CONTACT's 30 Edition, May 2026 - Register Now
Festival GalleryEditorialPhotobooksArchivesSupportersAboutFundraiserDonate
OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2019 primary exhibition

Ayana V. Jackson Fissure

May 1 – June 2, 2019
  • Campbell House Museum
Ayana V. Jackson, Installation view of Fissure, Campbell House Museum, Toronto, May 1 - June 2, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Galerie Baudoin Lebon
Ayana V. Jackson, Moments of Sweet Reprieve, from the series Intimate Justice in the Stolen Moment, 2017. Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Baudoin Lebon.
Ayana V. Jackson, Installation view of Fissure, Campbell House Museum, Toronto, May 1 - June 2, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Galerie Baudoin Lebon
Ayana V. Jackson, Installation view of Fissure, Campbell House Museum, Toronto, May 1 - June 2, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Galerie Baudoin Lebon
Ayana V. Jackson, Stella, from the series Dear Sarah, 2016. Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Baudoin Lebon.
Ayana V. Jackson, Saffronia, from the series Intimate Justice in the Stolen Moment, 2017. Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Baudoin Lebon.
Ayana V. Jackson, Installation view of Fissure, Campbell House Museum, Toronto, May 1 - June 2, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Galerie Baudoin Lebon
Ayana V. Jackson, Installation view of Fissure, Campbell House Museum, Toronto, May 1 - June 2, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Galerie Baudoin Lebon
Ayana V. Jackson, Installation view of Fissure, Campbell House Museum, Toronto, May 1 - June 2, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Galerie Baudoin Lebon
Ayana V. Jackson, Installation view of Fissure, Campbell House Museum, Toronto, May 1 - June 2, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Galerie Baudoin Lebon

fissure (noun)
1. a narrow opening or crack of considerable length and depth usually occurring from some breaking or parting
2. a natural cleft between body parts or in the substance of an organ
3. a separation or disagreement in thought or viewpoint

Employing her own body, Ayana V. Jackson deconstructs racial and gender stereotypes to create contemporary portraits laced with historical allusions. Deeply influenced by her own fluid identity and her transcontinental practice—working between New York, Paris, and Johannesburg— Jackson’s images crystallize African and African-diasporic realities while challenging a fraught legacy of pictorial representation.

With Fissure, Jackson’s work activates the Campbell House Museum, the former home of Chief Justice Sir William Campbell and his wife, Hannah. The house was built in 1822, more than ten years prior to Canada’s official abolition of the slave trade in 1834. While it is commonly acknowledged that enslaved Africans did flee to Canada in the mid- to late 19th century to escape the pre-abolition United States, Canada’s more than 200-year participation in the transatlantic slave trade is little-known. The Campbell House’s age, style, decor, and original function epitomize the historical period alluded to in Jackson’s photographs in a visceral way. Adorning the walls of its period-furnished sitting and dining rooms, Jackson’s series Intimate Justice in the Stolen Moment (2017) responds to vernacular depictions by reimagining both free and enslaved Black women in 19th-century Europe and the Americas. It rejects the over-representation of centuries of abuse by offering another gaze, concerned with beauty, dignity, and self-representation. Jackson draws upon both her imagination and reference materials, including the controversial Portrait d’une negresse (1800) by French painter Marie-Guillemine Benoist, the source for the work Lucy. Jackson interrupts the stereotype of the angry, irrepressible Black woman, and instead conveys sensuality and vulnerability, reinvesting historical subjects with personal selfhood and agency. Inhabiting intimately staged scenes, Jackson’s personas, some donning garments suggestive of servitude, embody “stolen” moments of tenderness, comfort, joy, and resistance, creating fissures in the historical record and challenging the authority of its pictorial referents.

Cascading from the ceiling in the upstairs ballroom, prints on fabric feature a figure adorned in a fine white dress and elaborate jewellery. The series Dear Sarah (2016) was inspired by the dramatic story of Sarah Forbes Bonetta, a Yoruba princess captured in 1848 during intertribal warfare under King Ghezo of Dahomey, and later gifted to Queen Victoria at the behest of Captain Frederick Forbes. It commemorates Bonetta in both image and name, each work’s title one of her many aliases. Defying the burden of history, the lone figure floats free on a white background, almost dancing. The weightlessness of the draped works affords a sense of release, of ascendancy. In Sarah Forbes, displayed over the fireplace, the subject wears a royal blue dress and sits, staring straight ahead with hands clasped tensely—perhaps a cue to Bonetta’s shifting subjecthood, first as princess, then captive, and finally, noblewoman. While not eliding the traces of the figure’s endurance and resilience, this portrait conveys a restrained sense of power that safeguards the exuberance of the others.

Jackson’s act of reclamation via self-portraiture endows her images, and history itself, with the nuanced testimony of lives lost to time. Intervening in domestic spaces of leisure and extravagance, routinely off limits to Black bodies unless in servitude, the works confront the viewer in the present—a moment still charged with the legacy of colonial racism. Sharing walls with historical portraits of the Campbells, Jackson’s photographs provide a sensitive counterpoint, prompting conversation about representations of Blackness and shifting identities. Her work brings the past to life with a charged presence and a poetic gesture of defiant freedom, toward a hopeful future.

