The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery Announces Lead Exhibitions for 2023
New works by artists Abdelkader Benchamma, Amartey Golding, Brenda Draney, Jen Aitken, and Ron Terada make their debut at Canada’s leading public gallery devoted to contemporary art

Abddelkader Benchamma, Art Brussels, Belgium, courtesy of the artist and Templon, Paris — Brussels — New York, photo: © Isabelle Arthuis.
The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, Toronto, has announced the five lead exhibitions for its 2023 program. Beginning February 3, 2023, the gallery will showcase new commissions and work by celebrated and emerging artists who are shaping cultural conversations in Canada and abroad. The 2023 program includes exhibitions of Adbdelkader Benchamma (born in Mazamet; based in Paris and Montpellier), Amartey Golding (born in London; based in Norwich), Brenda Draney (born in Sawridge First Nation, Treaty 8; based in Edmonton), Jen Aitken (born in Edmonton; based in Toronto), and Ron Terada (born and based in Vancouver). Further details will be announced on our website in the coming months.
2022–23 marks The Power Plant’s 35th anniversary. In celebration of this milestone, the gallery will present in parallel, a two-part presentation of twelve Ontario-based artists that evokes The Power Plant’s inaugural exhibition in 1987 — Toronto: A Play of History (Jeu d’histoire). Both presentations will highlight the tensions, hopes, and the transformative spaces artists create in the unfolding aftermath of settler colonialism. The first iteration runs February 3 – May 13, 2022, followed by a second June – September 2023.

Brenda Draney, Visit, 2021, oil on canvas.
Winter 2023
Brenda Draney (b. 1976, Sawridge First Nation, Treaty 8; based in Edmonton, Canada)
Drink from the river
February 3 – May 14, 2023
Painter Brenda Draney’s largest institutional exhibition to date, Drink from the river, features nearly 40 works by Draney, including five previously unexhibited paintings that examine the complex nature of intimacy. The presentation will be accompanied by a publication co-produced by Arts Club of Chicago.
Amartey Golding (b. 1988, London, UK; based in Norwich, UK)
February 3 – May 14, 2023
Amartey Golding’s first solo exhibition in Canada features three films, including the debut of Chainmail 3 (2018) from the artist’s Chainmail film series and Bring me to Heal 1 and 2 (2021). Screenings are accompanied by two installations of garments featured in the films, as well as photographs that further explore their imagery and narratives.
in parallel
February 3 – May 14, 2023
in parallel brings together six artists from Tkaronto to explore how visual documentation and cultural practices can reclaim narratives of their respective communities despite colonialism’s persistence, featuring work by Rouzbeh Akhbari, Joi T. Arcand, Aylan Couchie, Simon Fuh, Anique Jordan, and Julia Rose Sutherland.
The second iteration of the project, centred on language-based forms of resistance, will be presented as part of The Power Plant’s Summer 2023 program and feature work by Ella Gonzales, Sami Tsang, Erdem Taşdelen, Shaheer Zazai, Micah Lexier, and Matt Nish-Lapidus.

Jen Aitken, Caelif, 2019, fiber-reinforced concrete. Courtesy the artist, Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto, and Trépanier Baer, Calgary.
Summer 2023
Jen Aitken (b. 1985, Edmonton, Canada; based in Toronto, Canada)
June – September 2023
Jen Aitken’s solo exhibition at The Power Plant—the artist’s first major institutional presentation—features both new commissions and a selection of concrete sculptures from the past several years. The exhibition also debuts her first video installation, animating the geometric shapes of her sculptures into an immersive prelude to the exhibition.

Ron Terada, TL; DR 1, 2017–2018, acrylic on canvas, 26 paintings, courtesy Catriona Jeffries, Vancouver, photo: Site Photography.
Ron Terada (b. 1969, Vancouver, Canada; based in Vancouver, Canada)
June – September 2023
Ron Terada’s exhibition at The Power Plant is comprised of paintings from TL; DR, his most recent series of work, produced in five parts since 2017. Terada has been producing series of found text paintings since 1993. Their sources include commercial gallery ads, high school yearbook quotes, Jeopardy clues, the subject index from a book about art world finance, and the full text of an artist’s memoir.
Fall 2023
Abdelkader Benchamma (b. 1975, Mazamet, France; based in Paris and Montpellier)
October 2023 – January 2024
In his first major solo presentation in Canada, and most comprehensive to date in North America, Abdelkader Benchamma presents drawings on canvas and on paper, as well as a site-specific work as part of The Power Plant’s Fleck Clerestory Commission Program.
About The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery
The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery is Canada’s leading public gallery devoted exclusively to contemporary visual art. It is a vital forum for the advanced artistic culture of our time and offers an exceptional facility and professional support to diverse living artists, while also engaging equally diverse audiences. The Power Plant pursues its activities through exhibitions, publications, and public programming that incorporate other areas of culture when they intersect with visual art. For more information, please visit thepowerplant.org.
Admission to The Power Plant and its programs is ALL YEAR, ALL FREE, presented by BMO Bank of Montreal Financial Group.
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Press Contact
Rebecca Moss, Communications & Marketing Coordinator, The Power Plant: rmoss@thepowerplant.org
Beverly Cheng, Head of Marketing & Communications, The Power Plant: bcheng@thepowerplant.org
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The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery
231 Queen’s Quay West, Toronto, Ontario M5J 2G8
The venue is accessible, includes automatic doors at entrance and accessible parking nearby. Plan your visit



