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CONTACT Gallery

  • 2025
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  • 2018
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  • 2013
  • 2012
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  • 2009
  • 2008
Maxim Dondyuk<br><em>White Series: Meditations on War</em>

Maxim Dondyuk White Series: Meditations on War

Oct 15 – Dec 19, 2025
10x10 Photobooks<br><em>Flashpoint! Protest Photography in Print</em>

10x10 Photobooks Flashpoint! Protest Photography in Print

May 1 – Jun 21, 2025
L. M. Ramsey<br><em>DAMNED</em>

L. M. Ramsey DAMNED

May 1 – Jun 15, 2024
Kayla Ward<br><em>I Am Easy To Find</em>

Kayla Ward I Am Easy To Find

Nov 7 – Dec 9, 2023
Maggie Groat<br><em>DOUBLE PENDULUM</em>

Maggie Groat DOUBLE PENDULUM

May 3 – Jun 17, 2023
Group Exhibition<br><em>Land of None / Land of Us</em>

Group Exhibition Land of None / Land of Us

Oct 1 – 28, 2022
Tyler Mitchell<br><em>Cultural Turns: CONTACT Gallery</em>

Tyler Mitchell Cultural Turns: CONTACT Gallery

Apr 28 – Jun 30, 2022
Laia Abril<br><em>A History of Misogyny Chapter Two: On Rape</em>

Laia Abril A History of Misogyny Chapter Two: On Rape

Sep 24 – Dec 17, 2021
Luis Mora<br><em>Say it with Flowers</em>

Luis Mora Say it with Flowers

Oct 17 – Nov 30, 2019
Carrie Mae Weems<br><em>Blending the Blues</em>

Carrie Mae Weems Blending the Blues

May 1 – Jul 26, 2019
Group Exhibition<br><em>Digital Animalities</em>

Group Exhibition Digital Animalities

Nov 1 – Dec 15, 2018
Anthony Gebrehiwot (with Bárbara Wagner and Benjamin De Burca)<br><em>Communities of Love</em>

Anthony Gebrehiwot (with Bárbara Wagner and Benjamin De Burca) Communities of Love

Sep 20 – Oct 20, 2018
Felicity Hammond<br><em>Arcades</em>

Felicity Hammond Arcades

Apr 28 – Jun 16, 2018
Brendan George Ko<br><em>Moemoeā</em>

Brendan George Ko Moemoeā

Jan 11 – Mar 10, 2018
Group Exhibition<br><em>An unassailable and monumental dignity</em>

Group Exhibition An unassailable and monumental dignity

Sep 21 – Nov 18, 2017
Petra Collins<br><em>Pacifier</em>

Petra Collins Pacifier

Apr 29 – Jun 24, 2017
Nathaniel Brunt<br><em>#shaheed</em>

Nathaniel Brunt #shaheed

Feb 10 – Mar 25, 2017
Ana Mendieta<br><em>Siluetas</em>

Ana Mendieta Siluetas

Sep 8 – Oct 29, 2016
Christian Patterson<br><em>Bottom of the Lake</em>

Christian Patterson Bottom of the Lake

Apr 28 – Jun 30, 2016
<em>The 2015 Paris Photo – Aperture Foundation PhotoBook Awards Shortlist</em>

The 2015 Paris Photo – Aperture Foundation PhotoBook Awards Shortlist

Apr 28 – May 28, 2016
Josée Pedneault<br><em>Nævus</em>

Josée Pedneault Nævus

Nov 19, 2015 – Jan 23, 2016
Cristina de Middel<br><em>This Is What Hatred Did</em>

