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Tenant Category: Artist

Tenant Directory

Discover a village within the city

401 Richmond is home to a community of over 140 artists, cultural producers, social innovators, galleries, festivals, and shops. Browse our full tenant directory or select a tag below to view our tenants by category.

Robert Fones

Second floor, Studio 255

Robert Fones is a visual artist and tenant of 401 Richmond. He works in a variety of media including photography, sculpture, painting, photo-installation and watercolour. He is represented by Olga Korper Gallery, Toronto.

Rocky Dobey

Rocky’s main artistic practice is his street art and political posters (ie: Anti-globalization – Quebec 2000, Reclaim the Streets, Prison Justice, Anarchist Gathering – Toronto 1988). He has been installing street art in Toronto and other Canadian cities for 30 years, since he started doing street posters and graffiti in the mid 1970’s. In the mid 1980’s he installed painted billboard political parodies on abandoned buildings. He has installed concrete sculptures, street-post mounted books and political historical plaques  around Toronto…

Roda Medhat

Second floor, Studio 260

Roda Medhat is a Kurdish-Canadian artist, currently based in Toronto, Ontario. He obtained a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from OCAD University, where he specialized in video art, photography, and sculpture/installation work. He also honed his skills in film production at FAMU Film and Television School in Prague.

Sarah Dinnick

Third floor

Sarah Dinnick is a Canadian photographer, visual communicator and founding partner of the award-winning design firm Dinnick & Howells. The artist’s work has been exhibited in numerous group and solo shows in Canada and the US. A graduate of McGill University with a Bachelor of Art History, and Visual Communications at the Ontario College of Art and Design and the Pratt Institute, Sarah is an active member of Canada’s arts community, serving on numerous boards and photography acquisition committees. In…

Sarah Nind

Third floor

Sarah Nind’s photo-based work incorporates painting, digital technology and installation, and addresses memory, displacement, and dichotomy, creating images that are real and fictional, evocative and emotional. The juxtaposition of media in her work confronts our understanding of seemingly disparate visual systems, ultimately questioning how we structure a world that is chaotic and undefined using the visual language of images.

Sheilah Wallin

Third floor