CONTACT's 30 Edition, May 2026 - Register Now
Festival GalleryEditorialPhotobooksArchivesSupportersAboutFundraiserDonate
OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2017 primary exhibition

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

May 5 – June 3, 2017
  • Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography
Stephanie Comilang, Lumapit Sa Akin, Paraiso (Come to Me, Paradise)
Tania Willard, Only Available Light
Martine Syms, Most Days
Dylan Miner, excerpt from omazinaakizaan : s/he takes its picture
Kapwani Kiwanga, The Secretary’s Suite
Kapwani Kiwanga , The Secretary’s Suite
Dana Claxton, Camping 2 (fellow with stone circle)

What does one do with such a clairvoyant image? is a group exhibition presented across two venues—Gallery 44 and Trinity Square—that explores questions of sovereignty, nationhood, and identity through strategies of speculative fiction and alternative histories of land and landscape. These artists ask how images might produce resistance to power structures, and how they can serve to write, or rewrite, historical narratives. The title, taken from Kapwani Kiwanga’s work, offers a provocative claim: images have agency that extends beyond the present. Together, these works foreground the possibilities of an otherwise unsettled future against the prospect of being indentured to history.

The reappropriation and reuse of historical and found imagery offers a range of possibilities for resistance. Tania Willard’s Only Available Light (2016) combines archival research and materials to question anthropological representations of her Secwėpemc community. The work departs from an educational lm by archaeologist Harlan Ingersoll Smith, a member of the infamous Jesup North Pacific Expedition (1897 – 1902). Willard’s intervention into the film physically obstructs and distorts a clear view of the imagery. By confronting the desire of settler society to consume and exotify Indigenous cultures, Willard transforms Smith’s ethnographic video and renders it unavailable to viewers; instead, it comes only as light, as a meditation on loss and resilience transposed through time. Similarly using reappropriated imagery, Dana Claxton’s Road Trip (2017) explores the quintessentially middle-class Canadian holiday—the road trip. Layering anonymous but familiar images of camping and leisure activities with those of beadwork patterns from the Lakota nation, Claxton’s project queries how histories are represented, and for whom. In knitting together two familiar cultural forms, Claxton emphasizes that history is an embodied and subjective story.

While the archive offers a rich terrain for speculating on the possibilities of what might have been, artists looking to the near future recognize that the minor, everyday rituals of domestic life can make much larger paradigm shifts possible. Stephanie Comilang’s Lumapit Sa Akin, Paraiso (Come to Me Paradise) (2016) is a science fiction documentary set among maze-like temporary structures constructed by Filipina migrant workers in Hong Kong. Narrated by a disembodied, ghostly drone, the video suggests a future where the isolation of economic migration and class can be thwarted through the emergent energy of collectivity. The mundane nature and drudgery of everyday life is likewise reflected in Martine Syms’ audio film Most Days (2014), a table read of an original screenplay accompanied by a score composed in collaboration with Neal Reinalda, and published as a vinyl record. The project details an average day for Chanel Washington, a young black woman in 2050 Los Angeles, tracking her boredom, sense of dread, and increasing uncertainty about life. Alongside Most Days is Syms’ Mundane Afrofuturist Manifesto (2013), a text work that articulates a new theory of the Black aesthetic in the 21st century, coalescing around a movement of Black, diasporic artists who consider everyday moments of futurism as lived reality.

Balanced upon a fulcrum of past, present, and future, Kapwani Kiwanga’s video installation, The Secretary’s Suite (2016), uses photographic iconography to interrogate the nature of sovereign states. Throughout the video, she slowly reveals the conflicting priorities that motivate international diplomacy and gift giving, suggesting cracks in the façade of history. The project is based on a 1961 photograph of then-Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld’s office at the United Nations. As Kiwanga sorts through photographs of various diplomatic gifts given throughout history, she narrates the possible intentions behind these exchanges. The stories provoke viewers to question the ways in which decisions with global implications are made, revealing the often contradictory narratives of colonial history.

In work commissioned for this exhibition and extending across the vitrine spaces of both galleries, Dylan Miner foregrounds processes of reciprocity and redress. In oma- zinaakizaan: s/he takes its picture (2017), Miner uses found photographs depicting common monuments to colonial dispossession and responds to their ideological premise by scarring the images’ surfaces. His marks are not subsequent to an original image but rather are irreducible from the images themselves, refusing a distinction between temporalities and decentring the colonial gaze.

By framing these artists’ projects with a question that implies a supernatural force, What does one do with such a clairvoyant image? calls the viewer to imagine futures that are radically different from the colonial present. And during a moment that is politically charged and fraught with conflict, an underlying question remains implicit: What is to be done now, with what we sense just beyond the horizon?

