Kerfuffle on Main Art collective brings creative spirit to refurbished Fortune Block

It’s been five years since Ryan Pollard and his team restored the Fortune Block on Main Street to its former glory, and the building is almost all leased up — except for the airy, street-level space at 226 Main St.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 03/05/2024 (802 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

It’s been five years since Ryan Pollard and his team restored the Fortune Block on Main Street to its former glory, and the building is almost all leased up — except for the airy, street-level space at 226 Main St.

Pollard could have left it sitting vacant until he found a permanent tenant; instead, he’s transformed it into a pop-up art gallery. And May is booked with exhibitions, revealing an appetite for professional spaces for artists to show their work.

This weekend, the gallery is inhabited by Pretty, a group show featuring works by the Frost Shield Kerfuffle, a Winnipeg collective composed of artists Michael Boss, Timothy Brown, Kelly-Jo Dorvault, Patricia Eschuk, Kenneth Harasym, Chris Simonite and Diana Thorneycroft.

Guest artists Parminder Obhi and Opeyemi Olukotun also have work featured in the exhibition, which is on view until Sunday.

Thorneycroft previously had art featured at the Fortune Block as part of a show organized by multimedia artist James Culleton in December.

Ruth Bonneville / Free Press
                                Frost Shield Kerfuffle Collective artist Parminder Obhi works on a multi-dimensional piece, readying it to be installed at the pop-up group art show Pretty at the Fortune Block on Main Street.

Ruth Bonneville / Free Press

Frost Shield Kerfuffle Collective artist Parminder Obhi works on a multi-dimensional piece, readying it to be installed at the pop-up group art show Pretty at the Fortune Block on Main Street.

“I walked in, and I said, ‘Oh, my God, this space is fantastic — the Kerfuffles should show here,’” Thorneycroft says.

It’s a rainy Thursday morning and Pollard, along with Thorneycroft and fellow collective members Boss and Simonite, and Brendan Michal Heshka, whose solo exhibition, Words in Paint, will be shown from May 10 to 21, are gathered at 226 Main St.

The walls, animated now by the freshly mounted works of Pretty, have been painted a crisp, gallery white. Track lighting has been installed.

But the gallery is temporary. It doesn’t have a name. And in a few months, it will likely be transformed into something else.

“It is a wonderful gallery space, definitely,” Pollard agrees. “I was excited to put artwork in here; we’ve done a couple of pop-up things here prior to this, and they all turned out great.

“The entire time that we’ve been doing those pop-ups, we’ve also been trying to lease this unit to have a more stable long-term tenant. It’s been a challenging thing to do. We’ve been trying to lease this space since the end of 2019, basically.”

“The entire time that we’ve been doing those pop-ups, we’ve also been trying to lease this unit to have a more stable long-term tenant. It’s been a challenging thing to do.”–Ryan Pollard

So, when Thorneycroft came along, it felt like a good fit. Pollard committed to doing a short-term lease, three months at a time.

“I was very conflicted over that, I should say. I knocked around the idea of trying to do a gallery here. At the end of the day, I just decided that I had enough going on with other parts of my personal and professional life that it just felt like too much,” he says.

Pollard has since lined up a prospective tenant to take over the unit for a different use in late summer, but until then, 226 Main St. will be filled with art.


Named for both a Manitoba car window covering of yore and the politest of Canadian arguments, the Frost Shield Kerfuffle began as a way to build some community around making art, which is often a solitary — and sometimes lonely — pursuit. The group would meet and discuss and offer critiques.

“The key, I think, to our collective is that we don’t take ourselves seriously. Our work, yes. But when we get together, we have as much fun as possible, as you can tell by the name,” Thorneycroft says.

Pretty is the collective’s fourth exhibition following We have nothing in common except some of us are nice (cre8ery, 2018), Revolting! (The Edge Gallery, 2019) and Damaged Landscapes (Prairie Fusion, 2022).

Pretty, the adjective, is kind of a slur in the art world; no one wants their works described — or perhaps more accurately dismissed — as “pretty.”

It has many different definitions and uses, depending on context — “That’s so pretty!” versus “That’s pretty strange” — and, while all the pieces in Pretty diverge wildly in terms of style and interpretation, there’s an overarching idea that if you scratch at the surface of pretty, you’ll often find weirdness and ugliness just underneath.

Following Pretty is Heshka’s Words in Paint, featuring a series of 12 paintings of covers of first-edition books rendered in everything from gold leaf to spray paint.

