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Locality: Mississauga, Ontario

Phone: +1 905-822-5495



Address: 1697 Lakeshore Road West L5J 1J4 Mississauga, ON, Canada

Website: harbourgallery.com

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Harbour Gallery 11.11.2020

Happy Mother’s Day to all the mom’s out there! We are grateful for all that you do for us! When you look at your mother, you are looking at the purest love you will ever know. Mitch Albom

Harbour Gallery 25.10.2020

#wildhorses could not drag us away from the #virtualartexhibition of Pierre Pivet’s #soloexhibit Life in Harmony- launching Saturday, April 25. Presales happening now! Request catalogue and exhibition painting details at [email protected] or call 647 267 5366. Chevaux en Camargue, Oil on canvas 40" x 60"

Harbour Gallery 19.10.2020

Check out a new series launch by Brian M. Atyeo. This Series, Mosaic of Places, is my response to the Objects, Places and Everyday Events that become so easily overlooked. It is a push back, at the speed of life, that would have me see what sustains me, as Common. What you might notice in this series is a sense of portraying community and its importance in all things. The constant asymmetrical play in the paintings speak to the difficulty in achieving and maintaining a functional place for all of us as we take our place in the evolving compositions of life. More to come.

Harbour Gallery 30.09.2020

For this special exhibition, two years in the making, Jean Claude has selected a collection of paintings of France, and Newfoundland and Labrador that reflect his ongoing relationship with the people, communities and landscape of both places. We are excited to introduce Jean Claude’s latest publication from Breakwater Books, Terra Magna, A collection of paintings of Labrador, a companion volume to Fluctuat Nec Mergitur which featured paintings of every community on the islan...d of Newfoundland. Painting in Labrador presented many new challenges; there are relatively few settled communities, but there is a vast network of seasonal, migratory and abandoned communities. Jean Claude often began painting a landscape that appeared empty of people, but in which he felt the presence of those people, both indigenous and European, who moved from place to place, following the changing seasons and the migration of the wildlife on which they depended for food, clothing and shelter. Getting from place to place in Labrador was another challenge, which eventually involved coastal boats, float planes and the kind assistance of Parks Canada in bringing him to Torngat Mountains National Park at the northern tip of Labrador. Jean Claude Roy takes us on a journey with him, to share in his connection to the people and places he paints. There is a reassuring continuity to his storytelling as he chronicles the beautiful moments of everyday life on two continents.