Articles tagged with: Toronto Photography

Scotiabank CONTACT Photo – Brothel Without Walls


Posted by Gloria on June 5th, 2010 - 1 Comment

 

A well valued visit to the Brothel Without Walls and Probing McLuhan exhibit proved it to be worthy of the primary exhibition status at the CONTACT Photography Festival. Image after image of bright and saturated coloured photos, intelligible and thought provoking quotes decorated the stark walls of the University of Toronto Centre (UTAC). By far my favourite gallery, inclusive of photography, written art, video, and an abundance of risqué all in one place. At first glance, much of the display doesn’t hint at anything other than PG13. A second look projects the true graphic nature of much of the exhibit.

 

 

In 1964 Marshall McLuhan wrote of the photograph as “the brothel without walls” just one year after creating a center for culture and technology at the University of Toronto, where he was a professor for over 30 years. McLuhan described photographs as “dreams that money can buy” which could be “hugged and thumbed more easily than public prostitutes.” The exhibition The Brothel Without Walls considers McLuhan’s metaphor within today’s global village, where it appears that the illusions images create are often preferable to reality.

 

McLuhan famously proclaimed, “the medium is the message”; in other words, the scope of a medium’s effect on human affairs is a result of how it functions as an extension of ourselves, and the change that it provokes. The advent of television and its subsequent domination over printed forms of communication, the shift from analogue to digital photography and the increasing popularity of image repositories on the Internet are all part of the pressures reshaping photography’s influence today.

 

Curated by Matthew Brower and Bonnie Rubenstein.

 

Presented in partnership with the University of Toronto Art Centre.

 

 

Hold any interest in quotable quotes? My suggestion is this one: “I may be wrong but I am never in doubt”. Pick yours.

 

Scotiabank CONTACT Photo – OCAD Thesis


Posted by Gloria on June 2nd, 2010 - Leave a Comment

 

A fanatic and advocate for graduate art (nothing like fresh talent), I did some moseying over to Yorkville to the Drabinsky Gallery, a two level wonder filled to the brim with photography and video (literally, every tip and turn of the gallery held incredible pieces). A backdrop?

 

This student-driven exhibition introduces an exciting group of talented emerging artists from the prestigious photography program of the Ontario College of Art & Design. This exhibition showcases a variety of photographic perspectives from the thesis work of these promising recent graduates.
Including work by:

 

Heather Appleby, Nasrin Arghavani Fard, Olivia Cataford, Sam Catalfamo, Caitlin Cox, Dianne Davis, Sherri Dawson, Alex Illich, Jeffrey Kum, Meryl McMaster, Amanda Mendham, Tue-Si Nguyen, Elena Prospero, Darren Rigo, Niki Ross, Danielle Schon, Logan Shishido, Salina Stange, Kate Subak, Brandon Titaro, Jesse Todd, Stella Uhm, Victoria Vitasek

 

Curated by Danielle Schön and Brandon Titaro

 

Nothing quite like the feeling of marveling at a work of art, and wondering what the photographer had done to accomplish the final product. The favourite? Several horizontal-inclined images with individuals overlaid on top of a homey backdrop (second image in thumbnails). A retro look with a fresh aesthetic. Did anyone else check out the OCAD show?

 

Scotiabank CONTACT Photo – Good News Bad News


Posted by Gloria on May 29th, 2010 - Leave a Comment

 

The Power Plant is something that I hold plenty near and dear to my heart – primarily due to the abundance of nostalgia that I’m overcome with when I step foot inside (back in the day when I had taken Contemporary Arts and Technologies as a summer school credit. Amazing).

 

The outdoor imagery of individuals created solely through newspapers was one to supply with a double take. The concept? How press, news, and gossip has managed to manifest itself into the creation of an individual identity.

 

“The 50 people in the photograph lack individuality, but as a group form a powerful entity. Breuning’s work suggests a new global personality is being created, but leaves it up to the viewer to decide if this is good or bad news.”

 

All the while when gazing at the piece, I had to nod internally in agreement. We’re consumed by news, rather than selectively consuming and scrutinizing the content that we surround ourselves with.

 

Any thoughts?

 

Scotiabank CONTACT Photo – To Be Determined


Posted by Gloria on May 22nd, 2010 - Leave a Comment

 

There’s something astoundingly pleasant about briskly strolling the lanes within the Distillery District. Better yet, doing it with purpose – the end destination being Sheridan Applied Arts’ Photo display at 55 Mill Street (Arta Gallery). Aside from mistakenly wedding crashing (nothing like an obtuse venture into a near-matrimonial union).

 

Despite the faulty visit, I was swept away by the beautiful imagery that was produced by the young talent that resides within Sheridan College (always without fail). They say that the display defies categorization – and I’m more than willing to embrace said descriptor. Though surprisingly slanted towards fashion, I more than enjoyed the array of product, still life, and classically cool photos. Most lovely – a pleasure to marvel.

 

Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival


Posted by Gloria on - 1 Comment

 

Not that I’m much opposed to the seemingly shocking photo above, but it’s the official image portraying the Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival that’s on in Toronto for the month of May (shame that I haven’t shared earlier – apologies)! Today’s a day booked with three visits to some great showings. Be sure to check out the schedule here and get to entertaining yourself (bring a bud along if you can).

 

See you out there!

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