Isabelle Parson, Élan vital, 2024. Courtesy of the artist.Together in Quiet Light features the multidisciplinary work of Holly Chang, Isabelle Parson, Chiedza Pasipanodya, and Alexandre Pépin. Responding to the subtle interconnections of the natural world, these works move beyond surface representation in search of new pathways for knowing oneself and others.
In her ongoing project documenting abandoned greenhouses, Quebec-based artist Isabelle Parson guides her camera lens through light-filled environments that appear suspended in time. Here, plants and tiny creatures are transfixed somewhere between inert and alive, while cloudy sheets of plastic obscure our view and add to the eerie sense of stillness. In this space, calm and protective though imbued with a sense of death and dirt, the artist is afforded moments of introspection to ruminate on life experiences and the fragility of existence.
Toronto/Tkaronto-based artist Holly Chang also turns to the camera to document her entanglements with nature, as a response to grief. Chang worked over the span of two months in two locations: Quirpon Island, Newfoundland and Banff, Alberta in 2022. The locations of this project—reaching eastward and westward—perform an allegory for her Chinese-Jamaican upbringing, impacted in recent years by personal loss and strained family relationships. The artist embeds photographs of her nature hikes into ceramic vessels that double as shadow boxes, revealing what might otherwise be hidden from plain sight. In making her private pain visible and accessing nature to imagine alternate ways of living, Chang takes steps to forge a new identity based on her own terms.
Like Chang, Chiedza Pasipanodya also works with ceramics to connect to a place and its people. Mauuyu is an ongoing series of raku-fired hybrid Baobab fruit sculptures. The baobab tree, found in her home country of Zimbabwe, is monumental in size (spanning up to forty feet in width) and can live for over 2,000 years. The fruits of this tree can be preserved for years and are rich in antioxidants, nutrients, and other medicinal properties. In Mauuyu, Pasipanodya reflects on how a sculpture can perform like a print or photograph, capturing indexical traces. These clay fruits are sculpted by memory and raku-fired with organic materials including rose petals, buchu tea, plantain chips, and sawdust, which leave indelible marks on the ceramic surface. Suspended in a state of offering, the juxtaposition of organic clay with an industrial metal vessel creates an affective resonance, mirroring the fragility and endurance embedded in these talismans. Like the baobab fruit—both a source of nourishment and a symbol of endurance—Mauuyu gestures toward the possibility of having one’s needs met, even across great distances.
The need for human connection and intimacy is foregrounded in the work of Austin-based French-Canadian artist Alexandre Pépin. In the painting Together in Quiet Light (2025), two figures emerge through a dense background brimming with natural elements and celestial bodies. Immersed in a symphony of rich symbolism that the artist has borrowed from his ongoing research in mysticism, queer modernism, and Byzantine painting, the figures seem to exist beyond time. Wrapped in their loving embrace, they communicate a profound sense of interconnection: with nature, with one another, with the divine.
Presented by Zalucky Contemporary in partnership with CONTACT