty 8 territory, where she is researching decolonizing land use options as part of a long-term SSHRC research/creation project. She lives in Treaty 1 Territory in Winnipeg, where she is an Associate Professor at the School of Art, University of Manitoba.

Polar Coordinates
Greg Hanec @greghanec
433 Main St. (Passport Building)

Greg Hanec began his Polar Coordinates project in 2020, exploring digital manipulation of photos of material objects—buildings, windows, trees—as well as original paintings.

Named after a digital filter effect that warps rectangular images into circular or cylindrical shapes, intended for turning panoramas into globes, Polar Coordinates allows Hanec to create unpredictable symmetrical images, furthering his ideas of mutating original images into
new works.

Greg Hanec is an Manitoban artist who works in moving images (film and video), music, painting, photography, and performance art. Since 1980, Hanec has been exhibiting work with an original voice and approach. Using chance operations, found materials, freeform, and an engagement with art theory and history, Hanec uses accidents and intention to create unpredictable, off-key and insightful works of art. Recently, Hanec released his 3rd feature film, Think at Night, and has been curating the space)doxa series at Graffiti Gallery since 2004, showcasing experimental music, expanded cinema and performance art.

Colonial Cartoons: Nanabush Across Time
Kaine McEwan @kain_mcewan
185 Bannatyne Ave. (McClary Building)

Nanabush is originally a “mythological” trickster spirit told in many Anishinaabe stories.

I decided to interpret him in my own way by using that trickster feel and making him tell stories of Indigenous urbanization and the real issues Indigenous people face. Nanabush is supposed to represent Indigenous people as a whole in my cartoons, all the creators I create within this world are to poke fun or address the real issues going on with commercialization of Indigenous objects or the history of colonial times. To kind of mask it in this fun, rubber-hose cartoon style and make people look twice at it, to really engage the audience.new works.

Kaine McEwan is a two-spirit Anishinaabe artist from Treaty 1 Winnipeg Manitoba. By taking aspects from traditional Indigenous art and mixing it with urban art, I like to create a unique style of graphic illustrations. I started drawing at an early age, taking an interest in video games and animals, eventually evolving into more character concept art. I attended the University of Manitoba School of Art, pursuing a Design Honours degree.

Jiibay-Miikana
Bret Parenteau @b.p___
100 Arthur St. (Artspace Drayway)

Jiibay-Miikana (pronounced jee-bye-me-kana) is a journey on the celestial highway from earth to the spirit world.

This aural journey is split into three pieces: leaving, arrival, and departure. Jiibay-Miikana is the Ojibwe name for the Milky Way meaning “Spirit Path” or “River of Souls”. The sounds in these pieces range from stygian drone/dark ambient music from the blackest depths of the cosmos.. To peaceful, calming cosmic dungeon synth/ambient. These tracks have been set to release on cassette under the name ‘Isputinaw’ and released on Manitoba indigenous black metal collective/label, Manidoo Gathering. 

Bret Parenteau is a sound/noise artist based in Winnipeg. Under Wasauksing Sniper and the initials B.P., Parenteau creates noise, field recording, sound collage & tape manipulation. Most recently Bret has been working on film scores for short & feature length films. Creating the scores for Ste. Anne (2021), NIGIQTUQ (The South Wind) (2023), Klee (2025), & Levers (2025) Parenteau’s collage work have been featured for releases with his local cassette label Makade Star. In addition his latest work has been included in local galleries around Winnipeg such as Urban Shaman, Blinkers Art & Project Space, Galerie Buhler Gallery, and Rosemary Gallery. 

The Poet Box (v.4)
Visual artist: Zachary Ironstand @zac_ironstand
with readings by: Rehman Abdulrehman @dr.r.abdulrehman & Rosanna Deerchild @deerchildrosanna
492 Main St. (Exchange District BIZ)

Lights On the Exchange once again presents The Poet Box, in collaboration with Plume Winnipeg, featuring visual artist Zachary Ironstand, and readings by writers Rehman Abdulrehman and Rosanna Deerchild.

