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

Carrie Mae Weems Blending the Blues

May 1 – July 26, 2019
  • CONTACT Gallery
    Carrie Mae Weems, Color Real and Imagined, 2014. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY
Carrie Mae Weems, Color Real and Imagined, 2014. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY

Carrie Mae Weems tells impassioned stories about humanity, probing the realities of losing and gaining privilege. Throughout her artistic practice, she has sustained a commitment to laying bare the socio-cultural processes of oppression, critically examining history and its reverberations, as well as popular culture and its manifestations. She breaks down structures of authority, tackling the culturally defined markers of identity—class, race, gender, and sexuality—and their implications in the realm of representation. Based out of Syracuse and Brooklyn, New York, Weems makes photographs and films, writes, directs, and acts, frequently performing the role of protagonist or witness. Using seductive aesthetic strategies to draw viewers into a personal engagement with difficult issues, her work provokes questions and rouses empathy.

The Festival’s spotlight on Weems situates her work at five distinct locations across Toronto, representing the artist’s first solo presentation in Canada. These gallery exhibitions and public installations combine pivotal streams of Weems’ practice: her sustained focus on women, which confronts issues of both repression and empowerment; and her ongoing investigation into the devastating effects of violence, especially against Black men. Weems’ exhibition at CONTACT Gallery, Blending the Blues, features photographic works spanning three decades that draw together these parallel themes.

Carrie Mae Weems, Installation view of Blending the Blues, CONTACT Gallery, Toronto, May 1 - July 27, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, theartist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.

Positioned at the gallery’s entrance, Color Real and Imagined (2014), a larger-than-life, soft-focused portrait of American singer and pianist Dinah Washington, highlights Weems’ approach to colour and its associated theories. Blocks of primary colour obscure the appropriated publicity photograph of the self-professed “Queen of the Blues”—the leading Black female recording artist during Weems’ childhood in the 1950s—to redress the fading legacies of Black women performers in popular culture. These ideas are further explored in Weems’ public installation Slow Fade to Black at Metro Hall and Scenes & Take at TIFF.

Carrie Mae Weems, Untitled (Colored People Grid), 2009. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY

Weems uses colour to reflect on conceptions of race and how these are framed, a strategy that recurs throughout the exhibition. In Untitled (Colored People Grid) (2009) colourized black-and-white portraits of African-American children—pictured at that moment in life when race surfaces as an integral issue—reference the complexity of skin tone and racial vernacular modulations, such as Blue Black Boy and Golden Yella Girl. Through these interventions, Weems points to hierarchies of social status based on colour, that privilege light shades of skin. Historical imagery is appropriated to confront racial conflict in Blues and Pinks (1992 – 93), which reconfigures photographer Charles Moore’s iconic photographs of the 1963 Children’s Crusade in Birmingham, Alabama. These images depict protestors—primarily Black youth—being sprayed with high-pressure firehoses and physically brutalized by police and attack dogs. Weems’ subtle overlay of pink and blue hues evokes tenderness and repositions the past in the present, underscoring the ongoing systemic violence toward people of colour by police and other institutions of power; a history that is interrogated in the concurrent exhibition Heave within the Art Museum at the University of Toronto.

Carrie Mae Weems, All the Boys (Blocked 3), 2016. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY
Carrie Mae Weems, All the Boys (Blocked 3), 2016. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY
Carrie Mae Weems, All the Boys (Profile 1) (detail), 2016. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY
Carrie Mae Weems, All the Boys (Profile 1) (detail), 2016. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY

Weems’ examination of police brutality and the mechanisms of oppression resonates in the series All the Boys, (Blocked) and (Profile) (2016). By appropriating the “objective” positioning of the police mugshot and applying colour, Weems manifests layered meanings. Across the exhibition she uses blue, with its many connotations—melancholy, despair, the musical genre of the Blues, coolness, heaven—and here the colour imbues her figures with iconic, saint like qualities that complicate notions of criminal stereotypes. Weems’ images speak to the condition of being Black under a continuing legacy of institutional racism.

