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geetha thurairajah: Migration is more momentous than ancient invasions

  • painting of a leopard jumping up at a red moon. Dark grey clouds and a dead tree are in the background
29 March 2019 to 16 June 2019

Artist Talk and Opening Reception: Friday 29 March, 7:00 pm

For Waterloo-born, Brooklyn based artist geetha thurairajah, form is a slippery precursor to meaning.  Her paintings begin as digital renderings, often composed of a surreal mix of symbols and visual quotations. Figures appear as fragments and shadows that refuse to stay confined to traditional compositional boundaries. thurairajah conjures the image of the trickster, a shapeshifting rebel who can be found in fables and origin narratives from cultures all over the world.  By entangling concepts of the familiar and the foreign, thurairajah encourages us to see the symbolic potential inherent in images: regardless of where they are sourced and by whom they are seen. 

This spring we welcome geetha thurairajah to KWAG as our Artist in Residence. During her stay in March 2019, thurairajah will develop a new site-responsive installation in our Eastman Gallery and participate in various programming initiatives designed to engage local youth in digital and painterly forms of experimental representation.

Currently based in Brooklyn, New York, geetha thurairajah earned a BA from Wilfrid Laurier University (2010) and a BFA from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (2014). She was a finalist in the RBC Canadian Painting Competition in 2016 and 2018 and received an Honourable Mention in 2018. Her work has been exhibited internationally, and has been included in recent group exhibitions at The Power Plant (Toronto) and Oakville Galleries. 

Youth workshops presented during geetha thurairajah’s residency are supported by the Youth in Recreation Fund – Ontario Endowment for Children and Youth in Recreation Fund and the Keith and Winifred Shantz Fund for the Arts held at the Kitchener Waterloo Community Foundation.


geetha thurairajah, Bloody moon, 2018, acrylic and oil, 48 x 42 inches. Courtesy of the artist. © geetha thurairajah.