Ruth Bonneville / Free Press
                                Members of Frost Shield Kerfuffle Collective install their artwork at the pop-up group exhibition Pretty at the Fortune Block on Main Street.

Ruth Bonneville / Free Press

Members of Frost Shield Kerfuffle Collective install their artwork at the pop-up group exhibition Pretty at the Fortune Block on Main Street.

“I’m making what I call a conceptual reading room,” says Heska, who recently moved back to Winnipeg after living and studying in Europe and was looking to make some connections.

“I was a bit isolated in my profession,” he says.

Heshka knew of Pollard via many mutual friends and was interested in the work he had done rehabbing the Fortune Block. Pollard visited Heshka’s studio, Heshka visited the space on Main Street, and the pair started working together.

Having a visible, street-level gallery on Main Street feels significant, especially considering the area’s losses. Fire destroyed the Main Street home of Mentoring Artists for Women’s Art and the Edge Gallery & Urban Art Centre in December. Four years before that, fire gutted the building that housed many artists’ studios on Jarvis Avenue.

The Fortune Block will host five shows featuring more than a dozen artists over the next three months, but Pollard is demure about his supporting role in Winnipeg’s art scene.

“I don’t really feel like it is a massive support. It’s a discounted rental rate and we’ll do a short-term ‘lease,’ if that’s even what you want to call it. Like, we’re not giving it away. But it provides a space to put up art,” he says.

The artists in the Frost Shield Kerfuffle Collective, however, might disagree.

“It is a huge support because it is so difficult to find any decent space to show artwork in the city. Don’t diminish that. It’s really important,” Boss says.

“Art is not a charity. Art is not a community service, necessarily.”–Brendan Michal Heshka

“I also appreciate what Ryan’s trying to convey there,” Heshka says. “Art is not a charity. Art is not a community service, necessarily. I would say Ryan’s participating in culture with this space. He’s not trying to hold it up or give something — he’s participating and it’s a mutual participation.”

In fact, at Heshka’s encouragement, Pollard himself is putting up an exhibition at the end of the month.

“For the past eight or nine years, I’ve spent a fair amount of time thinking about a man named Ernie Wilson,” he says.

Ernest (Ernie) Wilson was a Winnipeg artist who died in 1987. Pollard grew up around one of his paintings: a surrealist 1974 work called The Hysteria of a Sunny Day, which features a wild-eyed carousel horse loose in a prairie field that hung at his grandparents’ house.

“And so, I set out trying to figure out who he was, basically, and I built a little inventory of his work,” says Pollard (who is still looking for more art, by the way, so if you’re sitting on a Wilson, get in touch at the email below).

“He was essentially unsearchable. There was really nothing written about him, even though I think he’s an outstanding painter. I just felt like he was, in some ways, sort of forgotten about.”

Pollard tracked down Wilson’s brother and his family to learn more about Ernie, and they generously donated some additional works on paper.

Those pieces, plus 20 or so canvases, will compose Silent Fields: Art By Ernest G. Wilson (1933-1987), which will be on view from May 28 to June 8 and will be the first solo exhibition of Wilson’s work in decades.

Two more shows are on the books at 226 Main St., including an exhibition of paintings by Lilian Bonin and Liv Valmestad, along with ceramic pieces by Charlene Brown from June 12 to 19, and a group show featuring Susan Turner, Adelle Rawluk and others from July 23 to 29.

jen.zoratti@winnipegfreepress.com

If you value coverage of Manitoba’s arts scene, help us do more.
Your contribution of $10, $25 or more will allow the Free Press to deepen our reporting on theatre, dance, music and galleries while also ensuring the broadest possible audience can access our arts journalism.
BECOME AN ARTS JOURNALISM SUPPORTER Click here to learn more about the project.

Jen Zoratti

Jen Zoratti
Columnist

Jen Zoratti is a columnist and feature writer working in the Arts & Life department, as well as the author of the weekly newsletter NEXT. A National Newspaper Award finalist for arts and entertainment writing, Jen is a graduate of the Creative Communications program at RRC Polytech and was a music writer before joining the Free Press in 2013. Read more about Jen.

Every piece of reporting Jen produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print – part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.

 

Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.

Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Slam the door on overly aggressive suitor

Maureen Scurfield 5 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

DEAR MISS LONELYHEARTS: My new boyfriend wanted a key to my place and I told him, “Not yet — we just met. It’s too soon.”

