Monica Gupta

Monica Gupta is a contemporary photographer and video artist. She started taking photographs in 1994, then life happened. She started back in 2014 and has had several exhibitions and awards in Toronto. She started with digital photography and is moving into short documentary film making. Monica has been working with people experiencing homelessness for over 20 years. She uses photography and film to share stories about the people she meets daily.

Tracy Gorman

Tracy Gorman is a Toronto Textile Artist. Her canvas of choice is a dress-embellished & manipulated to address themes of self, environment and other societal issues.  
Hailing from Eastern Canada, her mother and aunt enveloped her arts and crafts. She has since refined her skills and vision through her work as a professional costumer and in fine arts studies & practice.
Tracy’s works have been seen previously in numerous Nuit Blanche Installations at Spadina Museum.
Take a look at her selected works, and get in touch for more information.

Amy Rogers

Amy Rogers makes art about people and their lives and designs accessories for people and their spaces. Intuitively mixing and matching media, she is comfortable exploring unknown combinations of materials and techniques to suit her needs. Amy's focus alternates between a conceptually-driven fine art practice and self-imposed design projects. Through her fine art practice, she addresses universal themes including the cycle of life and the roles we inhabit within that life. This work is expressed in drawings, photography, collage, and embroidery, and combinations of these.

Jode Roberts

Jode’s passion for creative expression includes nearly two decades of acrylic, oil and encaustic painting. His colourful artwork has been showcased in more than a dozen group and solo exhibitions throughout Toronto. Recently, he became one of the co-curators of Gallery 1065, a new art gallery in Toronto’s Bloorcourt neighbourhood. Inspired by the intersections of art, community, and urban life, Jode increasingly has been blending humor with thought-provoking ideas to engage people with their environments. An early example was the Walkable Planets, a community art project intended to spur curiosity about the immensity our solar system by installing a scale solar system in the city with planetary wayfinding signs.