Carrie Mae Weems, Untitled (Spike Lee Grid), 2018. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY
Carrie Mae Weems, Untitled (Spike Lee Grid), 2018. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY
Carrie Mae Weems, The Blues (A.K.A. MJB), 2017. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY
Carrie Mae Weems, The Blues (A.K.A. MJB), 2017. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY

As part of an ongoing cultural dialogue built by Weems and her contemporaries, Untitled (Spike Lee Grid) (2018) pays homage to Spike Lee’s films and critical insights into Black American culture, racism, systemic oppression, and resilience. Lee has a career that parallels Weems’ own, as does acclaimed musician and actor Mary J. Blige, the subject of The Blues (A.K.A. MJB) (2017). Both works emerged from magazine commissions, with the Blige images made in light of her Oscar-nominated performance in the film Mudbound, where she portrayed a mother coping with poverty and racism after World War II. These elegant images deem Blige royalty, focusing on her beauty, power, introspection, and perseverance—themes that are elaborated in the public installation Anointed at 460 King Street West.

A fervent advocate for social justice, Weems’ poised diplomacy and unwavering idealism result in eloquent, timeless works that give voice to searing messages and a profound point of view. While her pictorial accounts are derived from personal associations and societal constructs, they are quintessentially about all of us. Ultimately, Weems’ work centres on power and love.

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

Curated by Bonnie Rubenstein

Installation Images

  • Carrie Mae Weems, Installation view of Blending the Blues, CONTACT Gallery, Toronto, May 1 - July 27, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
  • Carrie Mae Weems, Installation view of Blending the Blues, CONTACT Gallery, Toronto, May 1 - July 27, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
  • Carrie Mae Weems, Installation view of Blending the Blues, CONTACT Gallery, Toronto, May 1 - July 27, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
  • Carrie Mae Weems, Installation view of Blending the Blues, CONTACT Gallery, Toronto, May 1 - July 27, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
  • Carrie Mae Weems, Installation view of Blending the Blues, CONTACT Gallery, Toronto, May 1 - July 27, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
  • Carrie Mae Weems, Installation view of Blending the Blues, CONTACT Gallery, Toronto, May 1 - July 27, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.

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

Carrie Mae Weems Blending the Blues

May 1 – July 26, 2019
  • CONTACT Gallery
    Carrie Mae Weems, Color Real and Imagined, 2014. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY
Carrie Mae Weems, Color Real and Imagined, 2014. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY

Carrie Mae Weems tells impassioned stories about humanity, probing the realities of losing and gaining privilege. Throughout her artistic practice, she has sustained a commitment to laying bare the socio-cultural processes of oppression, critically examining history and its reverberations, as well as popular culture and its manifestations. She breaks down structures of authority, tackling the culturally defined markers of identity—class, race, gender, and sexuality—and their implications in the realm of representation. Based out of Syracuse and Brooklyn, New York, Weems makes photographs and films, writes, directs, and acts, frequently performing the role of protagonist or witness. Using seductive aesthetic strategies to draw viewers into a personal engagement with difficult issues, her work provokes questions and rouses empathy.

The Festival’s spotlight on Weems situates her work at five distinct locations across Toronto, representing the artist’s first solo presentation in Canada. These gallery exhibitions and public installations combine pivotal streams of Weems’ practice: her sustained focus on women, which confronts issues of both repression and empowerment; and her ongoing investigation into the devastating effects of violence, especially against Black men. Weems’ exhibition at CONTACT Gallery, Blending the Blues, features photographic works spanning three decades that draw together these parallel themes.

Carrie Mae Weems, Installation view of Blending the Blues, CONTACT Gallery, Toronto, May 1 - July 27, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, theartist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.

Positioned at the gallery’s entrance, Color Real and Imagined (2014), a larger-than-life, soft-focused portrait of American singer and pianist Dinah Washington, highlights Weems’ approach to colour and its associated theories. Blocks of primary colour obscure the appropriated publicity photograph of the self-professed “Queen of the Blues”—the leading Black female recording artist during Weems’ childhood in the 1950s—to redress the fading legacies of Black women performers in popular culture. These ideas are further explored in Weems’ public installation Slow Fade to Black at Metro Hall and Scenes & Take at TIFF.

