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OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Carrie Mae Weems Heave

May 4 – July 27, 2019
  • Art Museum at the University of Toronto – Justina M. Barnicke Gallery
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Carrie Mae Weems, People of a Darker Hue, 2016. Video still. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Carrie Mae Weems, Constructing History: A Requiem to Mark the Moment, 2008. Video still. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.

This is a story within a story, how to enter this history, what to show, what to say, what to feel. It is a creation myth—how things came to be as they are.—Carrie Mae Weems, Constructing History (2008)

Carrie Mae Weems testifies, without equivocation, to how violence is an ongoing history that pulses through our present. With a sensibility honed to the rhythms and workings of power, she points to a tidal pull of oppressions, inextricably linked, recurrent and indelible. Sounding a sustained alarm that echoes throughout the exhibition, she implores: How did we get to this point?

In answer, she offers a fulsome history lesson, firmly rooted in the upheaval of the 1960s—an era punctuated by loss, harm done, ritual discrimination and assassinations. Each of the rooms forming the exhibition invokes a familiar interior—the classroom, the living room, and the entertainment complex—with its attendant rhetoric, tempo, and laws. Violence lurks in each of these sites and with the devotion of an archivist, Weems catalogues the exercise of power and full toll of human cruelty.

Constructing History: A Requiem to Mark the Moment (2008) is a body of work that Weems created in concert with students from the Savannah College of Art and Design, who she enlisted to re-enact key moments of past political violence. Dramatic tableaux posed by the students revisit the most publicized and archetypal of political assassinations, including those of John F. Kennedy, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, and later, Benazir Bhutto. In the unfinished hostilities of these moments, Weems exposes the underpinnings of today’s extremism, hate crimes, and demagoguery.

In Heave: Part I – A Case Study (A Quiet Place?) (2018), a constructed domestic space contains an array of signs and found ephemera, including broadcasts, revolutionary icons, popular music, magazines, and games. These everyday furnishings of American life denote both personal experience and structural violence. On a commanding mid-century modern desk, Weems places a set of bound books bearing the titles The Prison Industrial Complex, The Battle for Representation, The Skin in the Game, The Corporate State, and Spies, Surveillance, and Cyber Attacks. Together with a video compilation by the artist that weaves between historic newsreels and a contemporary choreography, these artifacts suggest the landscape of her own lived history. In an interview, Weems states: “I don’t deal with the history of violence constantly because I want to, but really because I am compelled to. My background, my culture, my concerns, along with my skin, the way in which I have been marked by time forces me in some ways to do so.”

In Heave: Part II (2018), a theatrical space is adorned by red stanchions, illuminated only by the light of a projected stream of videos. The installation is a detailed reckoning with the roots of violence in America, revealing a culture that consumes violence as daily entertainment. Among the most poignant material included is People of A Darker Hue (2016), which records the too palpable evidence of white supremacy at work and what it means to live day to day under constant fear of death for merely being in the world.

In the title Heave, Weems invokes the cadence of breathing. Under threat, we gasp for air, we retch, we convulse. So too does the social body in crisis—starved, abused, agitated, pulled apart, it heaves. In a surge of hatred, she sees a latent ailment propelled to the surface, brought into irrepressible visibility. Amid this violence, her melodious voice raises in an incantation to lament, to mourn, to howl.

Supported by Liza Mauer and Andrew Sheiner, Cindy and Shon Barnett, The Stonefields Foundation, and an anonymous donor.

Curated by Barbara Fischer and Sarah Robayo Sheridan

Mike Hoolboom and Jorge Lozano Configurations

A Space Gallery
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Arnait Video Productions Arnait Ikajurtigiit: Women Helping Each Other

AGYU
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Photography Collection: Women in Focus, 1920s–1940s

Art Gallery of Ontario
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Carrie Mae Weems Heave

Art Museum
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Michael Tsegaye Future Memories

BAND Gallery
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Ayana V. Jackson Fissure

Campbell House Museum
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Annette Mangaard Water Fall: A Cinematic Installation

Charles Street Video
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Carrie Mae Weems Blending the Blues

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Carrie Mae Weems Carrie Mae Weems

Daniels Building U of T
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Geoffrey James Working Spaces | Civic Settings: Jože Plečnik in Ljubljana

Daniels Building U of T
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition Developing Historical Negatives

Gallery 44
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Erika DeFreitas It is now here that I have gathered and measured yes.

