Toronto's
celebrated month-long Festival in May invites established and
emerging North American and international artists to
activate urban spaces across the city
TORONTO, March 10, 2020 /PRNewswire/ - Scotiabank CONTACT
Photography Festival, the esteemed annual presentation of
lens-based art, today announced its curated program of public
installations for the 24th edition of the city-wide event.
Throughout the month of May, 2020, a number of Public
Installations will address artists' roles in building
awareness, stimulating dialogue, and fostering engagement
concerning a range of environmental issues. Other installations
feature artists exploring the interconnectedness and implications
of body, identity, site, and history.
A selection of North American and international lens-based
artists will present a diverse array of installations to activate
public spaces throughout Toronto
and in eight cities across Canada. Artists include: Alberto Giuliani, Kim
Hoeckele, Vid Ingelevics
& Ryan Walker, Aaron Jones, Ebti Nabag, Taiyo Onorato & Nico
Krebs, Dawit L. Petros Thirza
Schaap, Małgorzata Stankiewicz, Greg Staats, Elizabeth
Zvonar, and others to be announced. Venues
include billboards, Toronto's
Osgoode subway station, Metro
Hall, and more, as well as new locations including Todmorden Mills
Heritage Site, the Toronto Port Lands, Malvern Public Library, and
Lester B. Pearson Collegiate Institute in Scarborough, expanding CONTACT's
engagement across the greater Toronto area. CONTACT is collaborating with
guest curators on a number of these projects, including
Chloe Catan. Anique Jordan,
Sara Knelman, and Philip Monk.
Internationally celebrated artists who have participated in
CONTACT's public installations program previously include Ilit
Azoulay, Rebecca Belmore,
Douglas Coupland, Awol Erizku,
Barbara Kruger, Robert Longo, Kent
Monkman, Martin Parr,
Mickalene Thomas, and Carrie Mae Weems. The Festival's Artistic
Director Bonnie Rubenstein said,
"For this year's Public Installation program, timely images by
artists from around the world will activate high profile-locations
across the city. We look forward to sharing these projects that
confront complex global realities in Toronto and beyond."
CONTACT Executive Director Darcy
Killeen said, "CONTACT's Public Installation
program began in 2003, with four venues in the city and now
includes numerous sites in the city plus a series of billboard
installations across the country supported by Scotiabank, Pattison
Outdoor Advertising, and Nikon
Canada. Whereas CONTACT's annual event is highly anticipated
by the international photography community, the public
installations are accessible to residents and visitors for both
intentional and unexpected encounters. The CONTACT team gratefully
acknowledges the support of our partners who make it possible for
us to connect the viewing public with the work of so many
outstanding artists."
Preview of CONTACT 2020 Public Installation Artists
Greg Staats, for at
least one day, you should continue to breathe clearly,
Todmorden Mills Heritage Site
With an installation that incorporates photographic and
pictographic enlargements adhered to the surfaces of Todmorden's
restored paper mill, Six Nations Hodinǫhsǫ:ni, Toronto-based artist Greg Staats reasserts First Nations' presence on
this site in an act of reconciliation, though it arrives and
derives from a double displacement. First came the original
displacement of the Hodinǫhsǫ:ni from the Mohawk Valley in upper
New York state to the Grand River;
then came a forced displacement from which many of the other
colonial disinheritances derive—of the deprivation of language,
culture, and governance. Staats's restorative aesthetic redresses
these losses. He utilizes a mnemonic of place (Six Nations of the
Grand River Territory) and the knowledge that resides in the Mohawk
language and the Great Law of Peace to shape a narrative of
transformation and renewal that circulates us around the building.
