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OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition MAGNUM PHOTOS: STATES OF CONFLICT

May 1 – 31, 2009
  • CONTACT Gallery
© Stuart Franklin / Magnum Photos, China, 1989

Magnum Photos: States of Conflict
examines some of the watershed
moments of civic transformation over
the last 40 years. Since 1948, Magnum
photographers have been depicting
conflict around the world, and the collective’s
force reflects photography’s
enduring power as a tool for change.
The images in this exhibition reveal
the intrepid persistence and unique
personal vision of their makers.

Bruno Barbey, a Frenchman born
in Morocco, captured the turbulence
of the May 1968 student protests and
general strikes in Paris that led to the
collapse of French president Charles
de Gaulle’s government. Barbey photographed
the riots, occupations and
street battles to communicate the
urgency of this seminal point in time.

In 1979, American photographer
Susan Meiselas documented the
Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua.
Twenty-five years later, she returned
to the region with murals of images
she made during the insurrection and
installed them in the public spaces
where the photographs were originally
taken. Meiselas’ photographs capture
the sites of collective remembrance she
created in her project Reframing History.

Twenty years after Beijing’s
Tiananmen Square protests in 1989,
Englishman Stuart Franklin’s iconic
images are symbols of defiance and
aggression. Franklin’s celebrated
photograph of the infamous man
standing before advancing tanks is
among the world’s most recognizable
photographs. His images encapsulate
the magnitude of an insurrection that
shocked the world.

Canada’s Larry Towell shows black-and-white
photographs that depict
anger and fear, aggression and assault.
Reminiscent of his images of conflict
in the West Bank, these images were
captured while dodging hurtling rocks
and flying tear gas canisters. Perhaps
surprisingly, they portray the police
and RCMP riot police confronting
demonstrators opposed to the expansion
of the North American Free Trade
Agreement in Quebec City, 2001.

Originally from Germany, Thomas
Dworzak has documented the conflict
in Chechnya, the crisis in Kosovo, the
war in Macedonia and the revolutions
in the former Soviet republics
of Georgia, Kyrgyzstan and Ukraine,
among many other tragic events.
Unified by Dworzak’s finely tuned
sense of colour, his photographs
captured around the world possess
an overwhelming ability to illuminate
humanity in states of conflict.


As an extension of the focus on conflict
through still images, a series of short
documentary films by Magnum in
Motion – from photographers’ behind-the-
scenes, first-hand accounts to thematic
essays – further convey the global
experiences of the agency’s members.
Reflecting complex histories, all of the
images in this exhibition inform the
way we see our evolving world.


Thomas Dworzak’s work is presented in association
with the
Goethe-Institut Toronto.

Geoffrey Pugen Another Side of You

Angell Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Bettina Hoffmann Emile

Art Gallery of Ontario – Young Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

James Nizam Anteroom

Birch Libralato
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Paul de Guzman Parasite Paradise: 1999-2009

Birch Libralato
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition awashawave

Blackwood Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Jeff Harris 3,653 Self Portraits

Brookfield Place
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Eli Palmer, Mike Robinson First Revolution, 1839: Daguerreotypes And The Intimate Gaze

Campbell House Museum
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Eldon Garnet DOMINION and CATEGORIES OF DISAPPEARANCE

Christopher Cutts Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition MAGNUM PHOTOS: STATES OF CONFLICT

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Susan Dobson Retail

The Department Inc.
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Its Time

The Drake Hotel
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Looking Forward, Looking Back

Gallery 44
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition IN MAY (AFTER OCTOBER)

Gallery TPW
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Hank Willis Thomas Hank Willis Thomas: Visionary Delusions

Georgia Scherman Projects
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Still Motions

Gladstone Hotel 3 & 4 Floor
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Jennifer Long Swallowing Ice

Harbourfront Centre
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Close Distance

Harbourfront Centre
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Peter Sibbald Elegy For a Stolen Land

Harbourfront Centre, Architecture Space, York Quay Centre
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

April Hickox Gather

Harbourfront Centre, Service Canada Window, York Quay Centre
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

M + M Good Timing / Bad Timing

Lausberg Contemporary
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Roberto Pellegrinuzzi Nature Morte

Leo Kamen Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Yam Lau Hutong House

Leo Kamen Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Jeff Bark Jeff Bark

Nicholas Metivier Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Rafael Goldchain

O’Born Contemporary
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Lynne Cohen Lynne Cohen

Olga Korper Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Andrew Wright Still Water

Peak Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Donald Weber The Drunken Bride, Russia Unveiled

Pikto
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Jonathan Taggart Salt and Earth

Ryerson Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Alison Rossiter Lament

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Gerry Deiter Give Peace a Chance

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Sanaz Mazinani Iran Revisited

Toronto Image Works Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Sara Angelucci Regular 8

Wynick/Tuck Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition
OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition MAGNUM PHOTOS: STATES OF CONFLICT

May 1 – 31, 2009
  • CONTACT Gallery
© Stuart Franklin / Magnum Photos, China, 1989

Magnum Photos: States of Conflict
examines some of the watershed
moments of civic transformation over
the last 40 years. Since 1948, Magnum
photographers have been depicting
conflict around the world, and the collective’s
force reflects photography’s
enduring power as a tool for change.
The images in this exhibition reveal
the intrepid persistence and unique
personal vision of their makers.