Gallery TPW
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Zinnia Naqvi, Luther Konadu, Ethan Murphy The New Generation Photography Award

Gladstone Hotel
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

As Immense as the Sky

The Image Centre
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Scotiabank Photography Award: Moyra Davey

The Image Centre
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Nevet Yitzhak WarCraft

Koffler Gallery
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Louie Palu Distant Early Warning

The McMichael
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Beatrice Gibson Plural Dreams of Social Life

Mercer Union
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

T.M. Glass The Audible Language of Flowers

Onsite Gallery
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition Idea Projects

Ontario Science Centre
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Taysir Batniji Suspended Time

Prefix ICA
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

The 2019 Photobook Lab

Scrap Metal
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Nadia Myre Balancing Acts

Textile Museum of Canada
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Manar Moursi The Loudspeaker and the Tower

Trinity Square Video
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Anthea Baxter-Page Passages

Alison Milne Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Leyla Godfrey, Clea Christakos-Gee A Thread to See Through

Alliance Française Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Noa Im Beyond the Limits

Artspace Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Tong Lam Moving Images, Moving People

Bachir/Yerex Presentation Space
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Jens Pfeifer, Katrin Korfmann Back Stages

Bau-Xi Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Jackson Klie Bent Atlas

Black Cat Artspace
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Stan Williams This is Indian Land

Black Cat Showroom
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Sophie Sabet I Almost Didn't Feel You Leave

Bradley Museum
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Adam Swica Placeholders

Christie Contemporary
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Jonah Samson It Will Be Night, The Mist Will Clear

Clint Roenisch Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition Turf

Connections Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Sondra Meszaros two blazing glares, for her pierce

Corkin Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition An Archive, But Not An Atlas

Critical Distance
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Chris Curreri The Ventriloquist

Daniel Faria Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Alex McLeod GHOST STORIES

Division Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Luther Konadu, Bishara Elmi A Kind of Return

Doris McCarthy Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Douglas Clark: Suite Hereafter

Gallery 310
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Glenn Lewis: The Poetic Process

Gardiner Museum
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Clara Couzino S’évader (To Escape)

General Hardware Contemporary
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Christopher Lacroix Perversions come in all sizes

Georgia Scherman Projects
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Samer Muscati Rwanda Retold: The Enduring Stories of Genocide Survivors

Hart House
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Sara Silks, Kris Sanford, Addison Brown Perceptions

Lonsdale Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Jeff Bierk In the Absence of Paradise

The Loon
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Liss Platt Trail Blaze

MKG127
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Neeko Paluzzi HOMUNCULUS, or the planets seen through my childhood window

Northern Contemporary
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Robert Mapplethorpe The Outsiders

Olga Korper Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Greg Girard Tokyo-Yokosuka 1976-1983

Patel Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Zachary Ayotte Trauma Clown

Patel Studios
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Stephen Andrews Take Hold

Paul Petro Contemporary Art
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Hua Jin The Trees Want to Remain Quiet, but the Wind Won't Stop

The Robert McLaughlin Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Roger LeMoyne The Republic of Port-au-Prince

Rukaj Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Sarah Anne Johnson This Land

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition Power in Resistance

Sur Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Laura Shintani, Leala Hewak Fault Lines

Tangled Art + Disability
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Eliot Wright Further Along The Road

Urbanspace Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Anique Jordan Ban’ yuh belly

Zalucky Contemporary
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition
OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Carrie Mae Weems Heave

May 4 – July 27, 2019
  • Art Museum at the University of Toronto – Justina M. Barnicke Gallery
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Carrie Mae Weems, People of a Darker Hue, 2016. Video still. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Installation view, Carrie Mae Weems, Heave, Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
Carrie Mae Weems, Constructing History: A Requiem to Mark the Moment, 2008. Video still. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.

