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Archives 2019 contact gallery exhibition

Luis Mora Say it with Flowers

October 17 – November 30, 2019
  • CONTACT Gallery
Installation view of Luis Mora, Say it with Flowers, Oct. 17–Nov. 30, 2019, CONTACT Gallery. Documentation photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Luis Mora, Paloquemao, Bogotá, 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Luis Mora, Paloquemao, Bogotá, 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Installation view of Luis Mora, Say it with Flowers, Oct. 17–Nov. 30, 2019, CONTACT Gallery. Documentation photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Installation view of Luis Mora, Say it with Flowers, Oct. 17–Nov. 30, 2019, CONTACT Gallery. Documentation photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Luis Mora, Say it With Flowers, 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Luis Mora, Paloquemao, Bogotá, 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Installation view of Luis Mora, Say it with Flowers, Oct. 17–Nov. 30, 2019, CONTACT Gallery. Documentation photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Installation view of Luis Mora, Say it with Flowers, Oct. 17–Nov. 30, 2019, CONTACT Gallery. Documentation photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Installation view of Luis Mora, Say it with Flowers, Oct. 17–Nov. 30, 2019, CONTACT Gallery. Documentation photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.

Flowers are often given in moments of joy and sorrow and have a multitude of connotations. When words fail, flowers become symbolic gestures and the ritual of offering them is as old as recorded history. The title of this exhibition by Toronto-based artist Luis Mora is a simple statement—Say it with Flowers—and the work functions as a love letter to Colombia, the country where Mora was born.

In 2000, when Mora was 12 years old, his parents decided to emigrate, and the family eventually settled in Toronto. He returned to Colombia for the first time in 2013, reacquainting himself with the country’s beautiful sights, people, and energy. The return to his birthplace gave way to a deeper curiosity that eventually led him to the famed Paloquemao market.

Paloquemao is a sprawling traditional food, goods, and flower market located in the capital of Bogota and is the second largest of its kind in the nation. The market is known as a place where the rigidly divided social classes of Colombia collide and it reveals complicated religious and political themes that reflect broader social narratives. Colombia is one of the largest flower exporters in the world, shipping more than $1 billion in blooms, and dominating North American markets. For Mora, the life cycle of a single flower cultivated in one country and destined to end up in another, is a metaphor for his own life and immigrant story. In turn, it echoes the aspirations of many people living in Colombia. Today, young Colombians are often raised knowing that they are going to end up somewhere else: a “leaving soon” mentality. Much of this is due to the current migrant crisis with Colombia’s neighbouring country of Venezuela, which involves harrowing stories of people traversing the Venezuelan border in hopes of a better life. A deeply religious people, they believe in God more than in their own government. Faith is not an option, but a necessity.

Mora returned to Paloquemao repeatedly to delve deeper into its metaphoric complexities. Say it with Flowers brings together a selection of photographs taken in the market alongside a vitrine containing objects either purchased or found by Mora during his time documenting there, such as religious ephemera, stickers, and pins. Having already established himself as an evocative portrait photographer of the Toronto arts community, Mora follows individuals who are known as “runners:” workers who are hired by farmers to move product around the market. While some portraits are captured frontally in black and white, similar to the style that he is most known for, other photographs depict the runners with large colourful bundles of flowers that serve as masks, concealing their identities. Their bodies have become vehicles that serve to move large amounts of blooms from point a to point b and perhaps somewhere around the globe. Images of blooms claustrophobically piled on top of one another, flowers in transit, and religious iconography offer powerful visual metaphors that echo the precariousness of home and the lengths to which people will go to acquire it.

Mora explores the strength and beauty of his former home and its realities in ways that contrast sharply with his life in Toronto, where many of the flowers imported originate from Colombia. As constant reminders of the distance he has travelled, the flowers raise difficult questions about what it means to live and work abroad. Instead of struggling to express his feelings with words, Mora says it with flowers. In this way, he participates in the symbolic ambiguity of the flower and all of its emotional complexity.

Mora’s first self-published photobook of the same name will be available for purchase at the CONTACT Gallery throughout the duration of the exhibition.

This exhibition premiers an initiative called The CONTACT Lab, which seeks to highlight new projects by Canadian artists discovered during the CONTACT Festival through its various programs. The Lab, an evolving and flexible platform, provides exhibition opportunities to emerging visual artists in the CONTACT Gallery.

Say it with Flowers is a 2019 honourable mention of the annual Edward Burtynsky Photobook Grant that offers a $5,000 grant to support Canadian artists and photographers who are at the advanced stages of developing a photobook or publication.

