Dion Smith-Dokkie: …everything was so infinite as according to my heart and truest wish

Jan 17 – Feb 28, 2026
Opening Reception Jan 17, 2026, 4–7pm

Ceremonial/Art is thrilled to present a solo exhibition of recent works by West Moberly First Nations artist Dion Smith-Dokkie. Born in the Peace River region of Northern BC Smith-Dokkie is now based in Grande Prairie Alberta where they continue to develop their interdisciplinary practice. …everything was so infinite, as ac- cording to my heart and truest wish brings together two series of works by the artist that focus on the fractal abstraction of land and bodily representation.


Artist Statement:

In summer 2025, I took part in a month-long artist residency in Demmitt, AB, run by Peter von Tiesenhausen and Maggie Tiesenhausen called CommonOpulence. Our group spent one month living outdoors and coming to terms with the legacy of utopian intentional communities of the 60s and 70s, ‘frontier placemaking’ and place-enforced contingency; to commune under the auspices of a common and locale under examination. It was deeply healing. These works were first presented at the Art Gallery of Grande Prairie in the group exhibition, wishcraft.

These works use paint I made: rice paste and a bespoke beeswax emulsion, along with watercolour, gouache and pigment. I wanted to draw out a new visual language from material and place. I undertook this research-creation in response to a question posed by a kind curator at a studio visit, where I was asked to question the primacy and ubiquity of plastic (acrylic) in my other works, to think through how to mitigate its impacts. I brought a Fresnel lens with me and would record the aspen parkland, the path to the swimming hole; the garden and clover; the sky and passing clouds.

These works mark a departure and critical re-evaluation of my past painting practice. Radically simplified forms respond to the pre-given shapes and divisions in the support surface, divisions that resemble the parcelling out of those northern prairies and parkland and the works oscillate between aerial and horizon-directed gazes. A brushy facture deploys distortions from the fresnel lens. Meanwhile, the judicious, sparse application of materials create a space for a more economical, ponderous hand, more implicated than ever in creating the materials it uses, whose limited palette tends towards soft dawn in contrast to smoky, atmospheric-blue support surfaces.

The chamois suede I encountered early on in the residency became my lodestar: stern divisions of the picture plane matter less when perforated by minimum escape capsules: panels of sky, cloud, and aquatic moments that turn each parcel into a window, a partialness that denotes its corresponding vista (a reflection shared by artist Rebecca Bair in a studio visit). . As a support, the patchwork resonates because I arrived to it in media res, to the grids, sections, divisions, finding a way through.

Elsewhere, I view my practice as a vessel between translation and mutation: recording on the one hand, escaping on the other. These works critique this escapist impulse and approach the longstanding concern of my practice—the uni-binity of body and environment along with the process of interface and determining what is inside and outside—from an ethos of soft, attentive insulation and inhabitation.

I adapt the work titles from a short story about two Wyoming buckaroos: their long-range, leaden love is perforated by omnipresent wind, daunting prairie and piercing mountain ranges: it reminds me of where I live. These airy daydreams sail across the plains of the work. More personally, the show is about returning home, where the sky is at its widest

Dion Smith-Dokkie, Installation view of …everything was so infinite as according to my heart and truest wish, Ceremonial/Art, 2026

The huge sadness of the northern plains rolled down on him,

2025,

Watercolour, gouache, rice paste, wax emulsion, and pigment on found chamois suede patchwork,

19⅞ x 24 in.

Everything's going to change, clouds and stars,

2025, Watercolour, gouache, rice paste, wax emulsion on found chamois suede patchwork 28 x 24 in.

rose gape chinook above,

2025, Watercolour, gouache, rice paste, wax emulsion, and pigment on found chamois suede patchwork 16 x 16 in.

Sometimes the pillow, sometimes the sky,

2025, Watercolour, gouache, rice paste, wax emulsion, and pigment on found chamois suede patchwork 12 x 18¼ in.

If luscious, new altitude then pasture,

2025, Watercolour, gouache, rice paste, wax emulsion, and pigment on found chamois suede patchwork 19⅞ x 16 in.

Fag-hide vista,

2025, Watercolour, gouache, rice paste, wax emulsion, and pigment on found chamois suede patchwork 14⅛ x 26⅛ in.

The huge sadness of the northern plains rolled down on him,

2025,

Watercolour, gouache, rice paste, wax emulsion, and pigment on found chamois suede patchwork,

19⅞ x 24 in.

Secret path through, then it opened up into damp tall grass and giant windswept,

2025,

Watercolour, gouache, rice paste, wax emulsion on found chamois suede patchwork,

14⅛ x 18⅛ in.