VivaGroup.org
www.VivaGroup.org
Fine Art Consultants and Sales
Consulting Services, Sales, Liaison ~ Artists, Galleries, Collectors, Corporate
* Viva Group provides carefully selected art to private collectors, galleries, offices and commercial spaces. We work with our clients' individual aesthetic to provide a comprehensive fine art consulting service.
* We meet with the client to understand their interests, style, size, medium and budget requirements. B
04/18/2026
04/04/2026
and
03/29/2026
Portrait of Steven Leckie by Adam Turkel
Portraits by Emmet Woulfe 2016
02/07/2026
Please help, share and support
Artist's model Singer Paris Black in his fight against a sudden diagnosis of Stage4 Cancer ✨️🙏
https://www.gofundme.com/f/paris-black-fighting-stage-4-cancer
Below is a list of cutting-edge cancer treatments that are either not available, not fully covered or only conditionally available under Ontario’s public health system.
NOTE: The key issue is pricetag.
Targeted Radioligand Therapies (e.g., Pluvicto, Lutathera, PSMA-Targeted Therapies)
Description: These therapies deliver radiation directly to cancer cells via molecules that bind to specific markers (e.g., Lutathera for neuroendocrine tumors, PSMA therapies for prostate cancer).
Coverage Status: Lutathera (lutetium Lu 177 dotatate) is funded under the NDFP for specific neuroendocrine tumors, but other radioligand therapies, like PSMA-targeted treatments for advanced prostate cancer, are often not covered unless part of a clinical trial or special program. MHRPC is covered, but NOT for MHSPC , which Paris has.
Why Not Covered: Emerging nature, limited Health Canada approval for broader use, and high costs restrict routine public funding. ( Note HIGH COST $250,000 USD while billions to foreign wars and foreign aid are covered).
CAR T-Cell Therapy (Beyond Specific Indications)
Description: Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy involves modifying a patient’s T-cells to attack cancer cells. It’s a breakthrough for certain blood cancers like leukemia and lymphoma.
Coverage Status: Ontario’s CAR T-cell Therapy Program funds this treatment for specific conditions (e.g., relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma or acute lymphoblastic leukemia) when patients meet strict clinical criteria. However, for other cancer types (e.g., solid tumors like breast or lung cancer) or off-label uses, it’s typically not covered as it’s still experimental and lacks broad approval.
Why Not Covered: Limited evidence for broader applications and high costs (often exceeding $400,000 per treatment) restrict its inclusion beyond approved indications.
Tumor-Agnostic Therapies (e.g., Larotrectinib, Entrectinib)
Description: These drugs target specific genetic mutations (e.g., NTRK gene fusions) regardless of cancer type, representing a shift toward precision oncology.
Coverage Status: While some tumor-agnostic drugs may be funded through the NDFP or Exceptional Access Program (EAP) on a case-by-case basis, they’re not universally covered. Approval often requires extensive documentation and proof of no alternative options, which can delay or deny access.
Why Not Covered: These are newer therapies, and Ontario’s funding process prioritizes drugs with established cost-effectiveness data for specific cancers, not broad genetic profiles.
Immunotherapy Drugs (e.g., Pembrolizumab/Keytruda, Nivolumab/Opdivo) for Non-Funded Indications
Description: Immune checkpoint inhibitors boost the immune system to fight cancer and are approved for cancers like melanoma, lung cancer, and colorectal cancer.
Coverage Status: Ontario covers these drugs under the NDFP or ODB for specific, approved indications (e.g., Keytruda for untreated Stage IV colorectal cancer with MSI-H/dMMR mutations). However, for non-approved indications or after prior treatments fail (e.g., Keytruda for colon cancer post-chemotherapy), patients may need to pay out-of-pocket, as seen in cases where costs reach $10,000/month.
Why Not Covered: Funding is tied to clinical trial evidence and Health Canada approval for specific uses; off-label or expanded use often falls outside public coverage.
Proton Beam Therapy (For Most Indications)
Description: A precise form of radiation therapy that targets tumors while sparing surrounding healthy tissue, particularly useful for pediatric cancers or tumors near critical structures (e.g., brain, spine).
Coverage Status: Ontario does not have a proton therapy facility, and OHIP may fund out-of-country treatment only for rare cases (e.g., certain pediatric cancers) via prior approval. For most adult cancers, it’s not covered due to insufficient local infrastructure and evidence of superiority over conventional radiation.
Why Not Covered: High cost, limited availability, and lack of broad comparative data with photon-based radiation limit routine funding.
