Event Dates
Time
3:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Andrew Latreille, Woven Knowledge / Crossover K71030-0165, 2023, archival pigment print, 116.84 × 154.94 cm. Courtesy of the Artist.
Andrew Latreille, Aquarelle 12.2 / Crossover ZF009-22-166, 2024, archival pigment print on cotton textured rag, 30.48 x 60.96 cm. Courtesy of the Artist.
Andrew Latreille, Aquarelle 15.3 / Crossover ZF009-22-211, 2024, archival pigment print on cotton textured rag, 30.48 x 60.96 cm. Courtesy of the Artist.
3:00 pm – 5:00 pm
ADMISSION
Free
No registration required.
Join us at Vancouver Special on Saturday, April 25, for a public talk with artist Andrew Latreille. Andrew will discuss Crossover, his progression in the series, and our relationship to the land.
In Crossover: Aquarelle, Latreille continues his pursuit of liminal space, those subtle thresholds where transformation unfolds imperceptibly, exploring the intertwined processes of destruction and regeneration.
Here, his muse is the boreal forest under reflected winter full moonlight. Through traditional in-camera techniques, the work embraces a visual language that evokes the quiet continuity of the forest’s life cycle. The stillness and heightened luminosity of the nocturnal landscape reflect on beauty beyond visible perception.
Installed alongside earlier Crossover works, Crossover: Aquarelle offers a translucent tactility reminiscent of layered watercolor, where fragility and resilience coexist in suspended light.
Exhibition will be on view April 9th 2026 – May 9th 2026, Mon – Saturday from 11 am – 6 pm and Sunday from 12 – 6 pm.
Andrew Latreille is an Australian-born, Canadian-based visual artist whose practice reveals liminal moments at the intersection of the built and natural environments.
With a background in architecture and a lifelong connection to the land; from the outback in Australia to the northern tundra of Canada, Latreille’s practice balances conceptual and emotional depth. The often long-term projects delve into our evolving relationship with place; both culturally and environmentally.
His series are atmospheric and textural, inviting viewers into perceptual shifts through subtle light, layered meaning, and the transformative power of time.