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  • Core
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Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Christian Patterson Bottom of the Lake

April 28 – June 30, 2016
  • CONTACT Gallery
Christian Patterson, Fond du Lac (Blue Lake)
Installation view of Christian Patterson, Bottom of the Lake
Christian Patterson, Telephone Deconstruction #1
Installation view of Christian Patterson, Bottom of the Lake
Christian Patterson, X1
Installation view of Christian Patterson, Bottom of the Lake

Bottom of the Lake is an elusive exploration of New York artist Christian Patterson’s hometown of Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. Less interested in a conventional portrait of his youth than using the subject to consider ways of looking and understanding, Patterson takes a semiotic approach to delve into ideas of memory, place, and identity. Employing documentary strategies seen in his early work, such as Redheaded Peckerwood (2005 – 2011), Patterson’s investigative style questions what is fact and fiction, encouraging an interpretive reading of the work.

Bottom of the Lake originates as an artist book—a facsimile of his family’s personal copy of the 1973 Fond du Lac telephone directory. The directory functions as a historical document encapsulating the essence of a small, Midwest American town at a particular point in time. For his book, Patterson built upon the directory’s pages by inserting photographs, text, and drawings, adding to the doodles and commentary interspersed throughout the original. The exhibition expands on these visual strategies and contains selected pages from the publication, installations, and found objects, presenting an abstract depiction of place and cryptic clues about the artist’s past. For instance, the original cover of the directory, an idyllic landscape, is displayed in the gallery as a large-scale colour mural titled Fond du Lac (Blue Lake) (2013), setting the stage for Patterson’s narrative about this small town. In contrast, forensically charged black-and-white photographs made by the artist depict present-day views of the town’s harsh winter climate, including detailed photographs of wood, stone, water, and snow. The exhibition has little direct reference to the personal and in fact is absent of people, except in the case of Self Portrait (Old Man) (2015), a black-and-white photograph of a man holding a camera; the title suggests the man could be the artist, if he had stayed in his hometown.

Throughout the exhibition, a number of leitmotifs are deconstructed in a variety of unexpected ways. For example, Patterson presents the town’s iconic lighthouse in numerous incarnations: as a picturesque postcard, as a tightly focused photograph of an interior view of the structure, and as a physical installation of plywood and blue beams in the middle of the gallery. A blue rotary telephone is shown in gradual stages of fragmentation in a series of photographs, and displayed in its entirety in Telephone Deconstruction #1 (2014). An interactive installation invites the viewer to listen to a collection of scripted, archival, and field recordings, reinforcing the nuances of fact and fiction and the hazy recollection of memory. Patterson’s playful iterations serve to question the nature of representation and how objects function as signs.

Bottom of the Lake is a multi-faceted examination of identity and place, offering clues and visual threads to trigger the viewer’s imagination. A telling statement written on a found matchbook reads, “SEEING Change Through TIME,” further emphasizing the act of looking and the formation of personal memory and collective history of this small town of Fond du Lac.

 

Organized by CONTACT

Curated by Tara Smith

Karl Beveridge, Carole Condé Public Exposures: The Art-Activism of Condé + Beveridge (1976-2016)

A Space Gallery, Prefix ICA, Urbanspace Gallery, Trinity Square Video, and YYZ Artists’ Outlet
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Public Studio What We Lose in Metrics

AGYU
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Alec Soth Hypnagogia

Arsenal Contemporary
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition Outsiders: American Photography and Film, 1950s - 1980s

Art Gallery of Ontario
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Thomas Ruff Object Relations

Art Gallery of Ontario
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Counterpoints: Photography Through the Lens of Toronto Collections

Art Museum at the University of Toronto
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

James Barnor Ever Young

BAND Gallery
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Christian Patterson Bottom of the Lake

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Kotama Bouabane We’ll get there fast and then we’ll take it slow

Gallery 44
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Oliver Husain Isla Santa Maria 3D

Gallery TPW
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Angela Grauerholz Scotiabank Photography Award

The Image Centre
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Annie MacDonell Holding Still // Holding Together

The Image Centre
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition some landings/certains débarquements

John B. Aird Gallery
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Raymond Boisjoly Over a Distance Between One and Many

Koffler Gallery
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Sarah Anne Johnson Field Trip

The McMichael
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Edgar Leciejewski Aves

North York Centre
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Aleksandra Domanović Mother of This Domain

Oakville Galleries at Centennial Square
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Corin Sworn Corin Sworn

Oakville Galleries in Gairloch Gardens
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Cutline: The Photography Archives of The Globe and Mail

The Old Press Hall, The Globe and Mail
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Rodney Graham Jack of All Trades

Prefix ICA
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition A City Transformed: Images of Istanbul Then and Now

