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

Lotus Laurie Kang A Body Knots

May 5 – June 9, 2018
  • Gallery TPW
Laurie Kang, Skin on Skin, (detail), 2018. Unfixed, unprocessed photographic paper and darkroom chemicals (continually sensitive). Courtesy of the artist.
Laurie Kang, Skin on Skin, (detail), 2018. Unfixed, unprocessed photographic paper and darkroom chemicals (continually sensitive). Courtesy of the artist.
Laurie Kang, A Body Knots, (production still), 2018. Courtesy of the artist.

A new site-responsive installation by Toronto-based Laurie Kang, A Body Knots coalesces several threads of research and creation, animated by the artist’s deep curiosity with science studies, science fiction, feminist theory, and personal and cultural history. As a twin, Kang considers these discourses and their combined impact on understandings of bodies as individual and specific, while also imagining possible shared micro-level blueprints. Most recently, Kang’s attention has turned to epigenetics—the study of how one’s genetic makeup is expressed or suppressed in relation to environment. The blueprint itself doesn’t change but how it expresses itself is mutable. The field is a groundbreaking rethink of the old nature versus nurture binary, speaking to an interrelation of the inherent biological code of an organism and how, through wide-ranging environmental factors, that code is amplified or repressed.

Applying such framing to the life of all matter, it’s possible to ask if photography has a genetic blueprint of its own. Do photographic materials have their own inherent codes of expression beyond how humans use them? Pushing at this question, Kang’s work highlights the inherent expansive nature of photographic materials by misusing and thus freeing photographic processes from the medium’s structures of control. Most known for her camera-less images, Kang uses light-sensitive photographic papers brought into relation with organic materials, darkroom chemicals, and uncontrolled natural light. Each image is produced without fixative, allowing her abstractions to remain continually sensitive and perpetually evolving in relation to their environment. Interrupting the depictive role of photography traditionally used to fix vision and memory through the capture of an image, Kang’s abstractions work to unfix, allowing photographic materials to metabolize their environments at their own pace.

With A Body Knots, photographs become skins in relation to material forms of both intimate and architectural scale, turning the apparatus of presentation—the physical frame, the hanging mechanism, the space within which images are presented—into felt evocations of skeletal structure, fascia, muscle, and flesh. Materials such as rubbers and metals become gentle industrial bodies to carry Kang’s responsive skins. Combining the photographic with the sculptural, Kang intuitively collaborates with matter to expand her thinking about what constitutes a body. What further expressions these images take on remain to be seen, as their inherent sensitivities entangle with new environments—an ongoing performance of coexistence.

Curated by Kim Simon

  • Lotus Laurie Kang, a Toronto-based interdisciplinary artist, holds a BFA in photography from Concordia University and an MFA from Milton Avery School of the Arts at Bard College in New York. She creates installations that concern the body and the forces that shape it. Drawing on biology, feminist theory and even science-fiction, Kang's work reveals the body as a process, always in a state of becoming, forevermore in relation to other bodies and environments around us. She draws on her Korean heritage, often altering, elevating and preserving materials that shaped her upbringing in thought-provoking ways.

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

Piero Martinello Radicalia

Campbell House Museum
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Felicity Hammond Arcades

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2018 primary 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

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

The McMichael
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Nadia Myre Acts That Fade Away

Salah J. Bachir New Media Wall
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Christina Battle BAD STARS

Trinity Square Video
Archives 2018 primary exhibition
OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Lotus Laurie Kang A Body Knots

May 5 – June 9, 2018
  • Gallery TPW
Laurie Kang, Skin on Skin, (detail), 2018. Unfixed, unprocessed photographic paper and darkroom chemicals (continually sensitive). Courtesy of the artist.
Laurie Kang, Skin on Skin, (detail), 2018. Unfixed, unprocessed photographic paper and darkroom chemicals (continually sensitive). Courtesy of the artist.
Laurie Kang, A Body Knots, (production still), 2018. Courtesy of the artist.

A new site-responsive installation by Toronto-based Laurie Kang, A Body Knots coalesces several threads of research and creation, animated by the artist’s deep curiosity with science studies, science fiction, feminist theory, and personal and cultural history. As a twin, Kang considers these discourses and their combined impact on understandings of bodies as individual and specific, while also imagining possible shared micro-level blueprints. Most recently, Kang’s attention has turned to epigenetics—the study of how one’s genetic makeup is expressed or suppressed in relation to environment. The blueprint itself doesn’t change but how it expresses itself is mutable. The field is a groundbreaking rethink of the old nature versus nurture binary, speaking to an interrelation of the inherent biological code of an organism and how, through wide-ranging environmental factors, that code is amplified or repressed.

Applying such framing to the life of all matter, it’s possible to ask if photography has a genetic blueprint of its own. Do photographic materials have their own inherent codes of expression beyond how humans use them? Pushing at this question, Kang’s work highlights the inherent expansive nature of photographic materials by misusing and thus freeing photographic processes from the medium’s structures of control. Most known for her camera-less images, Kang uses light-sensitive photographic papers brought into relation with organic materials, darkroom chemicals, and uncontrolled natural light. Each image is produced without fixative, allowing her abstractions to remain continually sensitive and perpetually evolving in relation to their environment. Interrupting the depictive role of photography traditionally used to fix vision and memory through the capture of an image, Kang’s abstractions work to unfix, allowing photographic materials to metabolize their environments at their own pace.

With A Body Knots, photographs become skins in relation to material forms of both intimate and architectural scale, turning the apparatus of presentation—the physical frame, the hanging mechanism, the space within which images are presented—into felt evocations of skeletal structure, fascia, muscle, and flesh. Materials such as rubbers and metals become gentle industrial bodies to carry Kang’s responsive skins. Combining the photographic with the sculptural, Kang intuitively collaborates with matter to expand her thinking about what constitutes a body. What further expressions these images take on remain to be seen, as their inherent sensitivities entangle with new environments—an ongoing performance of coexistence.

Curated by Kim Simon

  • Lotus Laurie Kang, a Toronto-based interdisciplinary artist, holds a BFA in photography from Concordia University and an MFA from Milton Avery School of the Arts at Bard College in New York. She creates installations that concern the body and the forces that shape it. Drawing on biology, feminist theory and even science-fiction, Kang's work reveals the body as a process, always in a state of becoming, forevermore in relation to other bodies and environments around us. She draws on her Korean heritage, often altering, elevating and preserving materials that shaped her upbringing in thought-provoking ways.

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

Piero Martinello Radicalia

Campbell House Museum
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Felicity Hammond Arcades

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2018 primary 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

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

The McMichael
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Nadia Myre Acts That Fade Away

Salah J. Bachir New Media Wall
Archives 2018 primary exhibition

Christina Battle BAD STARS

Trinity Square Video
Archives 2018 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.