Curated by Leila Timmins, cheyanne turions, and Jayne Wilkinson

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

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

May 5 – June 3, 2017
  • Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography
Stephanie Comilang, Lumapit Sa Akin, Paraiso (Come to Me, Paradise)
Tania Willard, Only Available Light
Martine Syms, Most Days
Dylan Miner, excerpt from omazinaakizaan : s/he takes its picture
Kapwani Kiwanga, The Secretary’s Suite
Kapwani Kiwanga , The Secretary’s Suite
Dana Claxton, Camping 2 (fellow with stone circle)

What does one do with such a clairvoyant image? is a group exhibition presented across two venues—Gallery 44 and Trinity Square—that explores questions of sovereignty, nationhood, and identity through strategies of speculative fiction and alternative histories of land and landscape. These artists ask how images might produce resistance to power structures, and how they can serve to write, or rewrite, historical narratives. The title, taken from Kapwani Kiwanga’s work, offers a provocative claim: images have agency that extends beyond the present. Together, these works foreground the possibilities of an otherwise unsettled future against the prospect of being indentured to history.

The reappropriation and reuse of historical and found imagery offers a range of possibilities for resistance. Tania Willard’s Only Available Light (2016) combines archival research and materials to question anthropological representations of her Secwėpemc community. The work departs from an educational lm by archaeologist Harlan Ingersoll Smith, a member of the infamous Jesup North Pacific Expedition (1897 – 1902). Willard’s intervention into the film physically obstructs and distorts a clear view of the imagery. By confronting the desire of settler society to consume and exotify Indigenous cultures, Willard transforms Smith’s ethnographic video and renders it unavailable to viewers; instead, it comes only as light, as a meditation on loss and resilience transposed through time. Similarly using reappropriated imagery, Dana Claxton’s Road Trip (2017) explores the quintessentially middle-class Canadian holiday—the road trip. Layering anonymous but familiar images of camping and leisure activities with those of beadwork patterns from the Lakota nation, Claxton’s project queries how histories are represented, and for whom. In knitting together two familiar cultural forms, Claxton emphasizes that history is an embodied and subjective story.

While the archive offers a rich terrain for speculating on the possibilities of what might have been, artists looking to the near future recognize that the minor, everyday rituals of domestic life can make much larger paradigm shifts possible. Stephanie Comilang’s Lumapit Sa Akin, Paraiso (Come to Me Paradise) (2016) is a science fiction documentary set among maze-like temporary structures constructed by Filipina migrant workers in Hong Kong. Narrated by a disembodied, ghostly drone, the video suggests a future where the isolation of economic migration and class can be thwarted through the emergent energy of collectivity. The mundane nature and drudgery of everyday life is likewise reflected in Martine Syms’ audio film Most Days (2014), a table read of an original screenplay accompanied by a score composed in collaboration with Neal Reinalda, and published as a vinyl record. The project details an average day for Chanel Washington, a young black woman in 2050 Los Angeles, tracking her boredom, sense of dread, and increasing uncertainty about life. Alongside Most Days is Syms’ Mundane Afrofuturist Manifesto (2013), a text work that articulates a new theory of the Black aesthetic in the 21st century, coalescing around a movement of Black, diasporic artists who consider everyday moments of futurism as lived reality.

Balanced upon a fulcrum of past, present, and future, Kapwani Kiwanga’s video installation, The Secretary’s Suite (2016), uses photographic iconography to interrogate the nature of sovereign states. Throughout the video, she slowly reveals the conflicting priorities that motivate international diplomacy and gift giving, suggesting cracks in the façade of history. The project is based on a 1961 photograph of then-Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld’s office at the United Nations. As Kiwanga sorts through photographs of various diplomatic gifts given throughout history, she narrates the possible intentions behind these exchanges. The stories provoke viewers to question the ways in which decisions with global implications are made, revealing the often contradictory narratives of colonial history.

In work commissioned for this exhibition and extending across the vitrine spaces of both galleries, Dylan Miner foregrounds processes of reciprocity and redress. In oma- zinaakizaan: s/he takes its picture (2017), Miner uses found photographs depicting common monuments to colonial dispossession and responds to their ideological premise by scarring the images’ surfaces. His marks are not subsequent to an original image but rather are irreducible from the images themselves, refusing a distinction between temporalities and decentring the colonial gaze.

By framing these artists’ projects with a question that implies a supernatural force, What does one do with such a clairvoyant image? calls the viewer to imagine futures that are radically different from the colonial present. And during a moment that is politically charged and fraught with conflict, an underlying question remains implicit: What is to be done now, with what we sense just beyond the horizon?

Curated by Leila Timmins, cheyanne turions, and Jayne Wilkinson

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

Join our mailing list

Email marketing Cyberimpact

80 Spadina Ave, Ste 205
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.