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OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2018 exhibition

Charlie Engman Mom

May 3 – June 16, 2018
  • Scrap Metal
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit

For nearly a decade, Charlie Engman’s mother has willingly, sometimes hesitantly, experimented in front of his camera. She has donned makeup, stylized hair, high-fashion clothing—or a complete lack thereof—for his pictures and films, in the way that many mothers selflessly offer themselves up to their children so that they do not go without. However, this particular relationship between mother and son is not nearly so clearly defined. In the case of the quasi-collaborative, long-standing photographic project simply titled Mom, Engman’s mother has stepped into the role of muse and mannequin, coming out as stranger on the other side—stranger because Engman does not always recognize who he sees dancing, shuffling, and posing before his lens. She is his mother, but images reveal she is “more, more, more.”

The Chicago-born, Brooklyn-based Engman is a highly sought-after photographer, although not initially by his own ambition. Trained originally as a movement artist, Engman arrived at picture-taking as a form of visual notation. His images capture the sculptural potential of an action, as a sleeve, collar, elbow, or freckle is caught in the moment of becoming something other than itself. His singular sensibility has produced intrigue and demand—experimental publications, mainstream magazines, and fashion brands alike have commissioned and published his work. For the most part, Engman’s mother does not appear in these editorial spreads and campaigns. She shows up in the after-hour images, once an official shoot has wound down. She may, from time to time, try on the same clothing that has been pulled for someone younger and tighter, someone editors and brands see as more current, more sellable. But his pictures of her not only edge on fashion, they could also be seen as reworking industry norms. Engman’s mother sells the unsettling, and she’s good at it. Some of the most familiar yet foreign pictures are played out during mother-and-son road trips—her barely dressed body drifting through expansive fields, or stumbling along rolling hills that recall images by Stephen Shore or William Eggleston. Through Engman’s lens we observe a middle-aged, middle-American woman engaging the possibilities of dress, which momentarily unfix her from motherhood and unload her of our cultural baggage.

Without a doubt, Mom is born of a filial connection. But over the years it has evolved into a prodigious body of work that disentangles itself from this singular bond between two specific people to speak about the mother/son relationship more generally, exploring notions of identity and power relationships, including those between photographer and subject. Asked to reflect on their collaboration, Engman’s mother replies, “I don’t think he’s seeing me. I don’t think he’s telling a story about his mom. Even someone you think you see, like your mother, is actually material for looking at the world in a new way.” —Rui Mateus Amaral

Excerpted from Mother, is that you?, a text written on the occasion of Charlie Engman’s first solo exhibition. This premiere presentation at Scrap Metal reveals the breadth of Mom through various modes of photographic representation, including framed and floating images, murals, sculpture, as well as archival materials. Broadening the project’s reach, four of Engman’s photographs will be presented in public space on billboards at Dupont and Davenport, a context historically used for advertising.

  • Charlie Engman, originally as a movement artist, arrived at picture-taking as a form of visual notation. His images capture the sculptural potential of an action, as a detail of the setting is caught in the moment of becoming something other than itself. Engman’s images are at essence conceptual and visual solutions to the formal problem of picture making, pushing the scope and visual possibility of what he has to work with—models, clothing, props and sets, a certain space, light, the potential of post-production and graphic design. Engman playfully and cleverly confronts the artifice of his images, allowing the viewer to be privy to the boundaries and construction of his working environments.

Ruanne Abou-Rahme, Basel Abbas Incidental Narratives

A Space Gallery
Archives 2018 exhibition

Yuula Benivolski Scrap Pieces

A Space Gallery
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Ryan Pechnick refuse/reuse

Abbozzo Gallery
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Sylvia Galbraith Outside of Time

Abbozzo Gallery
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Benjamin de Burca, Bárbara Wagner Bárbara Wagner and Benjamin de Burca

AGYU
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Richard Mosse The Castle

Arsenal Contemporary
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Photography: First World War, 1914–1918

Art Gallery of Ontario
Archives 2018 exhibition

Charles “Teenie” Harris Cutting a Figure: Black Style Through the Lens of Charles “Teenie” Harris