*** Live Readings:
February 6th | 6:45 pm + 7:45 pm (in tandem with First Fridays walking tours, book here!)
March 13th | 8:00 pm (closing reception)

Winnipeg-born and rooted in Valley River (Tootinaowaziibeeng), Zac Ironstand is a self-taught artist making his mark in the creative scene. Specializing in acrylics, aerosol, and tattoo work, Zac’s style is raw and authentic. Recently, he’s been branching out into installations, sewing, and upcycling clothing pushing his craft in new directions. Zac’s work is a reflection of his heritage and experiences, bringing something fresh and grounded to the art world.

Dr. Rehman Abdulrehman, Ph.D., C. Psych. is a consulting and clinical psychologist with LeadWithDiversity.com and is the founder and director of Clinic Psychology Manitoba. He is an assistant professor at the University of Manitoba, and a visiting professor at the State University of Zanzibar and Zanzibar University. Dr. Abdulrehman spends his spare time with photography, writing poetry, trying to get back into painting, creating smartphone apps to build confidence, being a sidekick to a 4.5 year old Batman, and last but not least, cake-mongering. He enjoys creative and innovative approaches to problems and loves the balance between art and behavioural science.

Rosanna Deerchild is an award-winning author and veteran broadcaster. Her poetry collection this is a small northern town won the 2009 Aqua Books Lansdowne Prize for Poetry. Her second book, calling down the sky, is her mother’s residential school survivor story. She is co-founder and member of the Indigenous Writers Collective of Manitoba and has contributed to numerous Indigenous newspapers. She currently hosts the CBC Radio show, Unreserved, a radio space for Indigenous community, culture, and conversation. A Cree from O-Pipon-Na-Piwan Cree Nation at South Indian Lake in northern Manitoba, Rosanna now lives and works in her found home of the North End of Winnipeg.

PLATFORM 22×22: MEMBER’S LIGHTBOX

One of two new programs at Lights On the Exchange for 2026, 22×22: Member’s Lightbox presents four new photographic works by PLATFORM Centre for Photographic and Digital Arts members, selected from an open call for submissions.

Thank you to our venue sponsor 201 Portage

untitled
Sarah Crawley
35 Albert St. (201 Portage Parkade)

untitled is part of a large new body of work exploring ambiguous grief in relation to Alzheimer’s and dementia.

Crawley created images by enacting a series of rituals performed in nature using various alternative analog photographic processes.

Sarah Crawley works with ideas generated from lived experience using different photographic technologies and materials. She stubbornly clings to analog film and alternative photography techniques while also embracing digital processes in her recent investigations around vulnerability, personal loss and grief. Crawley’s approach invites unintended consequences through material use and process as she purposely gives up control, embracing and encouraging the accidental during both capture and processing.

Crawley has exhibited large-scale prints, installations, video and book works across Canada in solo and group shows as well as internationally; her work is held in several public collections including the Banff Centre for the Arts, the City of Winnipeg, the Province of Manitoba and the Canadian Government. Crawley enjoys sharing her passion for photography through teaching and mentoring, is an active member of the visual art community in Winnipeg.

Leaves
Madelyn Gowler @ma_elyn
35 Albert St. (201 Portage Parkade)

Leaves is a collage of film, shot of plastic trash found around the city of Winnipeg. The print aims to draw someone in with various unnatural materials disguised as a canopy of leaves.

Madelyn Gowler is a queer, film-based artist focusing on materiality and experimental processes of image making. They are currently residing in Treaty 1 territory and received their BFA from the University of Manitoba. They mainly work with textiles, installation, super 8 &16mm film, and analog photography. Their practice focuses on meditative processes of deconstruction, repurposing, and film as subject.

Their films have been screened internationally at Engauge Experimental Film Festival in Seattle, WA, and Experiments in Cinema in Albuquerque, NM, and locally at aceartinc., and Dave Barber Cinematheque. 

Their visual arts work was exhibited at aceartinc. (2025) in “Poetics of Light: Experiments in Photography,” MAWA in “Seamless Transitions,” the University of Manitoba Collections Gallery in “Indeterminate Limits” and Graffiti Art Gallery in “Off the Sofa.” Gowler was also selected for the Riding Mountain Artist Residency through Manitoba Arts Council and Parks Canada, and the Fish Factory – Creative Center of Stöðvarfjörður.

