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OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

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

May 1 – 31, 2010
  • CONTACT Gallery
Lauren Greenfield, Lily, 5, shops at Rachel London’s Garden, where Britney Spears has some of her clothes designed, Los Angeles, California
Jodi Bieber, Brenda, From the series Real Beauty
Zed Nelson, Ox and Angela, plastic surgeon and wife. Rio, Brazil. From the series Love Me

The enhanced human beauty the photographic image conveys inspires widespread feelings of inadequacy. In the unpublished text Touch and Go Photography (n.d.), Marshall McLuhan noted that “the skin-you-love-to-touch” has undergone a great change as a result of photography. He went on to describe how with the photo came “self-consumption” and “collective social trauma”. While McLuhan’s aphoristic pronouncements can be interpreted in a number of different ways, it seems clear that these ideas carry unnerving relevance to the work in this exhibition.

Selections from Zed Nelson’s documentary series Love Me (2004 – 09) look at the multi-billion dollar beauty industry, suggesting that self-consumption begins with modification of the body towards a standardized ideal. As Nelson notes, the “worldwide pursuit of body improvement has become like a new religion.” Lauren Greenfield’s ongoing work kids + consumerism (2004 –), presents an extended portrait of children who have only ever known an image-saturated world. Self-consumption for them is a matter of buying their way to a happiness defined by appearance and material goods. Photography, however, also has the power to counter the distortions in self-perception that the image industry creates. For her series Real Beauty (2007 – 08), Jodi Bieber worked with South African women to present images of beauty as it exists in real life. Collaborating with her subjects, Bieber photographed them at home in their underwear presenting themselves as empowered and comfortable in their own skin.

Bieber, Greenfield and Nelson are represented by Institute Artist Management, Los Angeles and London. 

Curated by Bonnie Rubenstein

Meera Margaret Singh Nightingale

3rd Floor
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Ukrainian Journey

Alliance Francaise De Toronto – Galerie Pierre-Leon
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Survey 2002 – 2007 / Homeless • Home / Familia Lavandria • Family Laundry

Angell Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Hermann & Audrey

Baitshop
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Glen Baxter Right To Play – Azerbaijan, 2009

Boss Store
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Finbarr O'Reilly Congo on the Wire

Canadian Broadcasting Centre – Barbara Frum Atrium
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Adam Harrison La Notte on a Laptop

Clark & Faria
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

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

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Thaddeus Holownia Silver Ghost

Corkin Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Jennifer Greenburg, Mary Farmilant, Patty Carroll REWind

The Department Inc.
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition You May Feel Something

The Drake Hotel
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Always Moving Forward: Contemporary African Photography from The Wedge Collection

Gallery 44
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Eric Baudelaire Unfinished Business

Gallery TPW
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Zach Slootsky Disposable Hold

Gladstone Hotel — 4th Floor
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Barbara Probst Exposures

Jessica Bradley Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

James Robert Durant Tropical Punch

Lausberg Contemporary
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Carlos Sanchez, Jason Sanchez CARLOS & JASON SANCHEZ

Nicholas Metivier Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Subjective

O’Born Contemporary
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

LOS SOÑADORS

Olga Korper Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Susana Reisman Selective Affinities

Peak Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

USER, Portraits of Crack Addicts

Pikto
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Penelope Umbrico Broken Sets / eBAY

p|m Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Guillaume Cailleau Creative Commons

Royal Ontario Museum – Spirit House
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition In Her Presence: Selected Photographs by Women from the Mira Godard Research Centre, Ryerson University

Ryerson Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Ruth Kaplan Some Kind of Divine

Ryerson Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Subjective

Spoke Club
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

The Pervasive View: Vintage Prints from the National Geographic Image Collection

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Miki Gingras, Patrick Dionne Humanidad - Working Childern

Toronto Image Works Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Sara Angelucci Lacrimosa

Wynick/Tuck Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Marina Black The VERSTS (Версты)

XEXE Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition
OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