Bruno Barbey, a Frenchman born
in Morocco, captured the turbulence
of the May 1968 student protests and
general strikes in Paris that led to the
collapse of French president Charles
de Gaulle’s government. Barbey photographed
the riots, occupations and
street battles to communicate the
urgency of this seminal point in time.

In 1979, American photographer
Susan Meiselas documented the
Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua.
Twenty-five years later, she returned
to the region with murals of images
she made during the insurrection and
installed them in the public spaces
where the photographs were originally
taken. Meiselas’ photographs capture
the sites of collective remembrance she
created in her project Reframing History.

Twenty years after Beijing’s
Tiananmen Square protests in 1989,
Englishman Stuart Franklin’s iconic
images are symbols of defiance and
aggression. Franklin’s celebrated
photograph of the infamous man
standing before advancing tanks is
among the world’s most recognizable
photographs. His images encapsulate
the magnitude of an insurrection that
shocked the world.

Canada’s Larry Towell shows black-and-white
photographs that depict
anger and fear, aggression and assault.
Reminiscent of his images of conflict
in the West Bank, these images were
captured while dodging hurtling rocks
and flying tear gas canisters. Perhaps
surprisingly, they portray the police
and RCMP riot police confronting
demonstrators opposed to the expansion
of the North American Free Trade
Agreement in Quebec City, 2001.

Originally from Germany, Thomas
Dworzak has documented the conflict
in Chechnya, the crisis in Kosovo, the
war in Macedonia and the revolutions
in the former Soviet republics
of Georgia, Kyrgyzstan and Ukraine,
among many other tragic events.
Unified by Dworzak’s finely tuned
sense of colour, his photographs
captured around the world possess
an overwhelming ability to illuminate
humanity in states of conflict.


As an extension of the focus on conflict
through still images, a series of short
documentary films by Magnum in
Motion – from photographers’ behind-the-
scenes, first-hand accounts to thematic
essays – further convey the global
experiences of the agency’s members.
Reflecting complex histories, all of the
images in this exhibition inform the
way we see our evolving world.


Thomas Dworzak’s work is presented in association
with the
Goethe-Institut Toronto.

Geoffrey Pugen Another Side of You

Angell Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Bettina Hoffmann Emile

Art Gallery of Ontario – Young Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

James Nizam Anteroom

Birch Libralato
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Paul de Guzman Parasite Paradise: 1999-2009

Birch Libralato
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition awashawave

Blackwood Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Jeff Harris 3,653 Self Portraits

Brookfield Place
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Eli Palmer, Mike Robinson First Revolution, 1839: Daguerreotypes And The Intimate Gaze

Campbell House Museum
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Eldon Garnet DOMINION and CATEGORIES OF DISAPPEARANCE

Christopher Cutts Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition MAGNUM PHOTOS: STATES OF CONFLICT

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Susan Dobson Retail

The Department Inc.
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Its Time

The Drake Hotel
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Looking Forward, Looking Back

Gallery 44
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition IN MAY (AFTER OCTOBER)

Gallery TPW
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Hank Willis Thomas Hank Willis Thomas: Visionary Delusions

Georgia Scherman Projects
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Still Motions

Gladstone Hotel 3 & 4 Floor
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Jennifer Long Swallowing Ice

Harbourfront Centre
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Close Distance

Harbourfront Centre
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Peter Sibbald Elegy For a Stolen Land

Harbourfront Centre, Architecture Space, York Quay Centre
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

April Hickox Gather

Harbourfront Centre, Service Canada Window, York Quay Centre
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

M + M Good Timing / Bad Timing

Lausberg Contemporary
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Roberto Pellegrinuzzi Nature Morte

Leo Kamen Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Yam Lau Hutong House

Leo Kamen Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Jeff Bark Jeff Bark

Nicholas Metivier Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Rafael Goldchain

O’Born Contemporary
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Lynne Cohen Lynne Cohen

Olga Korper Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Andrew Wright Still Water

Peak Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Donald Weber The Drunken Bride, Russia Unveiled

Pikto
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Jonathan Taggart Salt and Earth

Ryerson Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Alison Rossiter Lament

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Gerry Deiter Give Peace a Chance

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Sanaz Mazinani Iran Revisited

Toronto Image Works Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

Sara Angelucci Regular 8

Wynick/Tuck Gallery
Archives 2009 featured exhibition

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Toronto, M5V 2J4
Canada

416 539 9595 info @ contactphoto.com Instagram

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.