Thawra
Christina Hajjar @garbagebagprincess
35 Albert St. (201 Portage Parkade)

The clenched fist features the Arabic word “Thawra,” meaning revolution. Located in Martyrs’ Square, Beirut, the sculpture is a permanent fixture at a gathering site for various protests.

It symbolizes unity and resistance, having been created by artist Tarek Chehab during the 2019 revolution against government corruption in Lebanon. Journalist Carla Henoud called it “a cry, a promise, and a landmark.” During Lebanon’s 2024 war with Israel, internally displaced people slept in Martyrs’ Square, highlighting national insecurity but also government inaction and the inaccessibility of shelters that only accepted Lebanese citizens, disproportionately affecting migrant workers and Palestinian and Syrian refugees. 

Its presence in Winnipeg’s Exchange District serves as a visual symbol of solidarity, anti-racism, and anti-fascism, beaming with both hope and dissonance, while offering intimate recognition to Arabic speakers.

Christina Hajjar is a Lebanese artist, writer, and cultural worker based in Winnipeg on Treaty 1 Territory. Her practice considers intergenerational inheritance, domesticity, and place through diaspora, body archives, and cultural iconography. Hajjar was a recipient of the 2020 PLATFORM Photography Award and she received an honourable mention for the 2021 Emerging Digital Artists Award.

red (Girl in Green)
Rae Swan
35 Albert St. (201 Portage Parkade)

Rae Swan’s work explores themes of identity and connection with respect to performance and the camera-as-object, with an interest in feminist and Indigenous historical and contemporary theory on lens-based and performance-based work.

Rae Swan (she/they) is a queer, Métis-settler artist from Treaty 1 territory, so-called Winnipeg, Manitoba. Their art-making spans across disciplines and forms, incorporating performance, mark making, movement, journaling, and research. Her interdisciplinary body of work explores topics of feminism, de/colonization, myth, and magic.

Recently, she has been a part of the Mentoring Artists for Women’s Art mentorship (2024-2025), mentored by Suzanne McLeod where she focused on research on the topic of  women-as-creatures in mythology (think Harpies, Sirens, Medusa.) In the spring of 2025, Rae and three other artists were recipients of the Manitoba Craft Council’s Craft Retreat Award, and spent a week at Victoria Beach skill-sharing craft techniques that culminated in a collaborative tapestry. Currently, Rae is preparing for another residency that will take her to the east coast to work on a project about connecting with the land in a relations-based way – challenging perspectives of classic landscape photography. 

WFG: LIGHTS ON THE CATALOGUE

The second of two new programs at Lights On the Exchange for 2026, Lights On the Catalogue presents a series of still images from films selected from the distribution catalogue of the Winnipeg Film Group, in illuminated light boxes.

Viewable in the WFG office windows at 100 Arthur St. (Artspace Building, King St. side)

Lights on the Catalogue is presented along with a special film screening on Friday, February 13 at 7:00pm, at the WFG’s Dave Barber Cinematheque. Consisting of 13 short films from the WFG Distribution Collection, the program features a majority of films by Manitoba filmmakers, with select films by directors from Ontario and Quebec. Curated by Jillian Groening and Skye Callow.

Plant Dreaming Deep (2018)
Charlotte Clermont
(analog VHS video, 7min)

Plant Dreaming Deep conveys states of transitions, loneliness, isolation, as well as uncertainty. Its introspective approach reveals itself through thick and overwhelming colours and textures that seems to hide psychic and misunderstood experiences, and mysterious symbols.

The video is a collaboration with Emilie Payeur.

Charlotte Clermont is a video artist living in Montreal, Quebec, interested in the moving image and the possible connection between the treatment of her materials and the themes which she explores. Working with VHS, MiniDV, Super8 and surveillance camera, the visual quality of her images, often dreamy and misty, tends to capture the complexity of her relationship towards people and her environment. Her videos are part of an oneiric universe and raises questions about her own emotional and psychological development. By reappropriating the image through analog manipulations and distortions, she subtly reveals a fragmented and non-linear narrative thread, where tension, intimacy, mystery and daily life coexist.

Her work has screened in Canada and internationally at galleries and festivals including Les Rendez-vous du cinéma québécois, Festival Oodaaq and the European Media Art Festival.

