Northbound 2024 bridges boundaries cultural convergence

NORTHBOUND 2025: Songs of Sovereignty

Experience Northbound: Songs of Sovereignty, a powerful exhibition curated by Muse & Museums, Shadio Hussein, and Funmi Ajala, presented by NYA in celebration of Emancipation Month.

The show highlights original works by five Black and Indigenous artists from North York, reflecting shared histories of resistance, resilience, and survival. Each piece exists as a visual “song” imagining liberation—personal, communal, and societal.

📍 North York Centre Mall – Main Atrium
5150 Yonge St, North York, ON M2N 6L8

🗓️ On view through October 2025

Go see the beautifully curated space and experience these vital voices in art.

Northbound is made possible through the partnership and support of GWL Realty Advisors.

Northbound Exhibit, Jassira, Jasmine, and Angela in the middle of their exhibited artworks.

NORTHBOUND 2025

Songs of Sovereignty

Northbound: Songs of Sovereignty is presented by North York Arts and curated by Funmi Ajala and Shadio Hussein of Muse and Museums, a Toronto-based curatorial team dedicated to spotlighting local BIPOC artists.

Northbound: Songs of Sovereignty unites five contemporary Black and Indigenous artists whose works embody resilience, cultural memory, and self-determination. Presented for Emancipation Month, the exhibition honours the ongoing pursuit of freedom across generations.

Spanning portraiture, abstraction, textile, and digital media, the artworks explore sovereignty through spiritual inheritance, political refusal, ancestral memory, and daily embodiment. Apanaki Temitayo’s textile muses channel resilience and healing; Claudia Luz Doare honours Miskito culture by rendering memory into form; Ghislan Sutherland-Timm’s collages trace water’s ties to diaspora; Segun Caezar’s portraits are rooted in historical reclamation and ancestral witnessing; and Yinkore’s mixed media reveres the depth of Black womanhood.

Together, their works form a visual chorus, each a distinct voice in a shared song of memory, identity, and liberation.

Through this collection, Songs of Sovereignty invites viewers to witness the ways artists hold space for memory, identity, and liberation. It is not only a celebration of cultural pride, but also an acknowledgment of the ongoing struggles for justice, freedom, and recognition. Each work is a note in a larger composition; a visual chorus that insists on the right to exist fully, to tell one’s story, and to be heard.

Please read full Curatorial Statement HERE.

You can explore and purchase all these beautiful pieces at the following link: https://www.museandmuseums.com/shop/northbound

Northbound Artists 2025

Apanaki Temitayo 

Angela Walcott Headshot

Artist Bio

Apanaki Temitayo

Apanaki Temitayo Minerve is a Trinidadian-Canadian multidisciplinary artist, art facilitator, and mental health advocate whose work embodies resilience, ancestry, and radical healing. Her practice is rooted in textile collage, quilting, and mixed media, using vibrant African fabrics to honour diasporic memory, spiritual identity, and storytelling.

Instagram: @apanaki_apnki / @apanakitemitayo

Self Portrait - Jassira De Almeida

Title: Wisdom
Medium: Mixed media on wood panel
Size: 32″

Artist Statement

“Wisdom” stands as the ancestral keeper, embodying the spiritual intelligence, cultural knowledge, and lived experience passed down through generations of BIPOC women. Her cloak tells stories through pattern and symbol, and her face reflects generations of BIPOC women who have carried the burden of injustice and still passed down love, insight, and resistance. 

She reminds us that liberation doesn’t start in courts—it begins in stories, in rituals, in blood memory. Wisdom is the voice that echoes long after the rally cries fade, insisting we remember who we are and what we deserve.

Mom in Jamaica - Jassira De Almeida

Title: Persistence
Medium: Mixed media on wood panel
Size: 32″

Artist Statement

“Persistence” is a testament to the unwavering power of BIPOC women who continue to fight for bodily autonomy and reproductive justice in the face of erasure and oppression. 

Cloaked in vibrant Ankara fabrics, this muse is rooted in cultural tradition while pushing forward against the tide of colonial systems.  Her gaze is fierce, her presence immovable—she represents the ancestral will to survive despite systemic barriers. This piece channels the legacy of women who have resisted control over their bodies for generations and continue to rise, stitched into the landscape of resistance.

Claudia Luz Doare

Angela Walcott Headshot

Artist Bio

Claudia is a Miskita-French artist and aspiring landscape architect exploring a variety of mediums including painting, sewing and murals. She enjoys the freedom colors allow for creativity in self expression and art making. Through her work Claudia explores themes of mixed identities, ecology and community reflecting on her personal experiences.