Curated by Philip Monk
Taiyo Onorato &
Nico Krebs, FUTURE
PERFECT, Metro Hall
This installation will be Swiss duo Taiyo Onorato & Nico
Krebs' first presentation in Canada. Their critical and timely suite of
images reflects on the current state of the planet and humanity's
drastically changing perception of the future. Using a variety of
techniques to disrupt traditional representations and readings of
beauty-oriented images of nature, the artists explore the subject
of human interference in the natural environment. Positioned
alongside a municipal site of governance in Toronto's entertainment district—where the
practical considerations of metropolis management and optimism
regarding travel and tourism are commonplace—the images' fusion of
the documentary and the imagined is heightened. Pointing to both
the idyllic landscape and the consequences of climate change, these
images of possible futures overtaken by plastic pollution confront
everyday realties and fictions. The work poignantly ties these
contradictory elements together, and the installation's large scale
will immerse viewers in the artist's reflections on a volatile
present that is still modifiable. Curated by
Bonnie Rubenstein
Thirza Schaap,
Plastic Ocean, Osgoode
Subway Station platform
Cape Town-based Dutch artist
Thirza Schaap's photographic series
Plastic Ocean touches on pressing contemporary concerns that
are front of mind globally. Disarmingly beautiful and delicate upon
first glance, a closer inspection of her staged tableaus offers
hints to their source material—consumer products that have endured
a full commercial lifecycle. The abstracted compositions are
carefully constructed from bits of scavenged plastic Schaap has
found along the seashore, "disposable" packaging worn and weathered
from exposure to the elements. Positioned along the subway
platform, the project will impact thousands of daily commuters, in
a space where they are accustomed to being targeted with commercial
advertisements for new products. Disposability, part and parcel of
commuter culture, is turned on its head in this critical and
striking installation. Curated by Sara
Knelman
Alberto Giuliani,
Surviving Humanity, Brookfield Place, Allan Lambert Galleria
Presented throughout Allen Lambert Galleria, Surviving
Humanity (2018) by Italian photographer and journalist
Alberto Giuliani focuses on forces
at work across the globe—the numerous scientific attempts to
safeguard ecological and societal longevity. Underscoring the
urgency of environmental action, the selection of images and their
accompanying texts resonate with the surrounding architecture of
the site's glass atrium. In the heart of Canada's financial
district, this exhibition opens a dialogue about the future
of the planet, confronting the question asked by Giuliani's
children which motivated his extensive explorations: "How will the
world be when we grow up?" Curated by Bonnie Rubenstein
Kim Hoeckele, epoch,
stage, shell, Billboards at Dupont/Dovercourt &
College/Dovercourt
In epoch, stage, shell, New
York-based artist Kim
Hoeckele presents physically and conceptually layered
black-and-white photographs, in which she uses her own body to
perform sculptural poses, mimicking Greco-Roman–influenced poses
and gestures seen in ethnographic, art historical, and commercial
images. In this work, Hoeckele reconsiders how women's bodies have
historically been presented and "consumed." Often cutting up,
layering, reconstructing, and re-photographing, her collaged
compositions simultaneously emphasize and disguise her
interventions, rendering the images both whole and fragmented,
complicating the legacy of the Western art historical canon, and
proposing a messier standard of beauty: one that is mixed, eroded,
and patched together. Curated by Ben Freedman
Małgorzata Stankiewicz, Lassen,
Billboards at Dundas & Lansdowne & Across Canada
Lassen is a topographic and polychromatic
exploration of natural landscapes, which it celebrates while
simultaneously revealing the artist's uneasiness and anxiety about
the current state of the environment. Further, it is an
experimental investigation of the chromogenic process. The original
enlargements, reproduced in this installation, are hand-printed in
sections, resulting from the artist's countless hours in the
darkroom, compressing numerous layers of physical and chemical
manipulations into one final image. Lassen is a journey
through both factual and fictional place; a metaphorical portrait
of nature of the Anthropocene era. Curated by Tara Smith
Lassen billboard locations across Canada
include:
Halifax
|
Two on North Street
at Alderney Drive
|
Montreal
|
Two on Van Horne
Avenue at St Laurent Boulevard and St Urbain; one at Van Horne
Avenue at Jeanne Mance
|
Ottawa
|
Two on Cumberland
Street at Besserer Street
|
Winnipeg
|
One at McDermot
Avenue at Hargrave Street; two at Bannatyne Avenue at Hargrave
Street
|
Saskatoon
|
One on 20th Street W
and Avenue H; one on Avenue J and Idylwyld Drive
|
Calgary
|
Two on 9th Avenue at
9th Street SE; one on 9th Avenue at 11th Street SE; one on 9th
Avenue at 12th Street SE
|
Edmonton
|
One on Jasper Avenue
at 117th Street
|
St. John's
|
One on East White
Hills Road at Robin Hood Bay Road
|
Vancouver
|
Two on Clark Drive at
East 4th Avenue; Two on Clark Drive at East 2nd Avenue
|
Dawit L. Petros, Untitled
(Overlapping and intertwined territories that fall from view
III), The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, south
façade
This installation is presented as an extension of Petros'
exhibition at The Power Plant, Spazio Disponibile, which
examines links between colonization, migrations, and modernism.
Petros created the work in Catania, Sicily, Italy's largest reception area for
migrants crossing the Mediterranean, a place where the country
comes face to face with the aftermath of its 19th- and 20th-century
colonization campaigns in Africa.
The installation's waterfront location resonates with the
significance of water in the work, evoking grave connotations from
colonization to contemporary migration. The artist employs
photography to examine parallels between African and European
histories, investigating how images and objects can obscure power
differentials while connecting people across borders.