So, last night I came home from playing tennis and there he was in my little house sitting in my new recliner. He was eating a bag of chips, drinking a beer and watching TV.

He laughed when he saw my shocked face! Then he said, “Hello, beautiful! I just let myself in. You must be hungry. Can I make you something to eat?”

I said, “You’re acting like you live here, but you don’t. Where did you get my house key? You scared me!”

First-aid volunteers treat folk fest attendees suffering from heat

Eva Wasney and Jill Wilson 4 minute read Preview

First-aid volunteers treat folk fest attendees suffering from heat

Eva Wasney and Jill Wilson 4 minute read Sunday, Jul. 12, 2026

Shade was at a premium at Birds Hill Provincial Park over the weekend as Winnipeg Folk Festival goers tried to keep cool during an extreme heat wave.

Heat warnings were issued across southern Manitoba and temperatures peaked at 35 C Sunday afternoon.

First-aid volunteers were seen administering cold compresses to several overheated attendees. STARS air ambulance responded to a medical call at the park on Saturday night, but did not transport the patient to hospital. By Sunday at noon, EMS had been called to the festival nine times.

“This is not an unusual number of calls for us or other events of our size,” festival executive director Valerie Shantz said.

Read
Sunday, Jul. 12, 2026

Toys ‘R’ Us closing Polo Park store

Free Press staff 2 minute read Preview

Toys ‘R’ Us closing Polo Park store

Free Press staff 2 minute read Yesterday at 8:39 PM CDT

Embattled toy retailer Toys “R” Us is closing its store in Winnipeg’s Polo Park area.

Staff hung signs sharing the news — and advertising liquidation pricing — on Friday. The signage does not indicate when the store, located at 1445 St. Matthews Ave., will close for good.

A store manager declined to comment on Monday, directing a reporter to Toys “R” Us Canada Ltd.’s head office. The company did not respond to interview requests.

Toys “R” Us announced in January it would close its Polo Park location, but reversed course a few weeks later. The Canada-wide company has been in creditor protection since February.

Read
Yesterday at 8:39 PM CDT

Name-change sex abuser pleads guilty

Dean Pritchard 4 minute read Preview

Name-change sex abuser pleads guilty

Dean Pritchard 4 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

A convicted child sex predator who changed his name before going on to abuse another victim is now facing a likely 15-year prison sentence.

Ryan Knight, 44, pleaded guilty Monday morning to sexual interference and making child sexual abuse and exploitation material.

Knight remains in custody and is expected to be sentenced in the fall, when Crown and defence lawyers will jointly recommend the repeat offender serve 15 years in prison.

Knight, who was born Ryan Gabourie, has been in custody since last July when he was charged with sex crimes involving a 13-year-old boy.

Read
2:01 AM CDT

The Manitoba Quiz Part 1

0 minute read Preview

The Manitoba Quiz Part 1

0 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 7:51 AM CDT

How well do you know our province? Part 1 of a two-part, 20-question quiz. Part 2 will come on Monday, July 20.

Read
Updated: Yesterday at 7:51 AM CDT

Artist Bistyek enjoys the freedom of living a creative life in full colour

Ben Waldman 7 minute read Preview

Artist Bistyek enjoys the freedom of living a creative life in full colour

Ben Waldman 7 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

In pants nearly as wide at the ankle as a downtown sidewalk, Bistyek cuts a striking silhouette on his daily marches through the Exchange District, an area the painter has made his muse since arriving in Winnipeg nine years ago.

He likes it here, loves it even, but as he’s established himself as one of the city’s most vibrant visual artists — with a street-honed style that pays homage to both Japanese anime series Dragon Ball Z and graffiti-inspired American painter Jean-Michel Basquiat — Bistyek won’t forget where he came from: he can’t.

Though the 30-year-old has built an enviable life here, he’s eminently aware that his circumstances are defined as much by sheer luck as they are by determination or talent. When he was growing up in Afrin, a village in Syria, his family was torn apart by civil war and discrimination against the Kurdish minority under the rule of dictator Bashar al Assad.

“I was living in Lebanon as a refugee for seven years, with a big group of friends, but day after day they started to cross the sea from Turkey or Greece. Some of them made it, some of them did not,” says the artist born Ormeya Zagros. “I turned to Mom and said, ‘I want to go across the sea. I cannot stay here. I don’t see a future here. I don’t see opportunities. There is so much discrimination and racism. I cannot build a life.’”

Read
2:01 AM CDT