Florence Vale, Pregnant Bird, 1961, watercolour and collage, 15.24 x 12.065 cm. Gift by bequest of Dorothy Macpherson, 1995. The University College Collection.

How often do we take note of the strange weather? With the onset of global climate change, weather patterns historically used by societies to anchor and frame the concept of seasonality are becoming less predictable and reliable.

Overview

Traditional tales guiding ideal preparation, planting, and harvesting times lose their value as knowledge, and all life on earth, from insects to plants, from farmers to fishermen, and from insurance companies to industrial giants, is forced to evolve and accommodate to new circumstances.

At the same time, the increasingly urban nature of our lives, with climate control and accessibility to global goods and services, effectively insulates us from change. Living within modernity’s capacity and mechanics of control, it is easy to forget (and even deny) the abundant evidence of change outside. The artists’ works included in Weather Amnesia offer visual insight into the profound disruptions that are underway. With strangeness becoming the new normal, the exhibition makes us wonder and think about what kind of future awaits us.

Presented in conjunction with the Jackman Humanities Institute’s 2019-2020 research theme Strange Weather.

This exhibition runs until June 26, 2020.

Our Supporters

Canada Council for the Arts
Ontario Arts Council
Jackman Humanities Institute

We gratefully acknowledge the operating support from the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council, with additional project support from the Jackman Humanities Institute, Structure Fusion Inc. and StructureCraft.

Event Metadata

Event Ended

  • Event Website: Official Website
  • Date: Wed, Sep 18, 2019
  • Time & Duration: 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm (EST) (2h)
  • Cost:
    • General Admission

      FREE

  • Venue:
    Jackman Humanities Institute
    170 St. George Street,
    Tenth Floor,
    Toronto, ON M5R 2M8
    View Map