Carrie Mae Weems, Untitled (Colored People Grid), 2009. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY

Weems uses colour to reflect on conceptions of race and how these are framed, a strategy that recurs throughout the exhibition. In Untitled (Colored People Grid) (2009) colourized black-and-white portraits of African-American children—pictured at that moment in life when race surfaces as an integral issue—reference the complexity of skin tone and racial vernacular modulations, such as Blue Black Boy and Golden Yella Girl. Through these interventions, Weems points to hierarchies of social status based on colour, that privilege light shades of skin. Historical imagery is appropriated to confront racial conflict in Blues and Pinks (1992 – 93), which reconfigures photographer Charles Moore’s iconic photographs of the 1963 Children’s Crusade in Birmingham, Alabama. These images depict protestors—primarily Black youth—being sprayed with high-pressure firehoses and physically brutalized by police and attack dogs. Weems’ subtle overlay of pink and blue hues evokes tenderness and repositions the past in the present, underscoring the ongoing systemic violence toward people of colour by police and other institutions of power; a history that is interrogated in the concurrent exhibition Heave within the Art Museum at the University of Toronto.

Carrie Mae Weems, All the Boys (Blocked 3), 2016. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY
Carrie Mae Weems, All the Boys (Blocked 3), 2016. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY
Carrie Mae Weems, All the Boys (Profile 1) (detail), 2016. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY
Carrie Mae Weems, All the Boys (Profile 1) (detail), 2016. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY

Weems’ examination of police brutality and the mechanisms of oppression resonates in the series All the Boys, (Blocked) and (Profile) (2016). By appropriating the “objective” positioning of the police mugshot and applying colour, Weems manifests layered meanings. Across the exhibition she uses blue, with its many connotations—melancholy, despair, the musical genre of the Blues, coolness, heaven—and here the colour imbues her figures with iconic, saint like qualities that complicate notions of criminal stereotypes. Weems’ images speak to the condition of being Black under a continuing legacy of institutional racism.

Carrie Mae Weems, Untitled (Spike Lee Grid), 2018. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY
Carrie Mae Weems, Untitled (Spike Lee Grid), 2018. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY
Carrie Mae Weems, The Blues (A.K.A. MJB), 2017. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY
Carrie Mae Weems, The Blues (A.K.A. MJB), 2017. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY

As part of an ongoing cultural dialogue built by Weems and her contemporaries, Untitled (Spike Lee Grid) (2018) pays homage to Spike Lee’s films and critical insights into Black American culture, racism, systemic oppression, and resilience. Lee has a career that parallels Weems’ own, as does acclaimed musician and actor Mary J. Blige, the subject of The Blues (A.K.A. MJB) (2017). Both works emerged from magazine commissions, with the Blige images made in light of her Oscar-nominated performance in the film Mudbound, where she portrayed a mother coping with poverty and racism after World War II. These elegant images deem Blige royalty, focusing on her beauty, power, introspection, and perseverance—themes that are elaborated in the public installation Anointed at 460 King Street West.

A fervent advocate for social justice, Weems’ poised diplomacy and unwavering idealism result in eloquent, timeless works that give voice to searing messages and a profound point of view. While her pictorial accounts are derived from personal associations and societal constructs, they are quintessentially about all of us. Ultimately, Weems’ work centres on power and love.

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

Curated by Bonnie Rubenstein

Installation Images

  • Carrie Mae Weems, Installation view of Blending the Blues, CONTACT Gallery, Toronto, May 1 - July 27, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
  • Carrie Mae Weems, Installation view of Blending the Blues, CONTACT Gallery, Toronto, May 1 - July 27, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
  • Carrie Mae Weems, Installation view of Blending the Blues, CONTACT Gallery, Toronto, May 1 - July 27, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
  • Carrie Mae Weems, Installation view of Blending the Blues, CONTACT Gallery, Toronto, May 1 - July 27, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
  • Carrie Mae Weems, Installation view of Blending the Blues, CONTACT Gallery, Toronto, May 1 - July 27, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.
  • Carrie Mae Weems, Installation view of Blending the Blues, CONTACT Gallery, Toronto, May 1 - July 27, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artist, and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY.

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

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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.