Four Seasons Bouquet (2022)
Emma Roufs @emma_roufs
(super 8mm film, 3.5min)

Nature and body at work over the course of a still yet disorderly year on a foreign land. 

“In that place, memory means something more than just something one looks back on, or something one feels from the past, it means something real for now that has made you.” -RT

Emma Roufs is a Canadian (Quebecois) filmmaker with a particular interest in film-journal aesthetics and themes related to memory. Emma is a member and administrator of VISIONS, and co-founder of la lumière collective, two entities based in Montreal, Canada, dedicated to screening and shining a light onto experimental film practices and their makers. Her films have been shown in various festivals and cinema spaces around the world. Her first essay documentary ATALAYA (2021) was presented internationally and won awards at Cinema on the Bayou film festival (USA) and at Vues du Québec – Festival de cinéma de Florac (France).

On the Bus (2018)
Ryan Steel @ryan.steel
(digital video, 3.5min)

A meditation on the buses, people and ghosts of Winnipeg Transit. Trapped in the confines of Winnipeg Transit there is little else to do but meditate on the bus, people and ghosts that inhabit this liminal space.

Ryan Steel is an independent filmmaker and animator from Treaty 1 Territory (Winnipeg). His work plays in the intersections of experimental, documentary and narrative filmmaking.

Lights On the Catalogue
Text by Skye Callow @callowlily

Lights on the Catalogue began with a seemingly simple goal: to cast light on the dark nights of Winnipeg’s never-ending winter through an engagement with films from the Winnipeg Film Group (WFG) Distribution Catalogue (“the catalogue”).

Taking form as a curated film screening and series of film stills exhibited in lightboxes in the windows of the WFG, the project features films that speak to processes of ongoing change and our relationship with memory, while also highlighting the cyclical nature of time and the seasons. The program unfolds like the passage of a year, showcasing elements of our distinct winters, while simultaneously reminding us of warmer days.  

The program illuminates underseen films from the catalogue, bringing them into conversation with one another and recontextualizing them within the present moment. The entirety of the catalogue is made up of over 1100 curated film titles of various genres, including but not limited to: documentary, experimental, animation, and narrative/fiction, including  short film titles as well as feature-length films. Consisting of 13 short film titles, “Lights on the Catalogue” is made up of a majority of films by Manitoba filmmakers, with select films by directors from Ontario and Quebec. 

Charlotte Clermont’s Plant Dreaming Deep (7 min, 2018) acts as the root of the program, hence its placement as the opening film and its feature in one of the three lightboxes. The title of this film leads to a visualization of hibernation, and makes us wonder: what, in fact, do the plants dream of as the winter months pass? What about the trees? In “Plant Dreaming Deep”, there is a section of text that can be assumed to read “there is mystery there.” It is partially redacted, leaving room for the viewer to interpret. These four words marvelously describe what is to be discovered in the catalogue, and provides the perfect entry point to the mysteries and eternal lore of the WFG itself. 

Founded in 1974, the WFG is a charitable artist-run centre that is freshly coming off of the organization’s 50th anniversary, making this a particularly exciting moment to rediscover the depths of the archive and film collection. The WFG recently acquired an Archivist lasergraphics film scanner which has the capability to scan both 8mm and 16mm celluloid film gauges, resulting in a new burst of digitizations. This has made possible the screening of films that have been previously inaccessible until now.

Lights on the Catalogue invites us to take a moment to reflect upon how we honour the changes in our lives, and how we remember the moments and people that are always passing us by. It brings attention to the seasons and the passing of time. This is a film program that moves forward like the months in the calendar year, and asks us – what’s next? The last film, Daryl Nepinak’s incredible short “Last of the Nepinaks” (3 min, 2005), leaves us hopeful, looking towards tomorrow with kind and eager eyes. A south wind blows, spring is coming.

LANTERNS

Twelve artist-designed lanterns, commissioned by the Winnipeg Arts Council and designed in collaboration with Joe Kalturnyk for the first Lights On the Exchange in 2023, exploring alternative perspectives on the history of the Exchange District.

Peaceful Protest, the Dividend of True Democracy
Artist: Yisa Akinbolaji @yisaakinbolaji
492 Main St.

