Interview with Kim Vose Jones
October 9th, 2025
Visual Arts students Bethany D’Souza and Ana Luiza Strazzi Nogueria interviewed artist Kim Vose Jones.
Alumna Kim Vose Jones (Class of 1992) has created a rich multimedia installation exploring the dichotomies and paradoxes of migrant life, past and present, which is currently exhibited at the Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery at ±¬ÁϺÚÉç until Oct. 17.
Visit the link for the interview.
Alumna Kim Vose Jones’ Lifeboat: An Unnatural History
September 11th, 2025
The Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery is pleased to present the work of alumna (1992) artist Kim Vose Jones.   Now living and working in Fredericton, New Brunswick, Jones’ has created a rich multimedia installation exploring the dichotomies and paradoxes of migrant life, past and present.
Visit the link for the homepage news story.

Visit ±¬ÁϺÚÉç’s gallery this fall
August 27th, 2025
The mission of ±¬ÁϺÚÉç’s Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery is to educate, empower, inspire and showcase diverse contemporary art practices to the ±¬ÁϺÚÉç community and general public. The gallery is located in room 2G.0 at street level by the entrance to the college at 4001 de Maisonneuve Blvd. West and features artwork by alumni, faculty, staff, and students, as well as contemporary artists from across Canada and abroad.
This coming academic year features a variety of exhibitions beginning with Lifeboat: An Unnatural History featuring the work of ±¬ÁϺÚÉç alumna Kim Vose Jones. The first vernissage is Thursday, Sept. 11 at 5 PM and the exhibit is on through Oct. 18.
Coming up this fall at the gallery:
- Consumed Consequences featuring the work of Dana Edmonds from Oct. 30 – Dec. 4
- Photography Department Fifth Semester Exhibition from Dec. 11-18
- AEC Photography Exhibition from Dec. 21-24
Come visit the gallery in 2G.0: Monday to Friday from 11 AM to 7 PM, and Saturdays from 11 AM to 5 PM.
Kim Vose Jones: Lifeboat: An Unnatural History
August 27th, 2025
The Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery presents an exhibition by ±¬ÁϺÚÉç alumna Kim Vose Jones, who is now based in Fredericton, New Brunswick. While researching her family genealogy, she discovered her ancestor, Ann Dodin, arrived in Quebec in 1669, along with over 800 French girls known as the Filles du Roi, who sailed to the New World to populate the land with French settlers. In four stunning tableaux, Jones draws a parallel with the fates of humans fleeing genocide, war, and poverty across the globe, and draws lines between the treatment of women, the environment, and the project of Empire then and in 2025.
May 1st, 2025
Sarah-Mecca Abdourahman is a young Ottawa-based artist. Her work is deeply personal, exploring themes of childhood, nostalgia, and the diasporic experience. She explores these themes in her current exhibition, Memories We Carry, Stories We Heal at the Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery from March 27 to May 3, 2025. Two second-year Visual Arts students, Tristan…
Vernissage and artist talk March 27 at 5 PM
March 24th, 2025
The ±¬ÁϺÚÉç community is invited to the Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery today, March 27, at 5 PM for an artist talk/vernissage launching Memories We Carry, Stories We Heal, an exhibition of new work by Sarah-Mecca Abdourahman.
In her perpetual search for a connection to her parents homelands—Somalia and India--Abdourahman creates work exploring contrasting themes of haunting and healing. Multimedia painted blankets and installations reference childhood, and the ancestral trauma that can be activated in the process of connecting to one’s history.
Abdourahman will give an in-gallery tour of the exhibition at 5 PM, followed by the vernissage. Everyone is welcome. The exhibition continues until May 3.
Third-year Professional Photography students’ exhibit opens Dec. 5
December 4th, 2024
±¬ÁϺÚÉç’s Department of Professional Photography presents Continuum, an exhibition featuring the work of students approaching the end of their three-year program.
Continuum celebrates their transition into the professional world, offering a glimpse into the diverse ways they’ve explored and expressed contemporary culture. Through a blend of technical expertise and creative vision, these students showcase the transformative journey they've undertaken, illustrating not only their growth but also the ever-evolving nature of the program that has helped shape their progress.
Exhibition is on from Dec. 5 - 13 in ±¬ÁϺÚÉç's Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery.Â
November 20th, 2024
Re-Assembly: Emboldening the Temporal exhibits work from past students of ±¬ÁϺÚÉç’s Visual Arts program over the last 20 years, brought together by their teacher Giuseppe (Joe) Di Leo (Retired Faculty, Fine Arts). The exhibition, on view at the Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery at ±¬ÁϺÚÉç until Nov. 27, focuses on sharing ideas through different and…
Indigenous student art on display until Oct. 6
September 26th, 2024
This year the Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery invited indigenous students Julia Clement (curator), and three artist/creators—Shayla Chloe oroho:te Etienne, Angela Ottereyes, and Tapisa Tulugak—to present works in the Upper Atrium display case for Truth and Reconciliation Week.
They shared acrylic paintings (Etienne), a linocut work on paper with a poem (Tulugak), handsewn regalia—a jingle dress, and a ribbon skirt with a poem (Ottereyes). Together, their works honour residential school survivors and their families, and create hope and beauty for the generations to come.
The showcase is located just outside the Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery in the Upper Atrium and the works will be on display until Sunday, Oct. 6.
─Submitted by Rhonda L MeierÂ
September 26th, 2024
O.M.: This exhibition explores queer art history through gossip. Why was it important for you to show queer art history through gossip, especially since you could argue that gossip has negatively impacted young queer folk. (For example: rumors about a person’s sexuality). C.P.: This is a good question, and it did come up for me…
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Last Modified: October 9, 2025