This is a story within a story, how to enter this history, what to show, what to say, what to feel. It is a creation myth—how things came to be as they are.—Carrie Mae Weems, Constructing History (2008)

Carrie Mae Weems testifies, without equivocation, to how violence is an ongoing history that pulses through our present. With a sensibility honed to the rhythms and workings of power, she points to a tidal pull of oppressions, inextricably linked, recurrent and indelible. Sounding a sustained alarm that echoes throughout the exhibition, she implores: How did we get to this point?

In answer, she offers a fulsome history lesson, firmly rooted in the upheaval of the 1960s—an era punctuated by loss, harm done, ritual discrimination and assassinations. Each of the rooms forming the exhibition invokes a familiar interior—the classroom, the living room, and the entertainment complex—with its attendant rhetoric, tempo, and laws. Violence lurks in each of these sites and with the devotion of an archivist, Weems catalogues the exercise of power and full toll of human cruelty.

Constructing History: A Requiem to Mark the Moment (2008) is a body of work that Weems created in concert with students from the Savannah College of Art and Design, who she enlisted to re-enact key moments of past political violence. Dramatic tableaux posed by the students revisit the most publicized and archetypal of political assassinations, including those of John F. Kennedy, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, and later, Benazir Bhutto. In the unfinished hostilities of these moments, Weems exposes the underpinnings of today’s extremism, hate crimes, and demagoguery.

In Heave: Part I – A Case Study (A Quiet Place?) (2018), a constructed domestic space contains an array of signs and found ephemera, including broadcasts, revolutionary icons, popular music, magazines, and games. These everyday furnishings of American life denote both personal experience and structural violence. On a commanding mid-century modern desk, Weems places a set of bound books bearing the titles The Prison Industrial Complex, The Battle for Representation, The Skin in the Game, The Corporate State, and Spies, Surveillance, and Cyber Attacks. Together with a video compilation by the artist that weaves between historic newsreels and a contemporary choreography, these artifacts suggest the landscape of her own lived history. In an interview, Weems states: “I don’t deal with the history of violence constantly because I want to, but really because I am compelled to. My background, my culture, my concerns, along with my skin, the way in which I have been marked by time forces me in some ways to do so.”

In Heave: Part II (2018), a theatrical space is adorned by red stanchions, illuminated only by the light of a projected stream of videos. The installation is a detailed reckoning with the roots of violence in America, revealing a culture that consumes violence as daily entertainment. Among the most poignant material included is People of A Darker Hue (2016), which records the too palpable evidence of white supremacy at work and what it means to live day to day under constant fear of death for merely being in the world.

In the title Heave, Weems invokes the cadence of breathing. Under threat, we gasp for air, we retch, we convulse. So too does the social body in crisis—starved, abused, agitated, pulled apart, it heaves. In a surge of hatred, she sees a latent ailment propelled to the surface, brought into irrepressible visibility. Amid this violence, her melodious voice raises in an incantation to lament, to mourn, to howl.

Supported by Liza Mauer and Andrew Sheiner, Cindy and Shon Barnett, The Stonefields Foundation, and an anonymous donor.

Curated by Barbara Fischer and Sarah Robayo Sheridan

Mike Hoolboom and Jorge Lozano Configurations

A Space Gallery
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Arnait Video Productions Arnait Ikajurtigiit: Women Helping Each Other

AGYU
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Photography Collection: Women in Focus, 1920s–1940s

Art Gallery of Ontario
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Carrie Mae Weems Heave

Art Museum
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Michael Tsegaye Future Memories

BAND Gallery
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Ayana V. Jackson Fissure

Campbell House Museum
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Annette Mangaard Water Fall: A Cinematic Installation

Charles Street Video
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Carrie Mae Weems Blending the Blues

CONTACT Gallery
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Carrie Mae Weems Carrie Mae Weems

Daniels Building U of T
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Geoffrey James Working Spaces | Civic Settings: Jože Plečnik in Ljubljana

Daniels Building U of T
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition Developing Historical Negatives

Gallery 44
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Erika DeFreitas It is now here that I have gathered and measured yes.