The Exchange District was the site of Winnipeg’s General Strike. Yisa Akinbolaji’s lantern celebrates the power of the people and peaceful protest. People’s voices must always be heard, and their human rights must be respected.

Born in Ondo, Yisa Akinbolaji is an interdisciplinary artist from Lagos, Nigeria, who settled in Winnipeg in 1997. He describes himself as an experimentalist and emphasizes the significance of curiosity and productivity for his evolution. Yisa developed Remoglue medium for his painting and is founder of the Creative Foundation Inc.

Light
Artist: Bîstyek @bistyek_
Viewable at LOTE events and in the EDB office at 492 Main St.

“Light” in the artist’s two languages, English and Arabic ضوء Daw’, are merged and suggest hope during the darkest times. Bîstyek’s lantern is intended to bring brightness, joy, and warmth, and serve as a reminder of the light at the end of the tunnel. 

Bîstyek is a Winnipeg-based, self-taught artist. He was born in Syria from a Kurdish family and arrived in Canada as a refugee in 2017. Bîstyek’s style is dramatic and angular, with flashes of memories captured in unsettling shapes and sometimes saturated colour. His pieces are heavily influenced by his personal life and experiences. 

Beacons
Artist: Anna Binta Diallo @annabintadiallo
155 Bannatyne Ave.

Silhouetted figures from archival photographs highlight multiple histories and the people who pass through this area over time. What draws people here, and why were some displaced?

Skyscrapers, industrious warehouses, and financial institutions were erected, but the land was already inhabited by Indigenous people. Immigrants settled the area. There was a historic strike. Today, it is Winnipeg’s artistic core. 

Anna Binta Diallo (b Dakar, Senegal) is a Canadian multi-disciplinary visual artist who investigates memory and nostalgia to create unexpected narratives surrounding identity. Her work has been widely exhibited in Canada and internationally. In 2021, she won the Barbara Sphor Memorial Prize and received the Black Designers of Canada award of Excellence. In 2022, she was longlisted for the Sobey Art Award. 

Lii Faam Michif Mashkawishiwak pi Tipeemishowak (Métis women are strong and free/own themselves)
Artist: Claire Johnston @clairejohnston__
474 Main St.

Claire Johntson’s lantern shines a light on the story of Annie Bannatyne, a well-educated Métis woman and philanthropist from the 19th century.

Annie publicly shamed and whipped an anti-Métis bigot, exclaiming “this is how the women of Red River treat those who insult them”. This lantern is a tribute to the fierce spirit of Métis women past, present, and future, and exemplifies the unique fire within our hearts.

Claire Johnston (they/she) is a Michif beadwork artist based in her Homeland of Winnipeg, MB. She is currently mentoring with Jennine Krauchi as part of the MAWA Foundation Mentorship Program. As an Autistic person, Claire’s art practice is informed by the strengthening of relationships — with herself, her kin and the natural world.

Magic Fish
Artist: Natalie Mark @floodkiss
168 Bannatyne Ave.

Magic Fish is designed to bring light and magic where extra stars are needed. The jackfish, walleye and catfish connect the urban landscape to nature and the nearby Red River, where all these fish can be found.

Natalie Mark is an illustrator and cartoonist. In addition to their illustrative practice, they have co-created an installation at Pride Toronto’s street fair, facilitated workshops, and created video work for Reel Asian International Film Festival. Recently, they have been teaching at their local art gallery. Natalie loves going to their local library and making zines!

Indigenous Perspectives on the Exchange
Artist: Justine Proulx @justineproulx
131 Albert St.

Justine Proulx’s lantern offers an Indigenous perspective on the history of the Exchange District across three unique panels.

The first panel is dedicated to First Nations and the bison who sustained them, especially through the harshest of winters. The second panel represents the Red River Settlement and the dangerous and exhausting work of the Voyageurs. The third panel shows the Exchange District in more modern times, owing much of its growth to Métis and First Nations peoples.

Justine Proulx is a Métis Tattooist & Mural Artist in Winnipeg, Manitoba. From a young age, she felt called to create and serve in industries that fuelled her creative passion and love for working closely with people. She is always looking for ways to honour her heritage, specifically with her woodland art/tattoos, and murals. 

