
Tethers: An Artist Talk and Installation by KJ Edwards
Join DARC’s Indigenous Residency recipient KJ Edwards in discussion about her latest work in progress Tethers, a mixed media installation conceived via hybrid analogue-digital workflows.

Join DARC’s Indigenous Residency recipient KJ Edwards in discussion about her latest work in progress Tethers, a mixed media installation conceived via hybrid analogue-digital workflows.

Digital Arts Resource Centre (DARC) is thrilled to announce our exhibited artists for Part 2 of the Fall 2024 LED Exhibition. This exhibition allows our diverse community of members to showcase their digital artwork on our impressive 7ft LED display. As we invite submissions, we aspire to inspire passersby of the Arts Court building and affirm our shared commitment to fostering a vibrant, inclusive, and supportive artistic community.

Digital Arts Resource Centre (DARC) is thrilled to announce our exhibited artists for Part 1 of the Fall 2024 LED Exhibition. This exhibition allows our diverse community of members to showcase their digital artwork on our impressive 7ft LED display. As we invite submissions, we aspire to inspire passersby of the Arts Court building and affirm our shared commitment to fostering a vibrant, inclusive, and supportive artistic community.

The Digital Arts Resource Centre is proud to be a recommender for the Ontario Arts Council Exhibition Assistance Grant, supporting Ontario-based professional media artists or collectives in the installation of a confirmed, upcoming public exhibition.

The Digital Arts Resource Centre (DARC), is thrilled to announce it’s latest endeavour: the LED Exhibition. This month’s Exhibition features works by Madisyn Dell and Mana Rouholamini.

The Digital Arts Resource Centre (DARC), is thrilled to announce it’s latest endeavour: the LED Exhibition. This month’s Exhibition features works by Helen Lam and Von Allan.

In Mother Ladder Night, Aylin Abbasi and Adam Ash Barbu explore the genre of the road movie through a trans-feminist lens. Together, they unpack scripts of gender difference, moving between active speech and words unsaid. Mother Ladder Night documents what is at stake when artists and curators negotiate their histories to engage in the common project of locating a lost object.

Our digital network has been put to task in the last two years. Its platforms and functionalities have provided multiple spaces for us to connect, come together, change and challenge very problematic, racist & extractive societal structures. Having said that, educational and social reflexivity previously granted

This group exhibition presents artists who examine the complex, and at times tenuous, links that tie some of us to the political, cultural, and geographic entity known as Canada. The artists share their unique perspectives as Indigenous and racialized Canadians, employing time-based media and digital