Curated by Ben Freedman

Luis Mora Say it with Flowers

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2019 contact gallery exhibition
OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2019 contact gallery exhibition

Luis Mora Say it with Flowers

October 17 – November 30, 2019
  • CONTACT Gallery
Installation view of Luis Mora, Say it with Flowers, Oct. 17–Nov. 30, 2019, CONTACT Gallery. Documentation photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Luis Mora, Paloquemao, Bogotá, 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Luis Mora, Paloquemao, Bogotá, 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Installation view of Luis Mora, Say it with Flowers, Oct. 17–Nov. 30, 2019, CONTACT Gallery. Documentation photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Installation view of Luis Mora, Say it with Flowers, Oct. 17–Nov. 30, 2019, CONTACT Gallery. Documentation photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Luis Mora, Say it With Flowers, 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Luis Mora, Paloquemao, Bogotá, 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Installation view of Luis Mora, Say it with Flowers, Oct. 17–Nov. 30, 2019, CONTACT Gallery. Documentation photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Installation view of Luis Mora, Say it with Flowers, Oct. 17–Nov. 30, 2019, CONTACT Gallery. Documentation photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
Installation view of Luis Mora, Say it with Flowers, Oct. 17–Nov. 30, 2019, CONTACT Gallery. Documentation photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.

Flowers are often given in moments of joy and sorrow and have a multitude of connotations. When words fail, flowers become symbolic gestures and the ritual of offering them is as old as recorded history. The title of this exhibition by Toronto-based artist Luis Mora is a simple statement—Say it with Flowers—and the work functions as a love letter to Colombia, the country where Mora was born.

In 2000, when Mora was 12 years old, his parents decided to emigrate, and the family eventually settled in Toronto. He returned to Colombia for the first time in 2013, reacquainting himself with the country’s beautiful sights, people, and energy. The return to his birthplace gave way to a deeper curiosity that eventually led him to the famed Paloquemao market.

Paloquemao is a sprawling traditional food, goods, and flower market located in the capital of Bogota and is the second largest of its kind in the nation. The market is known as a place where the rigidly divided social classes of Colombia collide and it reveals complicated religious and political themes that reflect broader social narratives. Colombia is one of the largest flower exporters in the world, shipping more than $1 billion in blooms, and dominating North American markets. For Mora, the life cycle of a single flower cultivated in one country and destined to end up in another, is a metaphor for his own life and immigrant story. In turn, it echoes the aspirations of many people living in Colombia. Today, young Colombians are often raised knowing that they are going to end up somewhere else: a “leaving soon” mentality. Much of this is due to the current migrant crisis with Colombia’s neighbouring country of Venezuela, which involves harrowing stories of people traversing the Venezuelan border in hopes of a better life. A deeply religious people, they believe in God more than in their own government. Faith is not an option, but a necessity.

Mora returned to Paloquemao repeatedly to delve deeper into its metaphoric complexities. Say it with Flowers brings together a selection of photographs taken in the market alongside a vitrine containing objects either purchased or found by Mora during his time documenting there, such as religious ephemera, stickers, and pins. Having already established himself as an evocative portrait photographer of the Toronto arts community, Mora follows individuals who are known as “runners:” workers who are hired by farmers to move product around the market. While some portraits are captured frontally in black and white, similar to the style that he is most known for, other photographs depict the runners with large colourful bundles of flowers that serve as masks, concealing their identities. Their bodies have become vehicles that serve to move large amounts of blooms from point a to point b and perhaps somewhere around the globe. Images of blooms claustrophobically piled on top of one another, flowers in transit, and religious iconography offer powerful visual metaphors that echo the precariousness of home and the lengths to which people will go to acquire it.

Mora explores the strength and beauty of his former home and its realities in ways that contrast sharply with his life in Toronto, where many of the flowers imported originate from Colombia. As constant reminders of the distance he has travelled, the flowers raise difficult questions about what it means to live and work abroad. Instead of struggling to express his feelings with words, Mora says it with flowers. In this way, he participates in the symbolic ambiguity of the flower and all of its emotional complexity.

Mora’s first self-published photobook of the same name will be available for purchase at the CONTACT Gallery throughout the duration of the exhibition.

This exhibition premiers an initiative called The CONTACT Lab, which seeks to highlight new projects by Canadian artists discovered during the CONTACT Festival through its various programs. The Lab, an evolving and flexible platform, provides exhibition opportunities to emerging visual artists in the CONTACT Gallery.

Say it with Flowers is a 2019 honourable mention of the annual Edward Burtynsky Photobook Grant that offers a $5,000 grant to support Canadian artists and photographers who are at the advanced stages of developing a photobook or publication.

Curated by Ben Freedman

Luis Mora Say it with Flowers

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2019 contact gallery 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.