Polygraphia, A Language Passing / Breaking Through Visual Noise - Opening Reception
Wed, Jun 10
|TAP Centre for Creativity


Time & Location
Jun 10, 2026, 6:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
TAP Centre for Creativity, 203 Dundas St, London, ON N6A 1G4, Canada
About The Event
Join us on June 10th from 6:00PM - 8:00PM for an opening reception to view the work and meet the artists.
In an era shaped by accelerating information, images and language no longer arrive as singular events but circulate through systems of repetition, sequence, and perception. Meaning emerges not as fixed or immediate, but through how these repetitions are encountered and experienced over time. This presentation brings together two distinct exhibitions that approach time and meaning through different material and conceptual languages. Xi Jin’s installations examine language as a system governed by rules, programmed movement, and iterative structures, where meaning unfolds through mechanical repetition and variation. In parallel, the London Camera Club’s group photography exhibition approaches time through perception, framing, and environmental change. Rather than proposing a singular unified theme, the exhibitions coexist as parallel curatorial streams. If one articulates time through operational systems and linguistic circulation, the other reveals how time is sensed through attention, seasonality, and lived perception. Together, they invite viewers to reflect on how meaning and experience unfold within the rhythms of time.
Polygraphia, A Language Passing and Breaking Through Visual Noise are mobile projects of SATELLiTE Project Space.
All are welcome to this free event.
Polygraphia, A Language Passing is in the North Section of the Main Gallery from June 9 to July 20, 2026.
For more information about this exhibition click here.
Breaking Through Visual Noise is in the South Section of the Main Gallery from June 9 to July 20, 2026.
For more information about this exhibition click here.
Featured Image:
Xi Jin, A Lexicon Not Yet Set, 2025, pleated blinds, found objects, aluminum extrusion frames, 10' x 3'
Kyle Van Alstyne, Break Through, 2025, Photography, 2026