Instagram: @claudialuzd_

Self Portrait - Jassira De Almeida

Title: Plun pi aya
Medium: Acrylic on canvas board
Size: 12″ x 12″

Artist Statement

“Plun pi aya” (“Dinner’s served” in Miskito) offers a quiet yet profound glimpse into a traditional communal hunting ceremony. The work captures a moment of connection between people and the land that sustains them. The hunt is not merely an act of survival; it is a ceremonial practice, embedded in a network of relationships between human, animal, and environment. 

Mom in Jamaica - Jassira De Almeida

Title: Mi Tierra
Medium: Marker on Illustration board
Size: 16″ x 20″

 

 

Artist Statement

“Mi Tierra” is an intimate self-portrait and a vivid meditation on Miskito heritage. Through rich patterns and layered vegetation, Doare envisions La Moskitia as it existed before colonization, abundant, diverse, and alive with harmony between people and land. 

“Mi Tierra” operates as an act of reclamation, drawing ancestral land into the present through memory and imagination. It asserts the beauty and resilience of Miskito identity, showing that self and place are inseparable, and that culture is not only remembered but actively lived and sustained today.

Ghislan Sutherland-Timm 

Angela Walcott Headshot

Artist Bio

Ghislan Sutherland-Timm is a multidisciplinary craftsman and media researcher based in Tkaronto. Their work is ignited by the ephemerality and tactility of sound, poetry, analog cinema, and archival materials. They frequently utilize collage techniques across a diverse range of mediums to shape autobiographical-fictional narratives.

Instagram: @orphicinema

Self Portrait - Jassira De Almeida

Title: vol. iii. this body loves too
Medium: Mixed media
Size: (2) 11” x 14” // (2) framed within a single poster frame about 22″ x 28″ inches

Artist Statement

“vol. iii. this body loves too” s part of an ongoing autobiographical-fictional collection of work entitled Why is water so heavy? (c. 2022–present). Shaping a visual diary, this series interlocks the fluidity and borderless nature of water with themes of diaspora and landmarking. 

In this entry, “vol. iii. this body loves too” examines the complex relationships enslaved Africans formed with both land and water through the Atlantic slave trade. These ties to non-native lands were forged in the forced exploitation of people and ecosystems across plantations of coffee, sugar, tobacco, cotton, and indigo. 

Yet within this violence, cultural resilience endured. Power was renegotiated through care, survival, and the blending of African and Indigenous traditions. Today, this legacy lives on in Tkaronto/Toronto’s diasporic cuisines—plantain, jerk chicken, ackee and saltfish. 

Segun Caezar

Angela Walcott Headshot

Artist Bio

Segun Caezar is a Nigerian-born visual artist whose practice centres on realistic portraiture as a tool of historical reclamation, emotional depth, and ancestral witnessing. His work foregrounds Black subjects, particularly immigrants and their descendants, and often integrates recurring motifs like koi fish and to explore spiritual endurance, displacement, and transformation.

Instagram: @hicaezar

Self Portrait - Jassira De Almeida

Title: Salvatore Nigrum
Medium: Oil on panel
Size: 30” x 48”

Artist Statement

“SALVATORE NIGRUM” reimagines Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi through an African diasporic lens. Here, the sacred figure is adorned with dreadlocks, royal blue agbada, and a serene gaze. One hand blesses, while the other cradles a golden koi. 

The fish, here, replaces the orb—representing both global burden and spiritual inheritance. The painting critiques the colonial roots of Christianity while reclaiming its iconography through an African diasporic lens. It asserts that liberation must include spiritual sovereignty, and that salvation, for the colonized, may look radically different from what was once preached.

Mom in Jamaica - Jassira De Almeida

Title: All my friends are Koi
Medium: Oil on panel
Size: 16” x 20”

 

Artist Statement

In “ALL MY FRIENDS ARE KOI,” a young Black girl gazes directly at the viewer, her eyes framed in gold, her cheek pressed gently against a koi fish. The stark grey background sets the tone for a quiet confrontation between innocence and history.

The koi, long associated with perseverance and transformation, carries layered meaning. It functions here as a silent companion, an ancestral witness, and a bearer of stories too long ignored. Its presence is central to the work’s exploration of isolation, beauty, and inherited memory. Through the subject’s stillness, Caezar asks what freedom looks like when shaped by survival.

Yinkore

Angela Walcott Headshot

Artist Bio

Yinkore is a self-taught Nigerian artist exploring the juxtaposition of her traditional culture and new age media. She uses her artistic voice to navigate her lived experiences as a Black woman, by exploring themes of intersectionality and representation in the art she creates, stories that are hardly ever told.

