What’s new at art galleries in Ottawa, from the National Gallery of Canada to artist-run studios

You can catch rare drawings by Klimt and Munch, Sobey Art Award finalists, and textile works on view in Ottawa.

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Here’s what’s on:


National Gallery of Canada

On now

The Governor General’s Awards in Visual and Media Arts 2024, to March 23, 2025. See the work of the eight Canadian artists named as laureates to the GG awards. 

Home: A Space of Sharing and Strength, to Dec. 15. Recent acquisitions that explore the notion of home.

Ottawa-based Inuit artist Taqralik Partridge
Taqralik Partridge, an Inuit writer/visual artist/curator, is one of the Canadian artists shortlisted for the 2024 Sobey Prize. Here she poses for a photo with her work at the National Gallery of Canada.Photo by Tony Caldwell /Postmedia

2024 Sobey Art Award Exhibition, to April 6, 2025. Works by the six artists from across Canada who are shortlisted for the 2024 Sobey Art Award.

Woven Histories: Textile and Modern Abstraction, to March 2, 2025. About 130 works elevate textile works from domestic drudgery to an influential art movement. 

Upcoming

Gathered Leaves: Discoveries from the Drawings Vault, Dec. 13-April 13, 2025. A rare opportunity to view works by Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun, Théodore Géricault, Gustav Klimt, Edvard Munch, Wassily Kandinsky and more. 

Permanent attractions

Maman, a 10-metre-tall sculpture of a spider complete with a marble sac holding 20 eggs, was created by French artist Louise Bourgeois to pay tribute to the strength of all mothers. It stands outside the main entrance.

Rideau Chapel at the National Gallery of Canada
The interior of the former Rideau Chapel is reconstructed inside the National Gallery of Canada.Photo by Jean Levac /Postmedia

Janet Cardiff: Forty-Part Motet. This sound sculpture by Janet Cardiff is a reworking of a piece by 16th-century English composer Thomas Tallis that encompasses 40 separately recorded choir voices played through 40 speakers strategically positioned in a room that reconstructs the interior of the former Rideau Chapel. 

A man looks at Indigenous art at the National Gallery of Canada.
A man checks out the art in the Canadian and Indigenous Galleries at the National Gallery of Canada.Photo by Jean Levac /Postmedia

Indigenous and Canadian Galleries: On display are a large number of works by the Group of Seven, as well as works by Indigenous artists from around the world, with a focus on Canadian and Inuit art, plus the Henry Birks Collection of Canadian Silver.

European, American and Asia Galleries: This is where you’ll find works by non-Canadian artists, dating back to the Renaissance, including about 400 pieces by Asian artists.

Contemporary Galleries: Don’t miss Barnett Newman’s Voice of Fire, the painting that ignited controversy when it was acquired in 1987, along with other paintings, sculptures and installations created since 1990 that illustrate modern art practices.

A man looks at the Voice of Fire painting.
The public was outraged when the National Gallery of Canada bought the Voice of Fire for $1.76 million.Photo by Postmedia file photo

Photography: The gallery has been actively collecting photographs since 1967, building one of the world’s most comprehensive collections with a holding of more than 50,000 photographs and 146,000 negatives.

Prints and Drawings: More than 27,000 works on paper by Canadian, American and European artists are included in this collection, which also represents all the major schools of thought from the 15th century to the contemporary period. 

Exterior of the Ottawa Art Gallery
The exterior of the Ottawa Art Gallery is marked by the modernist Ruddy cube.Photo by Errol McGihon /Postmedia


Ottawa Art Gallery

Alternate entrance: 10 Daly Ave.

On now

Art + Parcel, to Jan. 12, 2025: An annual holiday showcase of artsy gifts, all priced under $1,500, including Canadian-made ceramics, jewelry, homewares, kids crafts, art prints, books and more. 

Stories My Father Couldn’t Tell Me, to March 16, 2025: Jeff Thomas, the Urban-Iroquois photographer, curator, activist and cultural theorist, shares a new series titled Dream Panels reflecting his experience on the land.

Bright Oriental Star: An immersive contemporary installation by South-Asian Canadian Rachel Kalpana James focusing on the 1929 visit to Canada by Rabindranath Tagore, a celebrated Indian poet and educator.

William Topley's historical photo of the Ottawa River
A sample of the work of Ottawa’s preeminent historical photographer, William James Topley.Photo by William James Topley /Library and Archives Canada

Through the Ground Glass: Reframing William James Topley, to Feb. 9, 2025. Six contemporary artists offer their response to the work of historical Ottawa photographer William James Topley.

Art at the Ottawa Art Gallery.
A view of the Firestone Collection gallery at the Ottawa Art Gallery.Photo by Jean Levac /Postmedia

Visions and Views: Landscape and Abstraction in the Firestone Collection of Canadian Art, to Jan. 5, 2025: The latest exhibition inspired by the Firestone collection explores the influence of the abstract-art movement on Canadian artists who practised landscape art, including Henri Masson, Emily Carr and A.J. Casson. 


Main entrance of SAW Centre
The main entrance to the SAW Centre at Arts Court.Photo by Wayne Cuddington /Postmedia

SAW Centre

On now

Give Me Shelter, to Jan. 25, 2025. A dozen Canadian and international artists and architects share their artistic responses to the issue of housing insecurity and homelessness.