Archives 2016 primary exhibition
OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Christian Patterson Bottom of the Lake

April 28 – June 30, 2016
  • CONTACT Gallery
Christian Patterson, Fond du Lac (Blue Lake)
Installation view of Christian Patterson, Bottom of the Lake
Christian Patterson, Telephone Deconstruction #1
Installation view of Christian Patterson, Bottom of the Lake
Christian Patterson, X1
Installation view of Christian Patterson, Bottom of the Lake

Bottom of the Lake is an elusive exploration of New York artist Christian Patterson’s hometown of Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. Less interested in a conventional portrait of his youth than using the subject to consider ways of looking and understanding, Patterson takes a semiotic approach to delve into ideas of memory, place, and identity. Employing documentary strategies seen in his early work, such as Redheaded Peckerwood (2005 – 2011), Patterson’s investigative style questions what is fact and fiction, encouraging an interpretive reading of the work.

Bottom of the Lake originates as an artist book—a facsimile of his family’s personal copy of the 1973 Fond du Lac telephone directory. The directory functions as a historical document encapsulating the essence of a small, Midwest American town at a particular point in time. For his book, Patterson built upon the directory’s pages by inserting photographs, text, and drawings, adding to the doodles and commentary interspersed throughout the original. The exhibition expands on these visual strategies and contains selected pages from the publication, installations, and found objects, presenting an abstract depiction of place and cryptic clues about the artist’s past. For instance, the original cover of the directory, an idyllic landscape, is displayed in the gallery as a large-scale colour mural titled Fond du Lac (Blue Lake) (2013), setting the stage for Patterson’s narrative about this small town. In contrast, forensically charged black-and-white photographs made by the artist depict present-day views of the town’s harsh winter climate, including detailed photographs of wood, stone, water, and snow. The exhibition has little direct reference to the personal and in fact is absent of people, except in the case of Self Portrait (Old Man) (2015), a black-and-white photograph of a man holding a camera; the title suggests the man could be the artist, if he had stayed in his hometown.

Throughout the exhibition, a number of leitmotifs are deconstructed in a variety of unexpected ways. For example, Patterson presents the town’s iconic lighthouse in numerous incarnations: as a picturesque postcard, as a tightly focused photograph of an interior view of the structure, and as a physical installation of plywood and blue beams in the middle of the gallery. A blue rotary telephone is shown in gradual stages of fragmentation in a series of photographs, and displayed in its entirety in Telephone Deconstruction #1 (2014). An interactive installation invites the viewer to listen to a collection of scripted, archival, and field recordings, reinforcing the nuances of fact and fiction and the hazy recollection of memory. Patterson’s playful iterations serve to question the nature of representation and how objects function as signs.

Bottom of the Lake is a multi-faceted examination of identity and place, offering clues and visual threads to trigger the viewer’s imagination. A telling statement written on a found matchbook reads, “SEEING Change Through TIME,” further emphasizing the act of looking and the formation of personal memory and collective history of this small town of Fond du Lac.

 

Organized by CONTACT

Curated by Tara Smith

Karl Beveridge, Carole Condé Public Exposures: The Art-Activism of Condé + Beveridge (1976-2016)

A Space Gallery, Prefix ICA, Urbanspace Gallery, Trinity Square Video, and YYZ Artists’ Outlet
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Public Studio What We Lose in Metrics

AGYU
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Alec Soth Hypnagogia

Arsenal Contemporary
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition Outsiders: American Photography and Film, 1950s - 1980s

Art Gallery of Ontario
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Thomas Ruff Object Relations

Art Gallery of Ontario
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Counterpoints: Photography Through the Lens of Toronto Collections

Art Museum at the University of Toronto
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

James Barnor Ever Young

BAND Gallery
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Christian Patterson Bottom of the Lake

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Kotama Bouabane We’ll get there fast and then we’ll take it slow

Gallery 44
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Oliver Husain Isla Santa Maria 3D

Gallery TPW
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Angela Grauerholz Scotiabank Photography Award

The Image Centre
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Annie MacDonell Holding Still // Holding Together

The Image Centre
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition some landings/certains débarquements

John B. Aird Gallery
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Raymond Boisjoly Over a Distance Between One and Many

Koffler Gallery
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Sarah Anne Johnson Field Trip

The McMichael
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Edgar Leciejewski Aves

North York Centre
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Aleksandra Domanović Mother of This Domain

Oakville Galleries at Centennial Square
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Corin Sworn Corin Sworn

Oakville Galleries in Gairloch Gardens
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Cutline: The Photography Archives of The Globe and Mail

The Old Press Hall, The Globe and Mail
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Rodney Graham Jack of All Trades

Prefix ICA
Archives 2016 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition A City Transformed: Images of Istanbul Then and Now

Archives 2016 primary 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.