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

May 1 – 31, 2010
  • CONTACT Gallery
Lauren Greenfield, Lily, 5, shops at Rachel London’s Garden, where Britney Spears has some of her clothes designed, Los Angeles, California
Jodi Bieber, Brenda, From the series Real Beauty
Zed Nelson, Ox and Angela, plastic surgeon and wife. Rio, Brazil. From the series Love Me

The enhanced human beauty the photographic image conveys inspires widespread feelings of inadequacy. In the unpublished text Touch and Go Photography (n.d.), Marshall McLuhan noted that “the skin-you-love-to-touch” has undergone a great change as a result of photography. He went on to describe how with the photo came “self-consumption” and “collective social trauma”. While McLuhan’s aphoristic pronouncements can be interpreted in a number of different ways, it seems clear that these ideas carry unnerving relevance to the work in this exhibition.

Selections from Zed Nelson’s documentary series Love Me (2004 – 09) look at the multi-billion dollar beauty industry, suggesting that self-consumption begins with modification of the body towards a standardized ideal. As Nelson notes, the “worldwide pursuit of body improvement has become like a new religion.” Lauren Greenfield’s ongoing work kids + consumerism (2004 –), presents an extended portrait of children who have only ever known an image-saturated world. Self-consumption for them is a matter of buying their way to a happiness defined by appearance and material goods. Photography, however, also has the power to counter the distortions in self-perception that the image industry creates. For her series Real Beauty (2007 – 08), Jodi Bieber worked with South African women to present images of beauty as it exists in real life. Collaborating with her subjects, Bieber photographed them at home in their underwear presenting themselves as empowered and comfortable in their own skin.

Bieber, Greenfield and Nelson are represented by Institute Artist Management, Los Angeles and London. 

Curated by Bonnie Rubenstein

Meera Margaret Singh Nightingale

3rd Floor
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Ukrainian Journey

Alliance Francaise De Toronto – Galerie Pierre-Leon
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Survey 2002 – 2007 / Homeless • Home / Familia Lavandria • Family Laundry

Angell Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Hermann & Audrey

Baitshop
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Glen Baxter Right To Play – Azerbaijan, 2009

Boss Store
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Finbarr O'Reilly Congo on the Wire

Canadian Broadcasting Centre – Barbara Frum Atrium
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Adam Harrison La Notte on a Laptop

Clark & Faria
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

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

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Thaddeus Holownia Silver Ghost

Corkin Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Jennifer Greenburg, Mary Farmilant, Patty Carroll REWind

The Department Inc.
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition You May Feel Something

The Drake Hotel
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Always Moving Forward: Contemporary African Photography from The Wedge Collection

Gallery 44
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Eric Baudelaire Unfinished Business

Gallery TPW
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Zach Slootsky Disposable Hold

Gladstone Hotel — 4th Floor
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Barbara Probst Exposures

Jessica Bradley Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

James Robert Durant Tropical Punch

Lausberg Contemporary
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Carlos Sanchez, Jason Sanchez CARLOS & JASON SANCHEZ

Nicholas Metivier Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Subjective

O’Born Contemporary
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

LOS SOÑADORS

Olga Korper Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Susana Reisman Selective Affinities

Peak Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

USER, Portraits of Crack Addicts

Pikto
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Penelope Umbrico Broken Sets / eBAY

p|m Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Guillaume Cailleau Creative Commons

Royal Ontario Museum – Spirit House
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition In Her Presence: Selected Photographs by Women from the Mira Godard Research Centre, Ryerson University

Ryerson Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Ruth Kaplan Some Kind of Divine

Ryerson Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Group Exhibition Subjective

Spoke Club
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

The Pervasive View: Vintage Prints from the National Geographic Image Collection

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Miki Gingras, Patrick Dionne Humanidad - Working Childern

Toronto Image Works Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Sara Angelucci Lacrimosa

Wynick/Tuck Gallery
Archives 2010 featured exhibition

Marina Black The VERSTS (Версты)

XEXE Gallery
Archives 2010 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.