Illustration: Jenny Chen

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION

Lingering Echoes brings into conversation personal sound-centered artworks by artists Aliyah Aziz, Ghislan Sutherland-Timm, Middle, Tanya Workman, and Winta Hagos. Collectively and individually, the artworks take up themes of resistance, collectivity, embodiment, silence, and resilience. Lingering Echoes ask where the individual ends and the collective begins within the porosity of space and temporalities. 

This exhibition is the result of “Sounding Spaces” course, part of the Train to Present program led by instructor/artist Nicole Marchesseau.

Curated by Nicole Marchesseau and Fatma Hendawy.

FEATURED ARTISTS

Aliyah Aziz is a multidisciplinary storyteller, poet and musician who uses light to talk about shadows, and sound to physically move them through us. She uses disruption as a tool of resistance, embracing glitch and static to channel the friction that exists between the surface and the depth of the technology that we engage with. Aliyah’s expressions take many forms, from multimedia moving collages of archived material, experimental sound and poetry compositions, interactive media installations, to performance art. She considers her practice to be an exploration of identity and the power that stories hold, from the history of our shadows to the projection of our futures.

Aliyah works with experimental sound techniques and audio archives such as voice loop samples on magnetic tape, as well as electromagnetic frequency statics made audible in combination with spoken word recitations. She is currently exploring live performance in 5.1 using different instruments she has built to direct the power of the “auditory glitch” as a liberating disruption in confronting naturalized instances of dehumanization of the “Other”. Aliyah finds that cultural resilience is only possible through resistance, and her work is how she does this, using sound as a material force.

Ghislan Sutherland-Timm (they/she) is a multidisciplinary craftsman, media-based researcher, and cultural worker based in Tkaronto/Toronto. Their practice braids archival materials with collage-based techniques across a diverse range of mediums, including analog, to shape autobiographical-fictional narratives centred on ambiguous beings and land formations. Sutherland-Timm volunteers at the8fest Small Gauge Film Festival and The ArQuives. They hold a BFA in Integrated Media from OCAD University and are an alum of the Independent Imaging Retreat: Film Farm (2024) and Black Women Film! Canada (2019).

Previous works of Sutherland-Timm’s has been featured at Sankofa Square (Yonge & Dundas Square) (2025), Artist Project (2024), InterAccess (2024), Xpace Cultural Centre (2024), ArtSpace Gallery (2023), Images Festival (2023), PITCH Magazine Issue 4 (2023) & Issue 2 (2021), RBC Commission Career Launcher OCAD U x RBC (2022), InsideOut 2SLGBTQ+ Toronto Film Festival (2022), Toronto Queer Film Festival (TQFF) (2022), and Nia Centre for the Arts in collaboration with McMaster Museum of Art (2021).

Middle is a multidisciplinary musician, producer, and sound artist whose practice bridges identity, mental health, and social justice. As a queer, Black artist, she expands her musical world into the realm of installation, using sound as an aura, designed to surround, hold and tell stories.

Her sonic practice blends genres, while also exploring the use of optimal tunings, meditative frequencies, and resonant textures that move beyond entertainment into embodied listening. Through field recordings, synthesized instrumentation, and live soundscapes, she builds immersive sonic environments where audiences don’t just hear, but feel and inhabit sound as space.

Her music has been featured on Prime Video’s Dating Unlocked and TVO’s The Agenda with Steve Paikin, while her remix series #MiddleMix and original works have drawn recognition from artists such as Sampa the Great and Jessie Reyez.

Beyond her own artistry, Middle is an arts educator and mentor committed to fostering spaces where BIPOC and LGBTQ+ creatives can thrive. With over a decade in community-based work, she bridges creative expression and industry knowledge, equipping emerging artists with the tools to navigate their careers with intention. Her dedication was recognized with the 2024 Community Recognition Award from MPP Chris Glover as a Youth Leader.

Tanya Louise Workman is a multidisciplinary artist and writer who works with spoken word, text, images and vibration to create tactile installations that oscillate in the space between what is heard, seen and felt. Listening in to make audible what the body holds, she arrives at her practice through a trauma-informed lens, and is most interested in holding spaces that invite intimacy, connection and embodied, felt experiences.

Tanya received her MFA from Maine Media College + Workshops in 2022. She also holds a Bachelor of Journalism from Carleton University, a post-graduate certificate in creative writing from the Humber School for Writers and a photojournalism diploma from Loyalist College.

Her work has been exhibited and screened in spaces in Toronto and internationally, including at Gallery 44, MOCA Toronto, CONTACT Gallery and the Gladstone Hotel, and with PhotoSensitive, Project Re•Vision, Magnum in Motion and Workman Arts.

As a journalist, Tanya’s writing has appeared in the Toronto Star, The Globe and Mail, TV Guide Canada and Canadian Living. Her radio doc, “What Happened to Your Face?,” about the stories we tell about difference, aired on CBC Radio’s The Doc Project.

Winta Hagos is a Toronto-based multisensory artist and sound archivist whose work explores the intersection of sound, science, and cultural memory. Centering East African sonic traditions, she uses archival recordings, sculptural sound objects, and cymatics to investigate how sound can be both form and feeling. Her practice is rooted in community engagement, upcycling, and deep listening — creating immersive experiences that connect participants to epigenetic  memory, emotional release, and spatial storytelling.

October 23 - November 30, 2025

OPENING RECEPTION

Thursday, October 23, 2025 | 5-6:30 PM
WA OFFSITE (32 Lisgar, 2nd Floor, Room 12)
No Reservations Required.

Thursdays – Sundays, 1-6 PM
Workman Arts OFFSITE
32 Lisgar St. 2nd floor, Room 12