Press

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

Noticed: A Summer of Gallery Love for Alex McLeod

Image: Alex McLeod, Banked Tallship, 2009

Artist Alex McLeod was recently featured on “Unedit My Heart”, the blog of Toronto Art Writer and Critic, Leah Sandals.

Sandals writes:

I first saw McLeod’s work in a solo at Switch Contemporary earlier in June, and now it turns out the the guy has a two-person show opening at Queen West dealer Angell Gallery this Saturday, as well as a hand in an emerging-artist group show at Lonsdale Gallery opening next Wednesday.

So what is it, many young artists may be wondering, that makes McLeod’s work “so different, so appealing”? (Or, in the very least, much exhibited.)

For the rest of the story visit:
http://neditpasmoncoeur.blogspot.com/2009/08/noticed-summer-of-gallery-love-for-alex.html

Saturday, June 27th, 2009

Artist Alex McLeod Featured in NOW Magazine

Image of Alex in his studio courtesy of NOW Magazine online

NOW Magazine contributor, Sara Titanic, recently conducted an interview with digital artist, Alex McLeod, as part of the series: Meeting the City’s Artist One at a Time. The interview discusses Alex’s motivations, studio practice, as well as his up coming exhibitions with Lonsdale Gallery.

To see the full interview, please see the following link:
http://www.nowtoronto.com/daily/story.cfm?content=170153

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Review of Responsive Space by Terence Dick

http://www.akimbo.biz/akimblog/?id=278

Image: Stanzie Tooth, Floating, 2008, acrylic and oil on canvas

Saturday, November 15th, 2008

Parkdale liberty article for Love/Nomads

Street youth show art at Gallery 1313
By: Erin Hatfield

Art is the only thing that brings David Michael Rendall fulfillment.

The 22 year old says painting helps him grow and express himself, but at the same time it can be his downfall.

“Art is kind of the only thing I have ever been really good at,” he told the Villager in an interview.

In pursuit of his passion for painting, Rendall found himself broke and living off soup kitchens.

“It is really hard to focus on your creative expression if that is what you are doing to survive,” he said.

He has been living at Eva’s Phoenix for about two months. It’s a place that offers transitional housing for street youths. But along with giving him a warm place to rest his head at night, it’s awarded him an opportunity to showcase his work at Gallery 1313 on Queen Street West, as part of the 6th Annual Juried Love Exhibition: Mask.
Read more…

Sunday, November 2nd, 2008

Love Show article in the Toronto Star

Parkdale art show empowers street youths

By: Francine Kopun

David Michael Rendall keeps monsters under his bed

Saturday, September 20th, 2008

First Annual Park(ing) Day

Friday, September 19th, 2008 marked the first annual Park(ing) Day, sponsored and organized by Lonsdale Gallery. Though enjoyed by the neighbourhood, there was some controversy when an angry passer-by called the authorities.

The story of Park(ing) Day was captured by Toronto Star feature writer, Francie Kopun, in today’s Saturday Star. Please see below for our response and for pictures from the event.

Read more…

Friday, August 29th, 2008

Eye Weekly Review: “Hidden Secrets” by David Balzer

Those who admire Soulpepper’s impeccable taste in illustrators — and who, in general, lament the lost art of the graphically engaging playbill and poster — will want to check out Lonsdale Gallery’s latest exhibition by Edel Rodriguez, who did terrific work for the theatre company’s 2008 season. Rodriguez is not from Toronto (a disappointment, given his style’s affinity with that of many local, lower-profile illustrators) but was born in Havana and currently resides in New Jersey. His birthplace is present in an array of works hanging in the gallery’s second level, next to mock-ups of the Soulpepper posters. (The polished versions are on the first floor.)

The Havana works testify, as do the posters, to Rodriguez’s love of mid-20th-century American commercial illustration — all dynamic, jazzy lines and bright colours. The Chevy- and Ché-heavy scenes suggest picture-postcard views of the city (many of these pieces were part of a 2006 TIME feature), but are nonetheless infectiously jubilant. Most are on scraps of paper and displayed unframed, salon-style, as if ripped from Rodriguez’s sketchbook. He applies pastel and ink casually, smudging them to convey the motions of bodies dancing or whizzing by on motorbikes. In fact, the series is largely about couples — their inherent poetry, their subtle behavioural rifts, their celebrations.

See original article at Eye Weekly

Friday, April 11th, 2008

”NOW” Review (April 10-16 publication)

Weird kids

Sunday, November 20th, 2005

LUST Write-up in Eye Weekly

By David Balzer

Lonsdale Gallery put on a terrific show at TAAFI a couple of weeks ago; colourful, and in some cases noisy, art lined their tiny room at the Gladstone from stem to stern. Their new group outing, “LUST

Saturday, October 16th, 2004

Beauty in Black and White

By Michael Dault, The Globe and Mail

Sheila Gregory’s new exhibition of nine black and white paintings, now at Toronto’s Lonsdale Gallery, is called Landscape Burlesque, probably because of the joyous fervour with which the Toronto-based painter wielded her brush to make these big convulsive pictures. If there are landscape references here, you could argue that such references turn up in the suggestion, within the paintings, of stems and pods, leaves and flowers, even the whorls of insects in flight (as in Landscape Burlesque; Garden Bees), they are textural. And the “burlesque” part? Well, the burlesque part lives in the slam-bang exuberance of the whole enterprise.

Read more…