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OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen Call
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

EMPTY LOTS / ANIKORA-SEIFUKU

May 1 – 31, 2008
  • Corkin Gallery
Ryoko Suzuki, Anikora-Seifuku no. 2, 2007

The highly constructed images of Ryoko Suzuki’s
series Anikora-Seifuku depict popular,
life-like
Japanese dolls, akin to Barbie dolls, with the
artist’s face superimposed. The effect is an
uncanny critique of the “appropriate” social roles
traditionally designated for women living in
Japan. Reminiscent of animé, the distorted,
unrealistic dolls express the notion of the
supercute, or ‘kawaii’, an idea that confronts the
cute but often highly erotic portrayal of women
in Japanese comics, advertising and toys, which
has been prevalent since the early 1900’s.
Suzuki’s work situates her practice as a feminist
response to these conventional representations;
she creates a fictional self-portrait that
simultaneously highlights the prevalent
divisions of gender in contemporary Japanese culture.


In his recent series Empty Lots, American-born
photographer Chad Gerth depicts images of
unproductive, abandoned land in urban Chicago.
Such places are familiar to any urban dweller
insofar as they depict the slow process of nature
taking back the built, concrete environment.
Photographed from a vertiginous viewpoint, Gerth
transforms the cityscape into a visual plane of
shape and colour, removing the familiarity of
these common lots. This series not only documents
a kind of history – the ever changing face of
urban development – it also slyly suggests that
the built, concrete world of human engagement
will eventually fall to the unrelenting forces of
nature.

Sommes-nous? Tendance Floue

Alliance Française Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Family Album

Angell Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Confabulation / Shanghai Dragon

Birch Libralato
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Gun Control

Brayham Contemporary Art
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Photo Narratives: Remembering the 20th Century

Brookfield Place
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Magnum Workshop Exhibition

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

EMPTY LOTS / ANIKORA-SEIFUKU

Corkin Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Normal Work

Gallery 44
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

100 Stories About My Grandmother

Gallery TPW
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

A New City / Here

Gladstone Hotel – 3rd & 4th Fl
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

I am Elvis

Gladstone Hotel – Art Bar
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

PORTFOLIO REVIEWS EXHIBITION

HP Print Centre
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Drawn from Memory

Monte Clark Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

The Entire City Project

Nicholas Metivier Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Silent Warriors

Odon Wagner Contemporary
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Aufhebung

Olga Korper Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Parking on Personal Webcams

Peak Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

The Uchronie Fragments

Pikto
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

The Gaza Strip: When Brothers Fight

Ryerson Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Dream City of America

Scotiabank- Main Banking Hall – Scotia Plaza
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Don't Mess with the Pediment

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Contamination

Susan Hobbs Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Srebrenica: The Absence

Toronto Image Works Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Accumulated Histories / Disturbance

York Quay Centre
Archives 2008 featured exhibition
OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen Call
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

EMPTY LOTS / ANIKORA-SEIFUKU

May 1 – 31, 2008
  • Corkin Gallery
Ryoko Suzuki, Anikora-Seifuku no. 2, 2007

The highly constructed images of Ryoko Suzuki’s
series Anikora-Seifuku depict popular,
life-like
Japanese dolls, akin to Barbie dolls, with the
artist’s face superimposed. The effect is an
uncanny critique of the “appropriate” social roles
traditionally designated for women living in
Japan. Reminiscent of animé, the distorted,
unrealistic dolls express the notion of the
supercute, or ‘kawaii’, an idea that confronts the
cute but often highly erotic portrayal of women
in Japanese comics, advertising and toys, which
has been prevalent since the early 1900’s.
Suzuki’s work situates her practice as a feminist
response to these conventional representations;
she creates a fictional self-portrait that
simultaneously highlights the prevalent
divisions of gender in contemporary Japanese culture.


In his recent series Empty Lots, American-born
photographer Chad Gerth depicts images of
unproductive, abandoned land in urban Chicago.
Such places are familiar to any urban dweller
insofar as they depict the slow process of nature
taking back the built, concrete environment.
Photographed from a vertiginous viewpoint, Gerth
transforms the cityscape into a visual plane of
shape and colour, removing the familiarity of
these common lots. This series not only documents
a kind of history – the ever changing face of
urban development – it also slyly suggests that
the built, concrete world of human engagement
will eventually fall to the unrelenting forces of
nature.

Sommes-nous? Tendance Floue

Alliance Française Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Family Album

Angell Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Confabulation / Shanghai Dragon

Birch Libralato
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Gun Control

Brayham Contemporary Art
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Photo Narratives: Remembering the 20th Century

Brookfield Place
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Magnum Workshop Exhibition

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

EMPTY LOTS / ANIKORA-SEIFUKU

Corkin Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Normal Work

Gallery 44
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

100 Stories About My Grandmother

Gallery TPW
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

A New City / Here

Gladstone Hotel – 3rd & 4th Fl
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

I am Elvis

Gladstone Hotel – Art Bar
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

PORTFOLIO REVIEWS EXHIBITION

HP Print Centre
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Drawn from Memory

Monte Clark Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

The Entire City Project

Nicholas Metivier Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Silent Warriors

Odon Wagner Contemporary
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Aufhebung

Olga Korper Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Parking on Personal Webcams

Peak Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

The Uchronie Fragments

Pikto
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

The Gaza Strip: When Brothers Fight

Ryerson Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Dream City of America

Scotiabank- Main Banking Hall – Scotia Plaza
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Don't Mess with the Pediment

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Contamination

Susan Hobbs Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Srebrenica: The Absence

Toronto Image Works Gallery
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

Accumulated Histories / Disturbance

York Quay Centre
Archives 2008 featured exhibition

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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.