Oncolytic Virus Therapy (e.g., Imlygic)
Description: Uses genetically modified viruses to infect and destroy cancer cells while stimulating an immune response, approved for melanoma in some regions.
Coverage Status: Not routinely covered in Ontario. While Health Canada approved Imlygic (talimogene laherparepvec) for melanoma, it’s not listed in the NDFP or ODB formulary, leaving patients to seek private funding or clinical trials.
Why Not Covered: Limited evidence of widespread benefit and high costs deter public funding inclusion.
Personalized Cancer Vaccines
Description: Vaccines tailored to a patient’s tumor mutations to trigger an immune response, still largely in clinical trials (e.g., for glioblastoma or pancreatic cancer).
Coverage Status: Not covered by Ontario’s public system as these are experimental and not Health Canada-approved for standard use. Patients must join trials or pay privately (costs can exceed $100,000).
Why Not Covered: Experimental status and lack of regulatory approval exclude them from public funding.
Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy (HIPEC)
Description: Delivers heated chemotherapy directly into the abdominal cavity during surgery, used for peritoneal cancers (e.g., mesothelioma, appendiceal cancer).
Coverage Status: OHIP covers the surgical component if performed in-province, but the chemotherapy drug costs may not be fully funded unless part of a specific regimen under NDFP. Access is inconsistent and often limited to specialized centers.
Why Not Covered: Variable evidence of efficacy and high resource demands limit standardized funding.
Notes:
Access Variability: Some treatments might be partially funded through programs like the Case-by-Case Review Program for rare, life-threatening conditions, but this requires extensive justification and isn’t guaranteed.
Out-of-Pocket Reality: Patients often turn to private insurance, compassionate use programs from drug manufacturers, or personal funds when public coverage is unavailable. For example, the Ottawa couple paying $80,000 for Keytruda highlights this gap.
Evolving Landscape: Coverage can change as new evidence emerges or drugs gain approval, but time is not on the side of Stage4 cancer patients...
Please share ✨️ 🙏
Donate to Paris Black: Fighting Stage 4 Cancer, organized by Paul Travers
12/24/2025
By James Picard
Santa -Oil Painting,
Fundraiser for Children’s Hospital in Los Angeles
11/29/2025
Carl Weber (1850–1921, Philadelphia/Mechanicsburg, PA)
Pastoral Landscape with Sheep – Original watercolor/gouache on paper
Sight size approx. 14 × 22 in, in its original period frame
A classic, signed Pennsylvania pastoral scene by one of the most beloved American watercolorists of the turn of the last century. Hand-painted (not a print – you can see every brushstroke and the natural paper texture). Soft rolling hills, grazing sheep, a winding country lane, and that signature Carl Weber sky filled with billowing clouds.
Light foxing and a few old water spots in the sky (easily reduced by a conservator if desired) do not detract from its gentle beauty.
Current fair market value $1,500–$2,500 USD. All proceeds benefit stage 4 cancer patient Paris Black.
Please attend our fundraising party, featuring, art sale and show, cello player, celebrity performers, complementary wine and fine foods, Dec.12, 2025 at High Park in Toronto, only $33:
https://www.facebook.com/share/1BvsWQ5oAR/
11/29/2025
John Wolcott Adams (1874–1925)
“On the Kibbey River” – Oil on board, c. 1910–1920
Sight size approx. 8 × 10 in, in its original gold-leaf frame
A luminous New England Impressionist landscape by the listed Boston School painter and illustrator John Wolcott Adams. Signed lower left, and fully titled, signed again, and inscribed with the artist’s old Brookline, Massachusetts telephone number (ASpinwall 4-1211) on the original backing paper. Even better: the artist painted it on the wooden panel from a period Clicquot Club Ginger Ale crate (visible on the reverse) – a charming, documented habit of many early 20th-century New England plein-air painters.
Provenance written right on the back in the artist’s own hand. A small gem with a big story.
Fair market value $4,000–$7,000 USD. Every dollar from its sale goes directly to care for Stage 4 cancer patient Paris Black.
Please attend our fundraising party, featuring, art sale and show, cello player, celebrity performers, complementary wine and fine foods, Dec.12, 2025 at High Park in Toronto, only $33:
https://www.facebook.com/share/1BvsWQ5oAR/
10/25/2025
On this day in 1881, Pablo Picasso was born
10/13/2025
Young Girl In Dress With Mirror - James Picard
Art by John Nobrega, animated
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