People look at art at SAW Centre
Art enthusiasts peruse an exhibition at SAW Centre.Photo by Wayne Cuddington /Postmedia

Zasaan, to April 6, 2026. The Ottawa-based Indigenous artist and curator Barry Ace created this outdoor sculpture to mark SAW’s 50th anniversary in 2023. Illuminated internally, Zasaan, which is the Anishinaabemowin word for nest, features four thunderbirds protecting a nest and is created from electronic components and circuit boards.


Ottawa City Hall

City Hall Art Gallery presents Signs of the Time by Egils Rozenbergs. The Latvian textile artist weaves the ribbons of old cassettes and video tapes into highly decorative tapestries.

Women look at art on the walls of the Ottawa City Hall Art Gallery.
Two women look at art at the Ottawa City Hall Art Gallery in 2017.Photo by Lois Siegel /Handout

Karsh-Masson Gallery presents Landslip by Kingston-based artist Nicholas Crombach, who uses found objects and unexpected materials in sculptural installations that reflect the current geological era.


A woman peruses the art at Carleton university art gallery
A woman looks at art during a retrospective at the Carleton University Art Gallery.Photo by Chris Mikula /Postmedia files

Carleton University Art Gallery

Jane Martin: The Ties That Bind, to Dec. 14. The first retrospective of the Canadian artist’s work divides her 50-year career into three periods.

A Dream of Return, to Dec. 14. Five diverse artists offer their broadly defined creative responses to the theme of “return.”

Practice as Ritual / Ritual as Practice, to Dec. 14. See work by 10 Black women artists who participated in a 1989 nationally touring exhibition that addressed the exclusion of Black women artists from the visual landscape of Canada.


Art students paint the Ottawa sign in the ByWard Market
Students from the Ottawa School of Art were assigned to paint the Ottawa sign in the Byward Market a few years ago.Photo by Wayne Cuddington /Postmedia files

Ottawa School of Art, J.W. Stelleck Gallery

On now

Braveheart (Un Cœur brave), to Nov. 17. Works by Metis artist Rosalie Favell, a leading figure in contemporary Indigenous art and photography.


Ottawa School of Art, Orleans Gallery

On now

This too, shall pass, to Dec. 15. A series of graphite drawings by Mayuko Ono Gray that juxtapose Japanese calligraphic forms with the people, animals, and still-life forms of the artist’s daily life.


The gallery space at SPAO
SPAO, the School of Photographic Arts of Ottawa, has a small gallery space.Photo by Julie Oliver /Postmedia

Exterior of SPAO
People flock outside the School of the Photographic Arts: Ottawa in anticipation of a new exhibition.Photo by ERROL MCGIHON /Postmedia

SPAO Centre Gallery

On now

Material Futures, to Dec. 15. Photo-based portraiture by four artists who use the human form to explore body politics.


Gallery 101

Do weeds still grow in Heaven?, to Dec. 14. New textile sculptures and installations by Lan “Florence” Yee.


Top commercial galleries in Ottawa

Wallack Galleries

One of Canada’s oldest commercial galleries founded in 1936 by Samuel Wallack, it remains in the Wallack family, continuing to represent contemporary artists working in a wide range of media.

Gordon Harrison Canadian Landscape Gallery

A boutique gallery of original contemporary Canadian landscapes by artist Gordon Harrison and other guest artists.

A painting by Gordon harrison.
Detail from a landscape painting by Gordon Harrison.Photo by Gordon Harrison /Handout

Galerie St-Laurent + Hill

A well-established contemporary art gallery, founded in 1977, with a focus on painting, photography, and sculpture.

Galerie Jean-Claude Bergeron

Founded in 1992 in an historic Victorian home in the ByWard Market by Bergeron, a professional engraver with expertise in original prints.

Jaya Krishnan Studio Gallery

This light-filled, second-floor space showcases colour-saturated paintings of Jaya Krishnan, a self-taught artist born in Malaysia and a Glebe resident for decades.

Ottawa artist Jaya Krishnan in his studio
Artist Jaya Krishnan poses for a photo at his art studio gallery in Ottawa’s Glebe neighbourhood.Photo by Tony Caldwell /Postmedia

L.A. Pai Gallery

A contemporary Canadian mixed-medium art gallery directed by Lisa A. Pai since 2000, with a sister gallery specializing in jewellery at 497 Sussex Dr.

de Montigny Contemporary

The former Studio Sixty Six was taken over this year by Brendan A. de Montigny and relaunched with the same passion for cutting-edge contemporary art.

Santini Gallery

A contemporary art gallery showcasing original, regional artwork, as well as artisan-made home decor and jewelry, curated by owner Lauryn Santini.

Salon Des Bananes

This new addition to the art scene is an avant-garde art exhibition space established by Rich Loen, one of Ottawa’s original tech entrepreneurs. It’s dedicated to immersive and experiential art exhibits, including Loen’s work and that of other artists. Open for events only. 

Wall Space Gallery

Emerging and established Canadian artists working in traditional and new media are represented at this contemporary art gallery in Old Ottawa South.

Koyman Galleries

The collection at Canada’s largest commercial art gallery consists of more than 5,000 works by some of the country’s top painters and photographers.

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