Instagram: @yinkore_

Self Portrait - Jassira De Almeida

Title: Redefining Boundaries
Medium: Digital illustration on archival canvas
Size: 36” x 48”

Artist Statement

“Redefining Boundaries” dismantles reductive archetypes that have long confined and flattened Black women into singular narratives. Through a rich layering of photographs, floral motifs and digital collage, Yinkore explores the emotional complexity of a father-daughter relationship marked by absence, longing, and the possibility of no repair. 

This piece refuses erasure by creating space for vulnerability, grief, and resilience. Through digital collage, Yinkore pieces together fragments into a sovereign self, insisting on full personhood. 

Mom in Jamaica - Jassira De Almeida

Title: We come in peace
Medium: Digital illustration on archival canvas
Size: 24” x 32”

Artist Statement

“We come in peace” celebrates the joy of queer love – soft, intimate, and defiantly visible. Yinkore’s layered digital collage, blending photography and painting, creates a visual space where tenderness is both celebrated and protected. 

The composition challenges the societal narratives that have historically flattened Black women into one-dimensional portrayals, stripping away complexity and depth. Here, intimacy is not hidden or diminished; it is centred. 

NORTHBOUND 2024

Bridges, Boundaries, and Cultural Convergence

Northbound 2024 was curated by Jasmine Vanstone, a Black Jamaican-Canadian artist living in North York. In partnership with GWL Realty Advisors and North York Arts, this exhibit amplifies the voices of Angela Walcott, Jassira De Almeida, and Jasmine Vanstone, to take up physical space in a high traffic location in Willowdale. Jasmine’s curatorial vision is rooted in the amplification of Black voices in conversation with Black Futures and highlights the importance of celebrating Black voices all year round. 

The Black Futures exhibition explores Bridges, Boundaries, and Cultural Convergence. Bridges are often symbols of relationships built between two entities and can be a metaphor for exchange. Boundaries are imagined or felt borders and walls that can limit the vulnerability or openness to exchange. Cultural convergence is a theory which recognizes changing relationships and experiences informed through open dialogue and appreciating the value of exchange while acknowledging and celebrating diverse cultures. 

Northbound Exhibit, Jassira, Jasmine, and Angela in the middle of their exhibited artworks.
Six artworks on big boxes in the atrium of the North Centre lobby. Photo by Maria Vega

Northbound Artists 2024

Angela Walcott

Artist Bio

Meet Angela

As a multidisciplinary Angela Walcott uses found objects as a bridge between past and present identities. Her visual narrative emerges from Caribbean, African and Latin American traditions. Various techniques are used to highlight sustainability and waste reduction in her practice through the use of living and lived natural inks and botanicals. By incorporating traditional and non-traditional methods Angela stretches the conversation with mixed media and elements of drawing, painting, ceramics, photography and typography as guides that inform her practice.

Instagram: @artistwritermaker

Jassira De Almeida

Artist Bio

Meet Jassira

Jassira De Almeida is an Angolan-Canadian visual artist who creates work digitally and traditionally. She is an undergrad animation student at OCAD U. When traditionally working, graphite, acrylic, watercolour, and oil are the mediums she uses for drawings, illustrations, and paintings. She combines analog and digital techniques when making stop-motion and 2D animation. She also experiments with photography and digital portraiture. She has recently been creating representations of herself and what inspires her (people in her life, nature, music, animation). She is focused on making fun and thoughtful stories with time-based and traditional media.

Jasmine Vanstone

Artist Bio

Meet Jasmine

Jasmine Vanstone is a Jamaican-Canadian multidisciplinary artist, arts facilitator, arts administrator, and curator based in North York. She experiments primarily in collage, poetry, murals, and paper crafts to share visual reflections of cultural identity, wellness, and environmental justice. Through vibrant colours and lyrical abstraction, she conveys the complexity of identity by visual overlapping of layers and interdisciplinary creations. Natural elements such as botanicals, animals, and produce become symbols of cultural environments, behaviours, and blessings through their creative manipulation. Each creation documents lived experiences and reflections to ultimately serve as a catalyst for exploration and introspection, inviting viewers to engage with the complexities of identity and the profound beauty of the world around us. With passion and the power of mentorship, Jasmine’s work has been featured at Meridian Arts Centre, Finch TTC station, Nuit Blanche, Gallery 44, DesignTO, Pearson Airport, KUUMBA, StreetARToronto, JAYU, VIBE Arts, and more.

Instagram: @articulately_jasmine

Website: https://www.jasminevanstone.com/

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