Ilya & Emilia Kabakov: Between Heaven and Earth & The Ship of Tolerance
Summer 2025 Program at Oakville Galleries
Oakville Galleries presents the exhibition Between Heaven and Earth and the project The Ship of Tolerance, by Ilya & Emilia Kabakov. The grand opening on Saturday, May 31 will feature a concert by young performers, presented in Gairloch Gardens. The curator of the exhibition, The Ship of Tolerance and related programming is Séamus Kealy, Executive Director of Oakville Galleries.

Ilya & Emilia Kabakov, The Ship of Tolerance in Kunsthaus Zug, 2016. Courtesy of the artists. Photo: Daniel Hegglin.
Ilya & Emilia Kabakov: Between Heaven and Earth & The Ship of Tolerance
May 31 – September 20, 2025
Oakville Galleries in Gairloch Gardens and at Centennial Square
Opening Reception
Saturday, May 31, 2 – 7pm
Centennial Square
Exhibition Opening: 2 – 5pm
Gairloch Gardens
Exhibition Opening: 2 – 7pm
Opening Remarks: 4pm
Children’s Concert and Performances: 5pm
Emilia Kabakov will be in attendance.
The exhibition Between Heaven and Earth is presented at both our Gairloch Gardens and Centennial Square locations. This exhibition highlights a number of the artists’ works, including paintings, prints and installations, and spills out into the gardens with several larger artworks. The largest installation is The Ship of Tolerance, a 60-foot long, hand-crafted wooden ship with sails made from children’s paintings, presented lakeside in Gairloch Gardens for one year. Now, marking its 20th anniversary, its first appearance in Canada takes place at a critical time where a crossroads towards a new global order is visible.
Séamus Kealy states, “To engage the Kabakovs’ work in such a project presents a momentous occasion, poignant especially in this time of global political discord and uncertainty. The future needs to be built on innovative ideas that embody tolerance, good will and respect, not their dark opposites as embraced by incapable leaders. Collectively we are invited to enable opportunities that compel us to envision our future together with hope, resilience, imaginative foresight and a global conscience. The art work of Ilya and Emilia Kabakov has long endeavoured to do just that. We welcome all people who journey over to Oakville to experience this marvelous and inspiring event.”
In Oakville, over 2,000 children from local schools and diverse community groups have played a part in creating this project to date. These young participants converse together about inclusivity, different cultures, respect and creative ideas of the future. They create paintings that express their visions of tolerance and how that influences robust notions of humanitarianism in society. A selection of their resulting paintings are sewn together to create the ship’s sail, while the remaining paintings are displayed in Oakville locations.
The Ship of Tolerance is being built from May 12 to May 30 in Gairloch Gardens and may be visited and photographed during its construction.
Altogether this set of exhibitions, programs and installations is the most ambitious project by Oakville Galleries to date. The Ship of Tolerance is presented in collaboration with the Ilya and Emilia Kabakov Foundation, as well as with The National Gallery of Canada. The National Gallery of Canada’s National Engagement initiative is generously supported by Michael Nesbitt, with additional funding from the National Gallery of Canada Foundation.
About the Artists:
Ilya (1933–2023) and Emilia (b.1945) Kabakov are globally recognized as the premier artists to emerge from the former Soviet Union and remain major figures on the international art scene. Working between painting, sculpture, prints, installations and total installations, the Kabakovs long collaborated on producing environments that fuse the everyday with conceptual and visionary elements. While their work is deeply rooted in the Soviet social and cultural context in which the Kabakovs came of age, their work still holds a deeply universal significance. Their work is represented in public and private collections globally and has been seen in major museums and biennales across the world. ARTnews named them among the world’s top 10 living artists.

Sunset Kino Returns in 2025
June 26 – July 17, 2025
Gairloch Gardens
Presented adjacent to The Ship of Tolerance, this year’s Sunset Kino festival runs from June 26 to July 17. Founded by Séamus Kealy in 2017 in Salzburg, Austria, Sunset Kino is now Canada’s only outdoor, avant-garde cinema. This year’s theme is WHAT WAS THAT and will include films or programs by Ilya & Emilia Kabakov, Renèe Helèna Browne, Rabih Mroué, and Ala Roushan.
Program:
Flies and Angels by Niels-Christian Bolbrinker & Dr. Kerstin Stutterheim
Thursday, June 26, 8:30pm
Films by Maryam Samadi, Rouzbeh Akhbari, Shadi Harouni, and Khashayar Javanmardi
Programmed by Ala Roushan
Thursday, July 3, 8:30pm
Films by Rabih Mroué
Thursday, July 10, 8:30pm
Films by Renèe Helèna Browne
Thursday, July 17, 8:30pm
A series of immersive projections by Faisal Anwar proceeds each screening.
Unless otherwise noted, all programming is by Séamus Kealy.

Oakville Galleries is a contemporary art museum presenting international and Canadian artists. Housed in a unique lakeside mansion and park as well as a white cube gallery downtown, Oakville Galleries is one of Canada’s leading contemporary art institutions. The Executive Director is Séamus Kealy. Supported by The Town of Oakville, Canada Council, Ontario Arts Council, sponsors, patrons and members.
Oakville Galleries in Gairloch Gardens
1306 Lakeshore Road East
Oakville, ON L6J 1L6
Oakville Galleries at Centennial Square
120 Navy Street
Oakville, ON L6J 2Z4
For more information:
oakvillegalleries.com
905.844.4402
info@oakvillegalleries.com



