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OverviewCoreOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Guillaume Simoneau MURDER

September 12 – October 17, 2020
  • Stephen Bulger Gallery
Guillaume Simoneau, Untitled (fight 02), Takeo city, Saga prefecture, Japan, 2016. © Guillaume Simoneau / courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery
Guillaume Simoneau, Untitled (dusk 04), Takeo city, Saga prefecture, Japan, 2016. © Guillaume Simoneau / courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery
Guillaume Simoneau, Untitled (giant bamboo forest), Takeo city, Saga prefecture, Japan, 2016. © Guillaume Simoneau / courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery
Guillaume Simoneau, Jeanne d’Arc 02, Ste-Marguerite, Canada, 1982. © Guillaume Simoneau / courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery
Guillaume Simoneau, Untitled (remains), Takeo city, Saga prefecture, Japan, 2016. © Guillaume Simoneau / courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery
Guillaume Simoneau, Untitled (after the fight 01), Takeo city, Saga prefecture, Japan, 2016. © Guillaume Simoneau / courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery

MURDER, by Montreal-based photographer Guillaume Simoneau, is a response to two existing bodies of work—photographs of crows taken by his mother, and the acclaimed photographic series Karasu (Ravens) by Masahisa Fukase. This once-obscure postwar masterpiece became one of the most significant collections of photographs ever published in Japan.

In the early 1980s, while Fukase was preparing to publish Karasu in book format, the four-year-old Simoneau’s father chopped down a tree that housed a nest full of baby crows; his family thus came to foster four young corvids. Simoneau’s mother, armed with a Japanese camera, documented their family’s newfound avian relationship in a suite of tender images.

MURDER seeks to honour Fukase in a violent, modern way. This same violence, pictured in Simoneau’s images and juxtaposed against the gentle calm of his mother’s, presumes a romantic vision of both his childhood and the past in general. Simoneau’s focus on the coexistence of power and vulnerability engenders many such oppositions and tensions—the resulting images challenge the viewer’s willingness to fully embrace reality. Brought together in the exhibition, the works take the form of fragmented stories, reflecting the extraordinary complexity of the world in which we live. They construct a non-linear narrative, where facts give way to perspectives, and truths to opinions.

Diane Arbus Photographs, 1956 – 1971

Art Gallery of Ontario
Archives 2020 exhibition

Christina Leslie Absence/Presence: Morant Bay

BAND Gallery
Archives 2020 exhibition

Elisabeth Belliveau Alone in the House (Still Life with Clarice Lispector)

Gallery 44
Archives 2020 exhibition

Scotiabank Photography Award: Stephen Waddell

The Image Centre
Archives 2020 exhibition

Natalie Wood Performing Change

John B. Aird Gallery, Charles Street Video
Archives 2020 exhibition

Carol Sawyer The Natalie Brettschneider Archive

Koffler Gallery
Archives 2020 exhibition

Native Art Department International Bureau of Aesthetics

Mercer Union
Archives 2020 exhibition

Vid Ingelevics, Ryan Walker Framework

Port Lands
Archives 2020 exhibition

Lyla Rye Mirage

Prefix ICA
Archives 2020 exhibition

Group Exhibition Performing Lives

Trinity Square Video
Archives 2020

San Salvatore

Archives 2020 online

Evelyn Bencicova Cure

Alison Milne Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

In Guns We Trust

Arsenal Contemporary
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Joyce Crago PLAYING DEAD

Black Cat Artspace
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Wenxin Zhang, Xuan Ye filling the Klein bottle (z) { }}}

Bunker 2 Contemporary Art Container
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Michelle Forsyth Our relationship is beautiful due to the distance

Corkin Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Steven Beckly The heart can't wait

Daniel Faria Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Diana H. Bloomfield The Old Garden

The Dylan Ellis Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Spring Hurlbut Dyadic Circles, 2019-20

Georgia Scherman Projects
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Photographers Without Borders Group Exhibition Original Perspectives

Gladstone Hotel
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Sage Szkabarnicki-Stuart Animal Logic

Henderson Lee Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition Salonsdale: Rebel Lens

Lonsdale Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Sara Graham Generator

MKG127
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Lynne Cohen Fortifications

Olga Korper Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Abundance

Patel Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Dr. Jeanne Randolph Prairie Modernist Noir – The Disappearance of the Manitoba Telephone Booth

Paul Petro Contemporary Art
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Ho Tam The Yellow Pages

Paul Petro Contemporary Art
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Graeme Wahn Lamp in the Hand

