Vancouver Art Gallery launches major exhibition addressing climate change through contemporary art
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Vancouver Art Gallery launches major exhibition addressing climate change through contemporary art
Installation view of Teresita Fernández, Island Universe 2, 2023, charcoal, Collection of the Vancouver Art Gallery, Acquisition Fund, VAG 2024.3.1 a-zz, Photo: Dan Bradica, Courtesy Lehmann Maupin, New York, Seoul and London.



VANCOUVER, BC.- The Vancouver Art Gallery presents Future Geographies: Art in the Century of Climate Change, the first major exhibition in Canada to examine the intersection of contemporary art and future climates on a global scale. Bringing together more than 30 artists and over 35 works—from immersive video installations to living sculptures—the exhibition underscores the urgency and relevance of sustainability and the environment as defining issues of our time. The exhibition opens on May 14, 2026 and runs until January 10, 2027.

“Future Geographies asks: How do we face ecological change with anything other than despair? Artists are not scientists, nor are they journalists, but they have a role to play in asking questions about our future on this planet. In this century shaped by climate change, that act of imagining is both a necessity and a form of resistance.” - Eva Respini, Interim Co-CEO & Curator at Large at the Vancouver Art Gallery

Organized into four thematic sections, Future Geographies brings into dialogue artists from around the world whose work engages with sustainability, activism and care. The exhibition opens with the thematic chapter titled Living Knowledge, where visitors are welcomed by Teresita Fernández’s Island Universe 2 (2023)—a monumental charcoal installation evoking the Earth’s geological past, when the continents formed a single supercontinent—presented in Canada for the first time. In this section, works by Andrea Bowers draw on the long history of environmental activism in Northern California, while Gabrielle L’Hirondelle Hill presents a delicate flag composed entirely of tobacco leaves. Visitors also encounter Firelei Báez’s Unbound (one way ashore, a thousand channels)—from her ongoing series of Map paintings—and Carolina Caycedo’s delicate hanging sculptures, fashioned from fishing nets gathered from communities whose waterways have disappeared due to damming projects in Central America.

Consumed Earth examines artistic responses to histories of extraction and the threat of extinction. John Akomfrah’s widely acclaimed Vertigo Sea (2015)—an epic three-channel video installation that montages archival and new footage into a meditation on humanity’s interdependence with the ocean—makes its Vancouver debut. Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun Lets'lo:tseltun’s vivid depiction of British Columbia wildfires stands as a history painting for our time, while Act III of LaToya Ruby Frazier’s Flint Is Family In Three Acts (2022) documents the crisis of contaminated drinking water in Flint, Michigan with portraits and stories of those activists who advocated for clean water. Visitors also see Edward Burtynsky’s aerial photographs of ocean oil spills, confronting the impact of human activity on the planet, and Judy Chicago’s series The End: A Meditation on Death and Extinction, which tackles human mortality.

Speculative Worlds introduces artists who have made fantastical works about imagined futures that incorporate notions of science fiction, including Josh Kline, whose video installations project a not-too-distant future changed by rising tides. Figurative sculptures by Huma Bhabha, Cannupa Hanska Luger and Rose B. Simpson imagine a post-human future, while Abbas Akhavan’s sculpture of natural elements presented against a green screen suggests a future in which nature is encountered primarily through mediated experience.

The exhibition concludes with Material Memory, centred on artworks fashioned from recycled and found materials, and those that focus on ideas of healing and recuperation. Brian Jungen’s Cetology (2002)—an 8.5-metre-long whale skeleton constructed from white plastic patio chairs—critiques environmental destruction, consumer waste and the institutional conventions of natural history museums. Visitors are invited to contemplate Jean Shin’s Huddled Masses (2020), composed entirely of obsolete cell phones and electronics, which exposes tensions between nature and technology. Also featured is YOU LIBERATE MY ANGER MY DESIRE MY LOVE (2026), a sculpture by Jeffrey Gibson created for the exhibition, marking the artist’s first presentation in Vancouver. The exhibition takes its title from Future Geography: Cosmic Cliffs (2023) by Brazilian artist Clarissa Tossin. In the work, NASA images of distant star clusters and planets are woven together with discarded Amazon delivery boxes—an everyday emblem of global consumption and environmental impact.

Future Geographies extends to the Gallery’s fourth floor with SANCTUARY: The Ancient Forest Experience (2021), an immersive installation by artist, ethnobotanist, educator and activist Dr. T’uy’t’tanat Cease Wyss, in collaboration with filmmakers Damien Gillis and Olivier Leroux. Presented within a geodesic dome, the 360° projection transports visitors into two ancient forest ecosystems in British Columbia: the Inland Temperate Rainforest in the Kootenay region and Stal’Kaya (Dakota Bear Ancient Forest) on the Sunshine Coast, in the unceded territory of the Skwxwú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation). Guided by Wyss’s narration and a rich soundscape of birdsong, streams and waterfalls, the work foregrounds the ecological and cultural significance of these environments, including the presence of culturally modified trees that reflect long-standing Indigenous stewardship. By juxtaposing these intact forests—some of which have existed since the last Ice Age—with nearby clear-cuts and managed tree plantations, SANCTUARY highlights both the beauty and vulnerability of old-growth environments, underscoring what is at stake in their protection. The presentation of SANCTUARY is accompanied by a presentation of Cedar baskets and garments by Indigenous weavers and selected by Cease Wyss. This display highlights Cedar’s sacred role at the heart of Indigenous communities, underscoring its enduring cultural, spiritual and practical significance.

In conjunction with the exhibition, the Vancouver Art Gallery is partnering with the University of British Columbia Climate Action Lab to develop new platforms for dialogue and public engagement. The collaboration brings together more than 40 undergraduate students from across disciplines, led by Eva Respini and Dr. Sara Harris, Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences. Student-produced videos, presented throughout the exhibition, respond to individual artworks and themes, providing scientific context and expanding on the environmental issues explored in each section.

Future Geographies: Art in the Century of Climate Change adopts a sustainable approach to exhibition-making, aligning its production methods with the urgency of its subject matter. Environmentally conscious practices include reusing existing gallery walls and plinths, replacing traditional vinyl wall texts with recycled alternatives and donating materials at the end of the exhibition to city organizations. The Gallery has also focused on including works by local artists and artists in the collection, implemented paperless ticketing, minimized exhibition-related travel and avoided air transport of artworks as part of its commitment to reducing environmental impact.










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