BAND Gallery
Archives 2018 exhibition

Piero Martinello Radicalia

Campbell House Museum
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Felicity Hammond Arcades

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Lee Henderson To Step From Shadow Into the Warmth of the Sun

Gallery 44
Archives 2018 exhibition

Lotus Laurie Kang A Body Knots

Gallery TPW
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Daniel Alexander When War Is Over

Harbourfront Centre
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Shelley Niro Scotiabank Photography Award: Shelley Niro

The Image Centre
Archives 2018 exhibition

Bill Jones Waking Dream

John B. Aird Gallery
Archives 2018 exhibition

Esther Shalev-Gerz

Koffler Gallery
Archives 2018 exhibition

Group Exhibition …Everything Remains Raw: Photographing Toronto’s Hip Hop Culture from Analogue to Digital

The McMichael
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Sophia Al Maria Black Friday

Mercer Union
Archives 2018 exhibition

Deanna Pizzitelli, Elisa Julia Gilmour New Generation Photography Award

Onsite Gallery
Archives 2018 exhibition

Trevor Paglen Surveillance States

Prefix ICA
Archives 2018 exhibition

Nadia Myre Acts That Fade Away

Salah J. Bachir New Media Wall
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Charlie Engman Mom

Scrap Metal
Archives 2018 exhibition

Christina Battle BAD STARS

Trinity Square Video
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Evan Rensch Into the Fire

3rd Floor
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Michelangelo Di Battista, Tina Berning Confluence II

Alison Milne Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Julia Nemfield Lost and Found

Alliance Française Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition Let There Be Light

Angell Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition seeping upwards, rupturing the surface

Art Gallery of Mississauga
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Erin Whittier Full of Holes

Artspace Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Kathleen Gerber, Lori Nix THE EMPIRE, THE CITY 

Bau-Xi Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Broadbent Sisters A Telepathic Book

Black Cat Artspace
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Dr. John E. Ackerman Collecting Moments: The Photographs of Dr. John E. Ackerman

Black Cat Artspace
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Brittany Shepherd Façades

Bunker 2 Contemporary Art Container
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Adam Swica Ellipsis

Christie Contemporary
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Erwin Blumenfeld From Dada to Vogue

Corkin Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Jade Nasogaluak Carpenter, Lacie Burning Forward Facing

Critical Distance
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Elizabeth Zvonar Ageless Ambiguity

Daniel Faria Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Yasin Osman Dear Ayeeyo

Daniels Spectrum
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Elise Rasmussen, Shadi Harouni With an instinct for justice

Doris McCarthy Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Steve Wadden, Chad Tobin Do As You Wish

Gallery 50
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Pam Purves Ingenuity

Gardiner Museum
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Rachel Burns Until Now

General Hardware Contemporary
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Yannick Anton Limited Edition

Gladstone Hotel
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Samer Muscati Uprooted and Dispossessed: Portraits of Women Caught in Conflict and Colonialism

Hart House
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Maryse Arseneault Sanguine et terres brulées / Blood Ties, Scorched Earth 

Le Labo
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Mary Manning Blueprints

Little Sister Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Curated Group Exhibition Red Light

Lonsdale Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Aydin Büyüktas Flatland

Matter Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Gordon Parks I AM YOU

Nicholas Metivier Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Angela Grauerholz Angela Grauerholz

Olga Korper Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Peter Andrew Lusztyk The Uncanny Valley Portraits

Only One Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition The Shape of the Middle

Open Studio
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Matilda Aslizadeh Moly and Kassandra

Pari Nadimi Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Ho Tam A Brief History of Me

Paul Petro Contemporary Art
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Rainer Ganahl Seminars/Lectures

Paul Petro Contemporary Art
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Tess Roby LIKE WATER, A WINDOW

Photo Passage
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Marie-Jeanne Musiol Plant Cosmos

Pierre-François Ouellette art contemporain @ Centre Space
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Nichole Sobecki Climate for Conflict

Rukaj Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives Queering Family Photography

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Sunil Gupta Friends and Lovers—Coming Out in Montreal in the 70s

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Sam Cotter Day for Night

Zalucky Contemporary
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition
OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2018 exhibition