Cristina de Middel This Is What Hatred Did

Sep 24 – Nov 7, 2015
Lorenzo Vitturi<br><em>Dalston Anatomy</em>

Lorenzo Vitturi Dalston Anatomy

May 2 – Jun 27, 2015
Michel Huneault<br><em>La longue nuit de Mégantic</em>

Michel Huneault La longue nuit de Mégantic

Jan 29 – Mar 13, 2015
Johan Hallberg-Campbell<br><em>Nzirambi</em>

Johan Hallberg-Campbell Nzirambi

Nov 22 – Dec 20, 2014
Rob Hornstra, Arnold van Bruggen<br><em>The Sochi Project: An Atlas of War and Tourism in the Caucasus</em>

Rob Hornstra, Arnold van Bruggen The Sochi Project: An Atlas of War and Tourism in the Caucasus

May 1 – 31, 2014
Ian Willms<br><em>The Road to Nowhere</em>

Ian Willms The Road to Nowhere

Jan 23 – Mar 7, 2014
Erik Kessels<br><em>24hrs in Photography</em>

Erik Kessels 24hrs in Photography

May 1 – Jun 15, 2013
Guillaume Simoneau<br><em>Love and War</em>

Guillaume Simoneau Love and War

Jan 17 – Mar 3, 2013
Luther Price<br><em>Number 9 and Number 9 II</em>

Luther Price Number 9 and Number 9 II

Sep 6 – Oct 6, 2012
<em>Upturned Starry Sky</em>

Upturned Starry Sky

Apr 28 – Jun 15, 2012
Alex Kisilevich<br><em>Alex Kisilevich</em>

Alex Kisilevich Alex Kisilevich

Feb 23 – Mar 24, 2012
Jonathan Taggart<br><em>The Friction of Distance: The Lillooet River Valley</em>

Jonathan Taggart The Friction of Distance: The Lillooet River Valley

Jan 19 – Feb 16, 2012
Jesse Louttit<br><em>No Roads</em>

Jesse Louttit No Roads

Jan 19 – Feb 16, 2012
Group Exhibition<br><em>Medium_Massage 2.0 :: an infinite inventory</em>

Group Exhibition Medium_Massage 2.0 :: an infinite inventory

Nov 5 – Dec 3, 2011
Lucas Blalock, Jessica Eaton<br><em>The Whole is Greater than the Sum of the Parts</em>

Lucas Blalock, Jessica Eaton The Whole is Greater than the Sum of the Parts

May 1 – 31, 2011
Zed Nelson, Jodi Bieber, Lauren Greenfield<br><em>The Skin you Love to Touch</em>

Zed Nelson, Jodi Bieber, Lauren Greenfield The Skin you Love to Touch

May 1 – 31, 2010
Group Exhibition<br><em>MAGNUM PHOTOS: STATES OF CONFLICT</em>

Group Exhibition MAGNUM PHOTOS: STATES OF CONFLICT

May 1 – 31, 2009
<em>Magnum Workshop Exhibition</em>

Magnum Workshop Exhibition

May 10 – Jun 10, 2008
205-80 Spadina Ave, Toronto
Opens 11AM • Fully Accessible
Wed-Fri
11AM–5PM
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416 539 9595 info@contactphoto.com

CONTACT’s headquarters is a community hub promoting critical photographic enquiry and appreciation. Festival and off-season programming includes curated exhibitions in the Gallery, public artist talks and workshops, and The Photobook Lab, CONTACT’s bookstore and reading room.

Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Felicity Hammond Arcades

April 28 – June 16, 2018
  • CONTACT Gallery
Felicity Hammond, Arcades, Exhibition at CONTACT Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Felicity Hammond, Arcades, Exhibition at CONTACT Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Felicity Hammond, Fragment 05, from Arcades, 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Felicity Hammond, Fragment 04, from Arcades, 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Felicity Hammond, Arcades, Exhibition at CONTACT Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Felicity Hammond, Arcades, Exhibition at CONTACT Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Felicity Hammond, Arcades, Exhibition at CONTACT Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Felicity Hammond, Arcades, Exhibition at CONTACT Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Felicity Hammond, Arcades, Exhibition at CONTACT Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Felicity Hammond, Arcades, Exhibition at CONTACT Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.

