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Other Territories

NICHOLAS METIVIER GALLERY
December 13th, 2025 - January 17th, 2026

Emmanuel Osahor - An Abundance, 2024
Emmanuel Osahor, An Abundance, 2024
Avec l’autorisation de / Courtesy of Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto
Michaëlle Sergile, OMBRE PORTRAIT #5 2023
Michaëlle Sergile, Ombre portrait #5, 2023
Collection privée Jad & Roula Shimaly, Toronto / Jad & Roula Shimaly private collection, Toronto
Moridja Kitenge Banza - Chiromancie 12, Goma 6
Moridja Kitenge Banza, Chiromancie #12 - Goma n°6, 2021
Avec l’autorisation de la Galerie Hugues Charbonneau, Montréal / Courtesy of Galerie Hugues Charbonneau, Montreal
3- Plage du Souffleur -MJ Gustave - crédit Mike-Patten
Marie-José Gustave, Plage du Souffleur - Photo © Mike Patten
Salihou_ImpressionD'étéToronto3_2024_watercolouronpaper_30x22in
Moses Salihou, Impression d'été, Toronto 3, 2024
Avec l’autorisation de / Courtesy of Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto

The Canadian Cultural Centre is proud to announce the second iteration of the exhibition “Other Territories,” presented from December 13, 2025, to January 17, 2026, at the Nicholas Metivier Gallery in Toronto, in collaboration with BAND Gallery, Galerie Hugues Charbonneau in Montreal, and the Canadian Cultural Centre in Paris. The exhibition Other Territories was previously presented at the Canadian Cultural Centre from June 2025 to September 2025.

Other Territories brings together five artists of African (Congo, Cameroon, Nigeria) and Caribbean origin (Haiti, Guadeloupe), working in an approach that is both rooted in a sense of belonging to a community, yet liberated from the injunctions of representativeness and fixed representations. Based in Montreal and Toronto, some of them having lived in France before immigrating to Canada, these artists include Marie-José GustaveMoridja Kitenge BanzaEmmanuel OsahorMoses Salihou and Michaëlle Sergile.

Interlacing, cut-outs and repeated gestures make up works that turn towards various forms of opacity, with the artists clearly seeking to abstract themselves from a weight (that of the direct or deferred impacts of colonialism, displacement, integration, the daily complexity of cultural issues) by immersing themselves in the joy and discipline of a practice that is at once material, ritualistic, political and poetic, in touch with the present but in dialogue with a revisited universal history of the arts.

With its assertive use of black and colour, and its hijacking of the perceptions associated with them, the exhibition responds to the challenge launched by the BAND Gallery (Black Artists Networks in Dialogue) by opening up a dialogue between artists from different horizons who meet through their art, and by placing this dialogue at the heart of a space opening up other dialogues: with other African communities on French and European soil; with France, but from a French-speaking point of view transformed by the Canadian experience; with a diverse public coming to discover artists who reinforce each other in an unprecedented and astonishing alliance where notions of protection, reparation and proximity emerge through the artistic practices themselves.

Curated by Catherine Bédard, Curator and Director of Programming at the Canadian Cultural Centre in Paris, and Joséphine Denis, Director of Curatorial Initiatives at BAND in Toronto.

More information : Metivier Gallery

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NICHOLAS METIVIER GALLERY
190 Richmond Street East, Toronto

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