Ring Around the Sun & We Rage On
AYLA DMYTERKO

13 November 2025 – 10 January 2026
Alma Pearl, Unit T, Reliance Wharf, London


Alma Pearl is pleased to present Ring Around the Sun & We Rage On, the debut solo exhibition in London by Ukrainian Canadian artist Ayla Dmyterko (b. 1988, Saskatchewan, Canada). This marks the artist’s first exhibition with the gallery following the announcement of her representation. An illustrated publication–the fourth in our series of limited-edition issues, features an essay by Daisy Lafarge.

The exhibition brings together new paintings, sculptures, ceramic hollyhocks, and moving image works, developed in part during Dmyterko’s residency at the Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture in Maine, as well as in Glasgow, where the artist is based, and in Saskatchewan, Canada. Drawing from ancestral memory, histories of possession and dispossession, and then acts of reparation, Dmyterko constructs visual narratives informed by eco-feminist perspectives and a profound engagement with both her community and other cross-cultural fragments. Conceived as a total installation inspired in part by Svetlana Boym’s notion of the ‘off-modern’– which attends to forgotten or unfinished experiments or “roads not taken”, Dmyterko’s presentation embraces the element of the detour here enacted on a number of temporal and spatial levels involving familial, personal and broader cultural memory.


Ayla Dmyterko
SK Eye, 2025
Single–channel video
14:43 min
Edition of 3 + 1 AP
(ADM015)


These works function as lost artifacts: meticulous bricolages of ritual, remembrance, and material storytelling. Rooted in Ukrainian and Slavic folklore, as well as agrarian and domestic craft traditions, Dmyterko reanimates past practices through a lens enriched by vernacular, pre-patriarchal and folkloric histories while also looking at the feminist and philosophical writings of Ewa Majewska, Ann Dufourmantelle, and Mikhail Bakhtin.

Installation view


Positioning her practice within a lineage of recovery, Dmyterko describes this as a “tornado of semiotic warning.” In this framing, the visual and metaphorical semiotics of the tornado mobilise aesthetic and ethical forces to gather fragments of erased cultural memory, gesturing toward forms of repair. Fallen birch leaves — a tree rooted in Slavic folklore but also emblematic of the Canadian landscape — are scattered across the floor, symbolising the debris left behind by the forces of the tornado.

Installation view 


The exhibition takes its title from the nursery rhyme “Ring a Ring o' Roses”—a folk song and playground game steeped in pagan myth and folklore. In Dmyterko’s reinterpretation, the ring evokes the sun’s apocalyptic appearance during North American forest fire season—a moment of rupture unfolding within the quiet persistence of daily life. The title also gestures toward ‘solastalgia’, the distress wrought by environmental change and the looming anxiety of ecological collapse of one’s home environment.

Ayla Dmyterko
Circles of Confusion
, 2025
Oil on linen with beeswax
150 x 110 cm
59 x 43 1/2 in
(ADM017)

Ayla Dmyterko
In the darkest nights, remember the sun, 2025
Oil on linen with beeswax in found wooden icon frame
44.5 x 31.5 x 9.5 cm
17 1/2 x 12 1/2 x 3 1/2 in
(ADM022)

Ayla Dmyterko
Like Fire on Water II, 2025
Egg tempera and chalk pastel on carved cherry wood
85 x 55 x 25 cm
33 1/2 x 21 1/2 x 10 in
(ADM028)


Other works, while inflected by humour, propose scenarios of turmoil and ecological collapse. In The Middle Distance, the artist subverts colonial posters that promoted emigration to Canada’s West in the early 1900’s, by reimagining the figure of the “spy girl,” a recurring stereotype in Cold War visual culture, here inhabiting and clinging onto a land that is about to be wiped away by tornadoes.

Ayla Dmyterko
Secrets fall in the forest, 2025
Oil and distemper on linen in found wooden screen
84 x 90 cm
33 x 35 1/2 in
(ADM036)


Secrets Fall in the Forest features the same figure moving between woodland trees and playfully stylised, faux-naïve flowers. The scene is set within a found triptych frame, which may once have been part of an Orthodox iconostasis, lending the work a subtle echo of sacred imagery within a contemporary, whimsical context. The character of the spy-girl is then again performed by the artist in the single-channel video SK Eye (2025) here displayed on a vintage cube monitor – a reference to both obsolescence and utopia. 

Ayla Dmyterko
Always remember your home I, 2025
Stoneware ceramic, glazed
8 x 23 x 13 cm
3 x 9 x 5 in
(ADM025)


The collaborative single-channel video Dance of the Fated Furies (2025) extends these investigations into movement and myth. Filmed inside Saskatchewan's Ukrainian Cultural Centre where Dmyterko grew up, it revisits a scene from Zvenigora (1928) by Oleksander Dovzhenko—a cinematic kolymaka, or circle dance—while a theremin composition by Christina Masha Milinusic vibrates in counterpoint. Across its looping gestures, the video becomes both lament and invocation: an echo of exile and an assertion of cosmic continuity grounded within a diasporic context.

Ayla Dmyterko
Secrets fall in the forest, 2025
Oil and distemper on linen in found wooden screen
84 x 90 cm
33 x 35 1/2 in
(ADM036)


Some of these works are framed in reclaimed wood or cast bronze, with frames made through pouring wax, referencing a Ukrainian folk ritual brought to Canada by early settlers. Lastly, Dmyterko’s stoneware ceramics of hollyhocks stand as symbols of life's cycle, human degradation of nature, and diasporic longing. In Ring Around the Sun & We Rage On, Ayla Dmyterko binds together the material, the metaphysical, the domestic and the diasporic. Her practice becomes an act of cultural and spiritual archaeology—an attempt to resuscitate not only what was lost, but the rituals of remembrance as a means of re–shaping a future. 

This exhibition is made possible in part by the generous support of the Canada Council.

Installation view


Installation view



Press

Blackflash
, January 2025
In the Middle Distance: An Interview with Artist Ayla Dmyterko
Article by Maegan Beck

The Peninent Review
, January 2025
Some 2025 highlights

Article by Crystal Bennes & Tom Jeffreys



Publication  

Limited edition publication featuring an essay by Daisy Lafarge and a poem by the artist