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OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Steve Driscoll, Finn O'Hara Size Matters

March 11 – August 20, 2017
  • McMichael Canadian Art Collection
Finn O’Hara & Steve Driscoll, For a Moment
Finn O’Hara & Steve Driscoll, It Seems Too Much Effort To Even Sleep
Finn O’Hara & Steve Driscoll, Watched in Awe

Toronto-based artists Steve Driscoll and Finn O’Hara met on matters of size. Driscoll felt that his robust landscape paintings, which use urethane to deploy pigments across vast plastic panels, were lacking any sense of scale when appearing as reproductions in print or online. He asked O’Hara to photograph his work, but this practical beginning grew into something more than art documentation. Foregoing the typical in-situ gallery shot, O’Hara scouted various rural and urban locations with an eye to framing Driscoll’s paintings, and a creative collaboration ensued.

At times, the photographs make the paintings seem immense as they loom over small children in the foreground, or threaten to topple on the set crew. Banal, everyday incidents become staffage around the monumental paintings. In photographs such as The Only Real Thing in His Life Were His Dreams (2017), Driscoll’s huge paintings lurk conspicuously in the woods. The paintings themselves are often based on photographs taken during Driscoll’s many camping trips, yet they are always created in studio, where rivers of colour-kissed urethane are pushed to form re-imagined landscapes. In front of O’Hara’s lens, these dreams of nature are returned to the reality of the woods or the sunny shores of a beach.

A sense of humour lies at the heart of this collaborative body of work, comprised of 16 digital chromogenic prints and 18 paintings. This brings a necessary dose of levity to the act of making metadocuments: a photo document of the act of art documentation of an artwork that also documents a landscape. The process of photographing art is laid bare, but any sense of practicality is abandoned for wit and guerrilla-style set making. Driscoll and O’Hara have a work-hard play-hard attitude, based in the belief that good ideas come from the process of work itself. In the case of this exhibition, the spark was a simple need for relative size.

The relationship between the photographs and the paintings in Size Matters is purposefully jarring; a schism always exists between the landscape setting in the photograph and the scene depicted in the painting. In It Seems Too Much Effort to Even Sleep (2016), Driscoll’s painting is captured beside a makeshift fire in a seedy underpass near Rosedale Valley Road in Toronto. The painting, however, captures quite a different scene: a northern forest showered by the light of the aurora borealis. In I Saw All this Continue On (2014), Driscoll’s painting of a woodland trail is shown in the midst of sidewalk traffic on Queen Street West, yet it receives scant attention, as if the canvas has been cast as an urbanite in a fuctional biography. In both cases, the artists draw attention to the disconnect between nature and urban life.

The sheer peculiarity of nding a large painting out of context—that is, off the museum or living room wall—mischievously removes the airs of white glove art handling and do-not-touch signs. Driscoll and O’Hara allow paintings to play hooky and indulge as interlopers within multilayered photographic narratives. At the same time, their lighthearted approach insightfully addresses the history and methods of Canadian landscape painting and its complex relationship with photography.

Organized by and presented in partnership with the McMichael Canadian Art Collection

Curated by Sarah Stanners

Group Exhibition The Family Camera: Missing Chapters

Art Gallery of Mississauga
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition Photography Collection 1840s to 1880s

Art Gallery of Ontario
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition It's All Happening So Fast: A Counter-History of the Modern Canadian Environment

Art Museum at the University of Toronto
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition Ears, Eyes, Voice: Black Canadian Photojournalists 1970s-1990s

BAND Gallery
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Celia Perrin Sidarous a shape to your shadow

Campbell House Museum
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition What does one do with such a clairvoyant image?

Gallery 44
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Luis Jacob Habitat

Gallery TPW
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Johan Hallberg-Campbell Coastal

Harbourfront Centre
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Suzy Lake Scotiabank Photography Award

The Image Centre
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Max Dean As Yet Untitled

The Image Centre
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Kent Monkman, Michelle Latimer, Jeff Barnaby Souvenir

The Image Centre
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Robert Burley An Enduring Wilderness: Toronto’s Natural Parklands

John B. Aird Gallery
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

2Fik His and Other Stories

Koffler Gallery
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Steve Driscoll, Finn O'Hara Size Matters

The McMichael
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Great Lake/Small City

Oxford Art Tablet
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Michael Snow Newfoundlandings

Prefix ICA
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Shelley Niro Battlefields of my Ancestors

Ryerson University
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Robin Cameron Right Now

Scrap Metal
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Katherine Knight Portraits and Collections