The 21st century has seen a dramatic shift in the way that architecture is experienced. Advancements in technology have enabled architectural representation to visualize the built environment through the lens of the virtual, generating digital renderings that depict both proposed and already-built structures as future projections. Through her new site-specific project Arcades, which includes an exhibition in the CONTACT gallery and a mural on the north façade of the building at 460 King St W, London-based artist Felicity Hammond considers how this camera-less mode of representing architecture implies a virtual archaeology, as existing buildings are reimagined through image-generating software. Vistas of new cityscapes appear to excavate the past in order to renew the present, and our experience of architecture in the physical realm becomes shadowed by such images. Her project considers the timescale at play, where capital is held in the virtual depiction of space rather than the physical structure itself, and where properties are bought and sold based solely on their digital representations.

For Post Production (2018), Hammond has collaged architectural renderings and photographs she has taken of Toronto’s skyline. Her layers of images reference the methods that are used to imagine new buildings, and the tendency to build on top of industrial properties whose original function is now obsolete. As a large-format mural positioned on the façade of a heritage building that has housed many different functions over the years, her work creates a dialogue with the surrounding developments, employing their visualization aesthetics to collapse and confuse the space between the real and the virtual. Simulated landscapes and vistas of new developments dominate the city scape, providing a window into the digital realm—not to be confused with the physical reality that it points toward.

Hammond’s installation in the gallery expands on these notions and focuses on the materials themselves through the actual construction of an imagined archaeological site. Rather than the surfaces traditionally associated with ruins and excavation sites, Hammond’s structure is clean and sleek, much like the historical buildings that are reconceived as new urban developments. Working with fragments of images, clay and concrete, interior surfaces, and malleable acrylic sheets, she layers and combines sculpture and photography. The individual components of Arcades are titled numerically, as if catalogued from a single excavation. Fragment 04 (2018) fuses raw material with rendered plant life and is photographed in a way that confuses reflection and object, recalling the glass frontages of buildings. The installation speaks to the architecture left behind in a period of vast urban growth as a result of both growing technologies and declining industries, and considers the urban homogenization that propels the construction of contemporary cities, paying close attention to the generic materials and motifs used to advertise future sites.

Hammond alludes to Walter Benjamin’s Arcades Project, and the concept of the archaeological arcade as something that is uncovered, or viewed as remains. Centred around the 19th-century rows of arcade shops in Paris, Benjamin’s monolithic text considers the commodification of things in the modern age and the notion of lost time embedded in displays of ephemera. The title also extends to the arcade as a place of computer gaming; a space for science fiction and fantasy. Within Hammond’s Arcades, material representations of architectural structures and substances are put on display, and appear to have been excavated before they have been built. Throughout her work, the past and future collide as the ruins and technologies of the built environment are entwined.

Curated by Bonnie Rubenstein

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CONTACT is a Toronto based non-profit organization dedicated to exhibiting, analyzing and celebrating photography and lens-based media through an annual festival that takes place every May.

Land Acknowledgement

CONTACT acknowledges that we live and work on the traditional territory of many nations, including the Mississaugas of the Credit, the Anishnabeg, the Chippewa, the Haudenosaunee and the Wendat peoples, and that this land is now home to many diverse First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples. CONTACT is committed to promoting Indigenous voices; to generating spaces for ongoing, meaningful, and creative Indigenous-settler dialogue; and to continuous learning about our place on this land.

Anti-Oppression

CONTACT is committed to the ongoing development of meaningful anti-oppressive practice on all levels. This includes our continuing goal of augmenting and maintaining diverse representation, foregrounding varied and under-represented voices and perspectives via our public platform (the Festival and all related programs), as well as continually examining the structures of power and decision-making within the organization itself. We aim to actively learn, grow, and embody the values of inclusivity, equity, and accessibility in all facets of the institution, as an ever-evolving process.