Conversation + Publication Launch: Alejandro A. Barbosa With Elliott Ramsey

Join us on Thursday, July 31 for a discussion of Alejandro A. Barbosa’s monumental new installation I Got Us the Moon, featuring the artist in conversation with Curator Elliott Ramsey. At the talk, The Polygon Gallery is pleased to be launching a new, limited-edition artist publication by Barbosa, on the occasion of his exhibition.

Doors at 7:00
Conversation at 7:30

Followed by a Deckchair Cinema screening of The Fifth Element.

Admission is by a suggested donation of $10-$20, courtesy of BMO Financial Group

RSVPs are helpful

Alejandro A. Barbosa: I Got Us the Moon is on view until September 28

About the exhibition
I Got Us the Moon presents a monumental new work by Vancouver-based Argentinian artist Alejandro A. Barbosa, consisting of 280 individual prints tiled together to form an atlas of the moon. The image is drawn from the “CGI Moon Kit”, a publicly available digital asset for non-scientific purposes, created from data assembled by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter camera and NASA’s laser altimeter instrument teams. Combining his extensive research with this specific, aesthetic representation of the moon, Barbosa steps into the role of amateur astronomer – astronomy being notable as one of the only scientific fields to which hobbyists make meaningful contributions.

Motivated by the current potential of a new space race, with the moon viewed as an asset to colonise or mine for resources, Barbosa engages with histories of naming-as-claiming, while disrupting the exclusive naming rights of the International Astronomical Union. These rights were granted in 1982 by the United Nations as a way to standardise a proliferation of systems by which lunar features had, until then, been named. Barbosa references these prior histories, here renaming lunar geographical features after a wide range of figures: some unknown, others infamous, and many significant to queer and feminist histories. In doing so, Barbosa posits the Earth’s satellite not as a commodity or frontier, but rather as a parallel world: one that becomes a site of collective fantasies, alternate timelines, and queer world-building.

Kids First

Join us for art-making, fun, and sun on first Saturday and Sunday of the month. In the summer (June – September) Kids First is taking place outside, and…

International Curators Forum Public Conversation

The Polygon Gallery is honoured to present a conversation with four visionary curators as part its inaugural International Curators Forum (ICF). Invited to…

Anna Binta Diallo: Predictions Opening Celebration

Join us on Thursday, July 10 for the Anna Binta Diallo: Predictions Opening Celebration
Reception starts at 7:30pm
Remarks at 8:00pm
Followed by a Deckchair…

Deckchair Cinema: Universal Language

Not sci-fi, but we’re making an exception for the most acclaimed Canadian film in recent memory. Universal Language takes place in a mysterious and…

Deckchair Cinema: Gravity

White-knuckle entertainment of the highest order! Directed by Alfonso Cuarón, and starring Oscar winners Sandra Bullock and George Clooney, this…

Deckchair Cinema: Spaceballs

The evil leaders of Planet Spaceball, having foolishly squandered their precious atmosphere, devise a secret plan to take every breath of air away from…

Deckchair Cinema: The Fifth Element

New York cab driver Korben Dallas didn’t mean to be a hero, but he just picked up the kind of fare that only comes along every five thousand years: A…

Deckchair Cinema: Flash Gordon

Super producer Dino De Laurentiis brought Alex Raymond’s beloved cartoon strip and the long running movie serial to the big screen for a delirious…

Deckchair Cinema: Star Trek 2 The Wrath Of Khan

The most celebrated and essential adventure from the Star Trek universe. On a routine training mission, Admiral James T. Kirk seems resigned that this may…

Deckchair Cinema: Starman

The most underrated entry in John Carpenter’s oeuvre. After his spacecraft is shot down over Wisconsin, an alien (Jeff Bridges) arrives at the remote…

Deckchair Cinema: David Lynch's Dune

Following a notorious failed attempt by Alejandro Jodorowsky in the 1970s, Frank Herbert’s bestselling sci-fi epic Dune finally made it to the big…