Leah Garnett: What I Tell the Sky, and What the Sky Tells Me
What I Tell the Sky, and What the Sky Tells Me, 2019, Gouache, graphite, and fluorescent orange gaffer’s tape, 88”x90” / 12”-22”x30” per tiled sheets of watercolor paper
What I Tell the Sky, and What the Sky Tells Me
Leah Garnett
March 27 to April 20, 2019
Opening Reception: Friday, March 29, 6 – 8PM
The Red Head Gallery is pleased to present What I Tell the Sky, and What the Sky Tells Me, an exhibition by artist Leah Garnett.
What I Tell the Sky, and What the Sky Tells Me is an exhibition of new large scale drawings. Garnett’s work often explores how space (both cosmological and architectural) is represented, occupied, felt, and fabricated. The works in What I Tell the Sky, and What the Sky Tells Me share questions about gravity: how it shapes cosmological space; how it affects structure and form, at all scales; and how it feels in the body.
Leah Garnett has exhibited throughout Canada, and attended residencies at the Sirius Art Centre, Fire Station Artists’ Studios, the MacDowell Colony, the Banff Centre for the Arts, and Struts Gallery. She received her BA Honors from Brown University, her BFA in Fine Arts from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, and her MFA from the University of Guelph. Originally from the coast of Maine, she now lives in Sackville, New Brunswick where she is an Associate Professor in the Fine Arts Department at Mount Allison University.
For more information, please contact:
Administrative Director
401 Richmond St West
Suite 115, Toronto, ON, M5V 3A8
info@redheadgallery.org
http://www.redheadgallery.org
416 504 5654
Gallery hours: Wed – Sat, 12 – 5 pm
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Venue
The Red Head Gallery

The Red Head Gallery
Venue Description
The Red Head Gallery was established in 1990 and is Toronto’s most enduring collectively run art gallery. It has stood the test of time as an exhibition space as well as a collective where critically engaged, highly productive artists enjoy curatorial control over the presentation of their work. Over the past two decades more than 100 artists have been part of The Red Head Gallery and have produced over 200 exhibitions.
There are two accessible entrances to 401 Richmond. At the northwest corner of the building, a ramp leads upward from the sidewalk to an automatic entrance onto the building’s main floor that measures 34″ wide, and with a lip that measures 1″ high. The other entrance at the northeast corner is less evident but equally, if not more, accessible. The automatic door measures 34″ wide and inside has a gradual ramp downwards which leads towards the elevators.
Accessibility Information
Entrance | |
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Street Level | Yes |
Street Level without Steps | Yes |
Street Level with Steps | No |
Door | |
Width of doorway | 80" |
Automatic Door Opener | No |
Vestibule | |
Vestibule at Entrance | No |
Accessible Washroom | |
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Single Occupancy Accessible Washroom | No |
Wheelchair Accessible Stall | |
Wheelchair Accessible Stall in a Washroom | Yes |
Washroom Door width | Unknown |
Washroom Automatic Door Opener | Unknown |
Grab Bars Beside and Behind the Toilet | No |
Obstructions Under the Sink | No |
Measurement from the Bottom of the Sink to the Floor | Unknown |
Hallways & Doors | |
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Interior hallways width | Unknown |
Doorways width in public spaces | Unknown |
Public Area | |
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Public area in your space is all on one level | Yes |
Screening Room | |
Venue has a screening room / theatre | No |
Parking | |
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Accessible Parking available on site | Yes |