Aaron Jones, part of
Three Thirty, Malvern Public Library, 30 Sewells
Road, Scarborough
Toronto artist Aaron Jones, who works primarily in collage and
assemblage, will produce a new site-specific installation using
imagery found in the Malvern Public Library's holdings of the Rita
Cox Black and Caribbean Heritage book collection. This resource is
recognized as one of the most significant and comprehensive
collections of Black, Caribbean,
and Canadian literature in Canada.
Presented as vinyl prints installed in the windows of the library,
Jones' compelling assemblages fusing archival materials and images
will reveal this treasure trove of material that is publicly
available yet rarely seen. This installation is one part of the
three-site project Three Thirty
which investigates how power is exercised through the
construction, manipulation, and occupation of space, focusing on
youth and after-school culture in which young people assert their
place in their communities. Curated by Anique Jordan,
Ebti Nabag, part of Three Thirty, Lester B.
Pearson Collegiate Institute, Scarborough
Working closely with the students of Pearson Collegiate,
portrait photographer Ebti Nabag will create life-size portraits of
high school students, celebrating the gestures, body language,
fashion, and friendships enmeshed in the high school experience.
Built in the late 1970s, Pearson Collegiate was intentionally
designed, with its hallways, lighting, and classroom locations
replicating the "complete neighborhood" of the surrounding
community. Nabag's photographic mural installation presented on the
building's façade will externalize and commemorate the rich culture
that lives within, affirming the presence of youth within the
community. Curated by Anique
Jordan,
Vid Ingelevics &
Ryan Walker,
Framework, ESSROC Cement Silos & Villiers Street Median
Toronto-based artists
Vid Ingelevics and Ryan Walker's installation creates a visual
pathway with construction-grade wooden frames displaying
photographs taken through windows and apertures of recently
demolished buildings installed between two industrial sites in
Toronto's Port Lands,. The
installation route guides viewers along the grassy median on
Villiers Street, from the silos of the defunct ESSROC cement plant
on Cherry Street— now a heritage site—to the vicinity of a former
metal-recycling facility at 130 Commissioners Street, now an empty
field. The images incite contemplation on the transformation of the
area, while reflecting on how heritage designation is an inevitable
form of curation of a city's industrial past. Curated by
Chloe Catan.
Elizabeth Zvonar,
Milky Way Smiling (2018), Westin Harbour Castle
Conference Centre
Vancouver-based artist
Elizabeth Zvonar brings a heightened
view of the cosmos to the cityscape with her monumental image
Milky Way Smiling, in its second year on display. For this
project, Zvonar transformed a photograph from a popular science
magazine through digital collage and manipulation. With its band of
cosmic light gently curved upwards, her galaxy of shining stars
brings the metaphysical to passersby at street level, inciting
contemplation of humanity's position and future on a grand
scale.
About Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival
CONTACT fosters and celebrates the art and profession of
photography with its annual Festival in May and year-round
programming in the CONTACT Gallery in Toronto. CONTACT presents lens-based works by
acclaimed and emerging artists, documentary photographers, and
photojournalists from Canada and around the world. The curated
program of Primary Exhibitions (collaborations with major
museums, galleries, and artist-run centers), and Public
Installations (site-specific public art projects), are the
core of the Festival. These are cultivated through
partnerships, commissions, and new discoveries, framing the
cultural, social, and political events of our times. The
Featured and Open Exhibitions present a range of works by
local and international artists at leading galleries
and alternative spaces across the city. CONTACT also includes
a wide range of events including a book fair, lectures,
talks, panels, workshops, and symposia during the Festival and
hosts exhibitions and programs at its Gallery throughout the
year.
CONTACT, a not-for-profit organization founded in 1997, is
generously supported by Scotiabank, Scotia Wealth Management,
Nikon Canada, Pattison Outdoor
Advertising, Toronto Image Works, Transcontinental PLM,
3M Canada, BIG Digital, Waddington's Auctioneers and Appraisers, Four
By Eight Signs, Beyond Digital Imaging, Steam Whistle Brewing, Art
Toronto, The Gladstone Hotel, The Globe and
Mail, NOW Magazine, CBC Toronto, Hyperallergic
and Canadian Art.
CONTACT gratefully acknowledges the support of Celebrate
Ontario, Ontario Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport, Ontario
Arts Council, The Government of Ontario, Toronto Arts Council, Partners in
Art, Canada Council for the Arts, La Fondation Emmanuelle Gattuso,
R. Howard Webster Foundation, Hal Jackman Foundation, Mondrian
Fund, Istituto Italiano di Cultura, Goethe-Institut, Tourism
Toronto and all of their funders, donors, and programming
partners.
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