Charlie Engman Mom

May 3 – June 16, 2018
  • Scrap Metal
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit
Charlie Engman, Mom, Exhibition at Scrap Metal Gallery, April - June 2018. Photo by Jimmy Limit

For nearly a decade, Charlie Engman’s mother has willingly, sometimes hesitantly, experimented in front of his camera. She has donned makeup, stylized hair, high-fashion clothing—or a complete lack thereof—for his pictures and films, in the way that many mothers selflessly offer themselves up to their children so that they do not go without. However, this particular relationship between mother and son is not nearly so clearly defined. In the case of the quasi-collaborative, long-standing photographic project simply titled Mom, Engman’s mother has stepped into the role of muse and mannequin, coming out as stranger on the other side—stranger because Engman does not always recognize who he sees dancing, shuffling, and posing before his lens. She is his mother, but images reveal she is “more, more, more.”

The Chicago-born, Brooklyn-based Engman is a highly sought-after photographer, although not initially by his own ambition. Trained originally as a movement artist, Engman arrived at picture-taking as a form of visual notation. His images capture the sculptural potential of an action, as a sleeve, collar, elbow, or freckle is caught in the moment of becoming something other than itself. His singular sensibility has produced intrigue and demand—experimental publications, mainstream magazines, and fashion brands alike have commissioned and published his work. For the most part, Engman’s mother does not appear in these editorial spreads and campaigns. She shows up in the after-hour images, once an official shoot has wound down. She may, from time to time, try on the same clothing that has been pulled for someone younger and tighter, someone editors and brands see as more current, more sellable. But his pictures of her not only edge on fashion, they could also be seen as reworking industry norms. Engman’s mother sells the unsettling, and she’s good at it. Some of the most familiar yet foreign pictures are played out during mother-and-son road trips—her barely dressed body drifting through expansive fields, or stumbling along rolling hills that recall images by Stephen Shore or William Eggleston. Through Engman’s lens we observe a middle-aged, middle-American woman engaging the possibilities of dress, which momentarily unfix her from motherhood and unload her of our cultural baggage.

Without a doubt, Mom is born of a filial connection. But over the years it has evolved into a prodigious body of work that disentangles itself from this singular bond between two specific people to speak about the mother/son relationship more generally, exploring notions of identity and power relationships, including those between photographer and subject. Asked to reflect on their collaboration, Engman’s mother replies, “I don’t think he’s seeing me. I don’t think he’s telling a story about his mom. Even someone you think you see, like your mother, is actually material for looking at the world in a new way.” —Rui Mateus Amaral

Excerpted from Mother, is that you?, a text written on the occasion of Charlie Engman’s first solo exhibition. This premiere presentation at Scrap Metal reveals the breadth of Mom through various modes of photographic representation, including framed and floating images, murals, sculpture, as well as archival materials. Broadening the project’s reach, four of Engman’s photographs will be presented in public space on billboards at Dupont and Davenport, a context historically used for advertising.

  • Charlie Engman, originally as a movement artist, arrived at picture-taking as a form of visual notation. His images capture the sculptural potential of an action, as a detail of the setting is caught in the moment of becoming something other than itself. Engman’s images are at essence conceptual and visual solutions to the formal problem of picture making, pushing the scope and visual possibility of what he has to work with—models, clothing, props and sets, a certain space, light, the potential of post-production and graphic design. Engman playfully and cleverly confronts the artifice of his images, allowing the viewer to be privy to the boundaries and construction of his working environments.

Ruanne Abou-Rahme, Basel Abbas Incidental Narratives

A Space Gallery
Archives 2018 exhibition

Yuula Benivolski Scrap Pieces

A Space Gallery
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Ryan Pechnick refuse/reuse

Abbozzo Gallery
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Sylvia Galbraith Outside of Time

Abbozzo Gallery
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Benjamin de Burca, Bárbara Wagner Bárbara Wagner and Benjamin de Burca

AGYU
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Richard Mosse The Castle

Arsenal Contemporary
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Photography: First World War, 1914–1918

Art Gallery of Ontario
Archives 2018 exhibition

Charles “Teenie” Harris Cutting a Figure: Black Style Through the Lens of Charles “Teenie” Harris