Wiikondiwag : to feast together. 
Artist: Destiny Seymour @indigo_arrows
155 Bannatyne Ave.

Destiny Seymour’s lantern was inspired by patterns on an ancient pot. Southern Manitoba has a rich history of ceramics dating back over 5000 years.

These early cooking tools were our first beautifully decorated home goods. Many are currently living in the Manitoba Museum with over 3 million shards catalogued. They are relatively unknown by the general population. It’s time we celebrate these beautiful designs. 

Destiny Seymour is an Anishinaabe interior designer based in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Her practice takes a critical look at the representation of Indigenous cultures within design and architecture. She works with patterns from local Indigenous pottery and bone tools that date from 400 to over 3000 years old. These patterns are picking up where her ancestors left off. 

The Sun Rises and Sets with You
Artist: Jackie Traverse @artbyjackietraverse
140 Bannatyne Ave.

The Sun Rises and Sets with You depicts a mother’s unconditional love of her children, the land and waters.

Jackie Traverse is a multi-disciplinary Indigenous artist with a practice rooted in community. She draws her inspiration from her Ojibway culture and her community of Lake St. Martin First Nation, and her experiences as a native woman living in Winnipeg. She is widely known in art communities across Canada for her painting, drawing, documentary, and sculptural works that speak to the realities of being an Indigenous woman. 

Murmurings
Artist: Paul Robles @paulrobles_cut
510 Main St. – City Hall

The birds and the skyline seen from studio windows make me think of Murmuration. I consider this epic natural phenomenon of large flocks flying together, twisting, and turning, and changing direction to understand the diaspora of the Exchange.

The lanterns invite you to connect with its past as a hub of labour and commerce, to think of migrant/immigrant (sewing) factories, and to create your own narratives.

Filipino born Winnipeg artist Paul Robles is known for his intricate cut paper works. He combines delicate craft with animist familiars, folklore, ghosts, and grief to explore psychological and emotional states. Recently, Robles has begun to incorporate sculptural elements into his work. 

wiigwaas gikendamowin
Artists: KC Adams @adams_kc
510 Main St. – City Hall

KC Adams’ lantern honours the Exchange District as an arts hub and vibrant place to visit, and it recognizes the original peoples of this territory.

Adams’ designs represent technologies that Indigenous people embraced in the past and present; beading, birchbark biting, and modern information technologies. The imagery contains Indigenous knowledge that vibrates with a wealth of wisdom, balance, hope, and innovation.

KC Adams is of Anishinaabe, Niheyew, and British descent and lives in Winnipeg. Adams is a relational maker whose work connects to Indigenous axiology and epistemology––recognizing her role as an educator, activist, community member and mentor. In addition, Adams creates work that explores technology and its relationship to her Indigenous identity and knowledge systems.

PAG-ASA (HOPE)
Artist: Jonato Dalayoan @4two_design
171 Bannatyne Ave.

Unique patterns were created for each side of the lantern to represent the diversity within our community and the integration of different cultures working together.

The design is intended to reflect the bustling creative energy of the Exchange today, while finding joy in the chaos. 

Jonato Dalayoan is an award-winning graphic designer and visual artist whose work is distinguished by a unique blend of urban art and professional design sensibilities. Jonato prides himself in being versatile. He draws inspiration from his family, faith, heritage, nature, community, and artistic interests. With two decades of experience in leading agencies in the Prairies, he is currently the owner of 4two Design Inc. 

Yagasuri Wheat 
Artist: Takashi Iwasaki @takashi.iwasaki.art
137 Bannatyne Ave.

Yagasuri Wheat reflects on the historical significance of the Exchange District, its modern-day function and iconic existence, and its future as a more culturally diverse and inclusive place.

A traditional Japanese textile pattern of repeated arrow fletchers evokes wheat fields here. Between the spikes of wheat are nibs of a fountain pen that could be used by the artists and writers of the Exchange.

Takashi Iwasaki was born in Japan and moved to Winnipeg at the age of 20 to study fine art and become a visual artist. Being immersed in the visual art scene and feeling rooted in the community, I have called Winnipeg my new hometown, where I have lived and worked for 20 years. 

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