Textile Museum of Canada
Archives 2017 primary exhibition
OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Steve Driscoll, Finn O'Hara Size Matters

March 11 – August 20, 2017
  • McMichael Canadian Art Collection
Finn O’Hara & Steve Driscoll, For a Moment
Finn O’Hara & Steve Driscoll, It Seems Too Much Effort To Even Sleep
Finn O’Hara & Steve Driscoll, Watched in Awe

Toronto-based artists Steve Driscoll and Finn O’Hara met on matters of size. Driscoll felt that his robust landscape paintings, which use urethane to deploy pigments across vast plastic panels, were lacking any sense of scale when appearing as reproductions in print or online. He asked O’Hara to photograph his work, but this practical beginning grew into something more than art documentation. Foregoing the typical in-situ gallery shot, O’Hara scouted various rural and urban locations with an eye to framing Driscoll’s paintings, and a creative collaboration ensued.

At times, the photographs make the paintings seem immense as they loom over small children in the foreground, or threaten to topple on the set crew. Banal, everyday incidents become staffage around the monumental paintings. In photographs such as The Only Real Thing in His Life Were His Dreams (2017), Driscoll’s huge paintings lurk conspicuously in the woods. The paintings themselves are often based on photographs taken during Driscoll’s many camping trips, yet they are always created in studio, where rivers of colour-kissed urethane are pushed to form re-imagined landscapes. In front of O’Hara’s lens, these dreams of nature are returned to the reality of the woods or the sunny shores of a beach.

A sense of humour lies at the heart of this collaborative body of work, comprised of 16 digital chromogenic prints and 18 paintings. This brings a necessary dose of levity to the act of making metadocuments: a photo document of the act of art documentation of an artwork that also documents a landscape. The process of photographing art is laid bare, but any sense of practicality is abandoned for wit and guerrilla-style set making. Driscoll and O’Hara have a work-hard play-hard attitude, based in the belief that good ideas come from the process of work itself. In the case of this exhibition, the spark was a simple need for relative size.

The relationship between the photographs and the paintings in Size Matters is purposefully jarring; a schism always exists between the landscape setting in the photograph and the scene depicted in the painting. In It Seems Too Much Effort to Even Sleep (2016), Driscoll’s painting is captured beside a makeshift fire in a seedy underpass near Rosedale Valley Road in Toronto. The painting, however, captures quite a different scene: a northern forest showered by the light of the aurora borealis. In I Saw All this Continue On (2014), Driscoll’s painting of a woodland trail is shown in the midst of sidewalk traffic on Queen Street West, yet it receives scant attention, as if the canvas has been cast as an urbanite in a fuctional biography. In both cases, the artists draw attention to the disconnect between nature and urban life.

The sheer peculiarity of nding a large painting out of context—that is, off the museum or living room wall—mischievously removes the airs of white glove art handling and do-not-touch signs. Driscoll and O’Hara allow paintings to play hooky and indulge as interlopers within multilayered photographic narratives. At the same time, their lighthearted approach insightfully addresses the history and methods of Canadian landscape painting and its complex relationship with photography.

Organized by and presented in partnership with the McMichael Canadian Art Collection

Curated by Sarah Stanners

Group Exhibition The Family Camera: Missing Chapters

Art Gallery of Mississauga
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition Photography Collection 1840s to 1880s

Art Gallery of Ontario
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition It's All Happening So Fast: A Counter-History of the Modern Canadian Environment

Art Museum at the University of Toronto
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition Ears, Eyes, Voice: Black Canadian Photojournalists 1970s-1990s

BAND Gallery
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Celia Perrin Sidarous a shape to your shadow

Campbell House Museum
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition What does one do with such a clairvoyant image?

Gallery 44
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Luis Jacob Habitat

Gallery TPW
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Johan Hallberg-Campbell Coastal

Harbourfront Centre
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Suzy Lake Scotiabank Photography Award

The Image Centre
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Max Dean As Yet Untitled

The Image Centre
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Kent Monkman, Michelle Latimer, Jeff Barnaby Souvenir

The Image Centre
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Robert Burley An Enduring Wilderness: Toronto’s Natural Parklands

John B. Aird Gallery
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

2Fik His and Other Stories

Koffler Gallery
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Steve Driscoll, Finn O'Hara Size Matters

The McMichael
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Great Lake/Small City

Oxford Art Tablet
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Michael Snow Newfoundlandings

Prefix ICA
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Shelley Niro Battlefields of my Ancestors

Ryerson University
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Robin Cameron Right Now

Scrap Metal
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

Katherine Knight Portraits and Collections

Textile Museum of Canada
Archives 2017 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.