Curated by Bonnie Rubenstein

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

Ayana V. Jackson Fissure

May 1 – June 2, 2019
  • Campbell House Museum
Ayana V. Jackson, Installation view of Fissure, Campbell House Museum, Toronto, May 1 - June 2, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Galerie Baudoin Lebon
Ayana V. Jackson, Moments of Sweet Reprieve, from the series Intimate Justice in the Stolen Moment, 2017. Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Baudoin Lebon.
Ayana V. Jackson, Installation view of Fissure, Campbell House Museum, Toronto, May 1 - June 2, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Galerie Baudoin Lebon
Ayana V. Jackson, Installation view of Fissure, Campbell House Museum, Toronto, May 1 - June 2, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Galerie Baudoin Lebon
Ayana V. Jackson, Stella, from the series Dear Sarah, 2016. Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Baudoin Lebon.
Ayana V. Jackson, Saffronia, from the series Intimate Justice in the Stolen Moment, 2017. Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Baudoin Lebon.
Ayana V. Jackson, Installation view of Fissure, Campbell House Museum, Toronto, May 1 - June 2, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Galerie Baudoin Lebon
Ayana V. Jackson, Installation view of Fissure, Campbell House Museum, Toronto, May 1 - June 2, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Galerie Baudoin Lebon
Ayana V. Jackson, Installation view of Fissure, Campbell House Museum, Toronto, May 1 - June 2, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Galerie Baudoin Lebon
Ayana V. Jackson, Installation view of Fissure, Campbell House Museum, Toronto, May 1 - June 2, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Galerie Baudoin Lebon

fissure (noun)
1. a narrow opening or crack of considerable length and depth usually occurring from some breaking or parting
2. a natural cleft between body parts or in the substance of an organ
3. a separation or disagreement in thought or viewpoint

Employing her own body, Ayana V. Jackson deconstructs racial and gender stereotypes to create contemporary portraits laced with historical allusions. Deeply influenced by her own fluid identity and her transcontinental practice—working between New York, Paris, and Johannesburg— Jackson’s images crystallize African and African-diasporic realities while challenging a fraught legacy of pictorial representation.

With Fissure, Jackson’s work activates the Campbell House Museum, the former home of Chief Justice Sir William Campbell and his wife, Hannah. The house was built in 1822, more than ten years prior to Canada’s official abolition of the slave trade in 1834. While it is commonly acknowledged that enslaved Africans did flee to Canada in the mid- to late 19th century to escape the pre-abolition United States, Canada’s more than 200-year participation in the transatlantic slave trade is little-known. The Campbell House’s age, style, decor, and original function epitomize the historical period alluded to in Jackson’s photographs in a visceral way. Adorning the walls of its period-furnished sitting and dining rooms, Jackson’s series Intimate Justice in the Stolen Moment (2017) responds to vernacular depictions by reimagining both free and enslaved Black women in 19th-century Europe and the Americas. It rejects the over-representation of centuries of abuse by offering another gaze, concerned with beauty, dignity, and self-representation. Jackson draws upon both her imagination and reference materials, including the controversial Portrait d’une negresse (1800) by French painter Marie-Guillemine Benoist, the source for the work Lucy. Jackson interrupts the stereotype of the angry, irrepressible Black woman, and instead conveys sensuality and vulnerability, reinvesting historical subjects with personal selfhood and agency. Inhabiting intimately staged scenes, Jackson’s personas, some donning garments suggestive of servitude, embody “stolen” moments of tenderness, comfort, joy, and resistance, creating fissures in the historical record and challenging the authority of its pictorial referents.

Cascading from the ceiling in the upstairs ballroom, prints on fabric feature a figure adorned in a fine white dress and elaborate jewellery. The series Dear Sarah (2016) was inspired by the dramatic story of Sarah Forbes Bonetta, a Yoruba princess captured in 1848 during intertribal warfare under King Ghezo of Dahomey, and later gifted to Queen Victoria at the behest of Captain Frederick Forbes. It commemorates Bonetta in both image and name, each work’s title one of her many aliases. Defying the burden of history, the lone figure floats free on a white background, almost dancing. The weightlessness of the draped works affords a sense of release, of ascendancy. In Sarah Forbes, displayed over the fireplace, the subject wears a royal blue dress and sits, staring straight ahead with hands clasped tensely—perhaps a cue to Bonetta’s shifting subjecthood, first as princess, then captive, and finally, noblewoman. While not eliding the traces of the figure’s endurance and resilience, this portrait conveys a restrained sense of power that safeguards the exuberance of the others.

Jackson’s act of reclamation via self-portraiture endows her images, and history itself, with the nuanced testimony of lives lost to time. Intervening in domestic spaces of leisure and extravagance, routinely off limits to Black bodies unless in servitude, the works confront the viewer in the present—a moment still charged with the legacy of colonial racism. Sharing walls with historical portraits of the Campbells, Jackson’s photographs provide a sensitive counterpoint, prompting conversation about representations of Blackness and shifting identities. Her work brings the past to life with a charged presence and a poetic gesture of defiant freedom, toward a hopeful future.

Curated by Bonnie Rubenstein

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

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.