Gallery TPW
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Zinnia Naqvi, Luther Konadu, Ethan Murphy The New Generation Photography Award

Gladstone Hotel
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

As Immense as the Sky

The Image Centre
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Scotiabank Photography Award: Moyra Davey

The Image Centre
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Nevet Yitzhak WarCraft

Koffler Gallery
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Louie Palu Distant Early Warning

The McMichael
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Beatrice Gibson Plural Dreams of Social Life

Mercer Union
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

T.M. Glass The Audible Language of Flowers

Onsite Gallery
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Group Exhibition Idea Projects

Ontario Science Centre
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Taysir Batniji Suspended Time

Prefix ICA
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

The 2019 Photobook Lab

Scrap Metal
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Nadia Myre Balancing Acts

Textile Museum of Canada
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Manar Moursi The Loudspeaker and the Tower

Trinity Square Video
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Anthea Baxter-Page Passages

Alison Milne Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Leyla Godfrey, Clea Christakos-Gee A Thread to See Through

Alliance Française Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Noa Im Beyond the Limits

Artspace Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Tong Lam Moving Images, Moving People

Bachir/Yerex Presentation Space
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Jens Pfeifer, Katrin Korfmann Back Stages

Bau-Xi Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Jackson Klie Bent Atlas

Black Cat Artspace
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Stan Williams This is Indian Land

Black Cat Showroom
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Sophie Sabet I Almost Didn't Feel You Leave

Bradley Museum
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Adam Swica Placeholders

Christie Contemporary
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Jonah Samson It Will Be Night, The Mist Will Clear

Clint Roenisch Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition Turf

Connections Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Sondra Meszaros two blazing glares, for her pierce

Corkin Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition An Archive, But Not An Atlas

Critical Distance
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Chris Curreri The Ventriloquist

Daniel Faria Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Alex McLeod GHOST STORIES

Division Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Luther Konadu, Bishara Elmi A Kind of Return

Doris McCarthy Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Douglas Clark: Suite Hereafter

Gallery 310
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Glenn Lewis: The Poetic Process

Gardiner Museum
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Clara Couzino S’évader (To Escape)

General Hardware Contemporary
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Christopher Lacroix Perversions come in all sizes

Georgia Scherman Projects
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Samer Muscati Rwanda Retold: The Enduring Stories of Genocide Survivors

Hart House
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Sara Silks, Kris Sanford, Addison Brown Perceptions

Lonsdale Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Jeff Bierk In the Absence of Paradise

The Loon
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Liss Platt Trail Blaze

MKG127
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Neeko Paluzzi HOMUNCULUS, or the planets seen through my childhood window

Northern Contemporary
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Robert Mapplethorpe The Outsiders

Olga Korper Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Greg Girard Tokyo-Yokosuka 1976-1983

Patel Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Zachary Ayotte Trauma Clown

Patel Studios
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Stephen Andrews Take Hold

Paul Petro Contemporary Art
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Hua Jin The Trees Want to Remain Quiet, but the Wind Won't Stop

The Robert McLaughlin Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Roger LeMoyne The Republic of Port-au-Prince

Rukaj Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Sarah Anne Johnson This Land

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition Power in Resistance

Sur Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Laura Shintani, Leala Hewak Fault Lines

Tangled Art + Disability
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Eliot Wright Further Along The Road

Urbanspace Gallery
Archives 2019 juried call exhibition

Anique Jordan Ban’ yuh belly

Zalucky Contemporary
Archives 2019 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.