BAND Gallery
Archives 2018 exhibition

Piero Martinello Radicalia

Campbell House Museum
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Felicity Hammond Arcades

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Lee Henderson To Step From Shadow Into the Warmth of the Sun

Gallery 44
Archives 2018 exhibition

Lotus Laurie Kang A Body Knots

Gallery TPW
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Daniel Alexander When War Is Over

Harbourfront Centre
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Shelley Niro Scotiabank Photography Award: Shelley Niro

The Image Centre
Archives 2018 exhibition

Bill Jones Waking Dream

John B. Aird Gallery
Archives 2018 exhibition

Esther Shalev-Gerz

Koffler Gallery
Archives 2018 exhibition

Group Exhibition …Everything Remains Raw: Photographing Toronto’s Hip Hop Culture from Analogue to Digital

The McMichael
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Sophia Al Maria Black Friday

Mercer Union
Archives 2018 exhibition

Deanna Pizzitelli, Elisa Julia Gilmour New Generation Photography Award

Onsite Gallery
Archives 2018 exhibition

Trevor Paglen Surveillance States

Prefix ICA
Archives 2018 exhibition

Nadia Myre Acts That Fade Away

Salah J. Bachir New Media Wall
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Charlie Engman Mom

Scrap Metal
Archives 2018 exhibition

Christina Battle BAD STARS

Trinity Square Video
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Evan Rensch Into the Fire

3rd Floor
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Michelangelo Di Battista, Tina Berning Confluence II

Alison Milne Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Julia Nemfield Lost and Found

Alliance Française Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition Let There Be Light

Angell Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition seeping upwards, rupturing the surface

Art Gallery of Mississauga
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Erin Whittier Full of Holes

Artspace Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Kathleen Gerber, Lori Nix THE EMPIRE, THE CITY 

Bau-Xi Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Broadbent Sisters A Telepathic Book

Black Cat Artspace
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Dr. John E. Ackerman Collecting Moments: The Photographs of Dr. John E. Ackerman

Black Cat Artspace
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Brittany Shepherd Façades

Bunker 2 Contemporary Art Container
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Adam Swica Ellipsis

Christie Contemporary
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Erwin Blumenfeld From Dada to Vogue

Corkin Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Jade Nasogaluak Carpenter, Lacie Burning Forward Facing

Critical Distance
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Elizabeth Zvonar Ageless Ambiguity

Daniel Faria Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Yasin Osman Dear Ayeeyo

Daniels Spectrum
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Elise Rasmussen, Shadi Harouni With an instinct for justice

Doris McCarthy Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Steve Wadden, Chad Tobin Do As You Wish

Gallery 50
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Pam Purves Ingenuity

Gardiner Museum
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Rachel Burns Until Now

General Hardware Contemporary
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Yannick Anton Limited Edition

Gladstone Hotel
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Samer Muscati Uprooted and Dispossessed: Portraits of Women Caught in Conflict and Colonialism

Hart House
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Maryse Arseneault Sanguine et terres brulées / Blood Ties, Scorched Earth 

Le Labo
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Mary Manning Blueprints

Little Sister Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Curated Group Exhibition Red Light

Lonsdale Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Aydin Büyüktas Flatland

Matter Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Gordon Parks I AM YOU

Nicholas Metivier Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Angela Grauerholz Angela Grauerholz

Olga Korper Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Peter Andrew Lusztyk The Uncanny Valley Portraits

Only One Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition The Shape of the Middle

Open Studio
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Matilda Aslizadeh Moly and Kassandra

Pari Nadimi Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Ho Tam A Brief History of Me

Paul Petro Contemporary Art
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Rainer Ganahl Seminars/Lectures

Paul Petro Contemporary Art
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Tess Roby LIKE WATER, A WINDOW

Photo Passage
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Marie-Jeanne Musiol Plant Cosmos

Pierre-François Ouellette art contemporain @ Centre Space
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Nichole Sobecki Climate for Conflict

Rukaj Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives Queering Family Photography

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Sunil Gupta Friends and Lovers—Coming Out in Montreal in the 70s

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2018 juried call exhibition

Sam Cotter Day for Night

Zalucky Contemporary
Archives 2018 juried call 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.