Pumice Raft
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Megan Moore Specimens

The Robert McLaughlin Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Aleesa Cohene Kathy

shell
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Guillaume Simoneau MURDER

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition [De]/[Re]constructing place

Varley Art Gallery of Markham
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Jessica Thalmann two truths and a lie

Varley Art Gallery of Markham
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Aaron Jones Closed Fist, Open Palm

Zalucky Contemporary
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition
OverviewCoreOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Guillaume Simoneau MURDER

September 12 – October 17, 2020
  • Stephen Bulger Gallery
Guillaume Simoneau, Untitled (fight 02), Takeo city, Saga prefecture, Japan, 2016. © Guillaume Simoneau / courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery
Guillaume Simoneau, Untitled (dusk 04), Takeo city, Saga prefecture, Japan, 2016. © Guillaume Simoneau / courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery
Guillaume Simoneau, Untitled (giant bamboo forest), Takeo city, Saga prefecture, Japan, 2016. © Guillaume Simoneau / courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery
Guillaume Simoneau, Jeanne d’Arc 02, Ste-Marguerite, Canada, 1982. © Guillaume Simoneau / courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery
Guillaume Simoneau, Untitled (remains), Takeo city, Saga prefecture, Japan, 2016. © Guillaume Simoneau / courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery
Guillaume Simoneau, Untitled (after the fight 01), Takeo city, Saga prefecture, Japan, 2016. © Guillaume Simoneau / courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery

MURDER, by Montreal-based photographer Guillaume Simoneau, is a response to two existing bodies of work—photographs of crows taken by his mother, and the acclaimed photographic series Karasu (Ravens) by Masahisa Fukase. This once-obscure postwar masterpiece became one of the most significant collections of photographs ever published in Japan.

In the early 1980s, while Fukase was preparing to publish Karasu in book format, the four-year-old Simoneau’s father chopped down a tree that housed a nest full of baby crows; his family thus came to foster four young corvids. Simoneau’s mother, armed with a Japanese camera, documented their family’s newfound avian relationship in a suite of tender images.

MURDER seeks to honour Fukase in a violent, modern way. This same violence, pictured in Simoneau’s images and juxtaposed against the gentle calm of his mother’s, presumes a romantic vision of both his childhood and the past in general. Simoneau’s focus on the coexistence of power and vulnerability engenders many such oppositions and tensions—the resulting images challenge the viewer’s willingness to fully embrace reality. Brought together in the exhibition, the works take the form of fragmented stories, reflecting the extraordinary complexity of the world in which we live. They construct a non-linear narrative, where facts give way to perspectives, and truths to opinions.

Diane Arbus Photographs, 1956 – 1971

Art Gallery of Ontario
Archives 2020 exhibition

Christina Leslie Absence/Presence: Morant Bay

BAND Gallery
Archives 2020 exhibition

Elisabeth Belliveau Alone in the House (Still Life with Clarice Lispector)

Gallery 44
Archives 2020 exhibition

Scotiabank Photography Award: Stephen Waddell

The Image Centre
Archives 2020 exhibition

Natalie Wood Performing Change

John B. Aird Gallery, Charles Street Video
Archives 2020 exhibition

Carol Sawyer The Natalie Brettschneider Archive

Koffler Gallery
Archives 2020 exhibition

Native Art Department International Bureau of Aesthetics

Mercer Union
Archives 2020 exhibition

Vid Ingelevics, Ryan Walker Framework

Port Lands
Archives 2020 exhibition

Lyla Rye Mirage

Prefix ICA
Archives 2020 exhibition

Group Exhibition Performing Lives

Trinity Square Video
Archives 2020

San Salvatore

Archives 2020 online

Evelyn Bencicova Cure

Alison Milne Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

In Guns We Trust

Arsenal Contemporary
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Joyce Crago PLAYING DEAD

Black Cat Artspace
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Wenxin Zhang, Xuan Ye filling the Klein bottle (z) { }}}

Bunker 2 Contemporary Art Container
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Michelle Forsyth Our relationship is beautiful due to the distance

Corkin Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Steven Beckly The heart can't wait

Daniel Faria Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Diana H. Bloomfield The Old Garden

The Dylan Ellis Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Spring Hurlbut Dyadic Circles, 2019-20

Georgia Scherman Projects
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Photographers Without Borders Group Exhibition Original Perspectives

Gladstone Hotel
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Sage Szkabarnicki-Stuart Animal Logic

Henderson Lee Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition Salonsdale: Rebel Lens

Lonsdale Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Sara Graham Generator

MKG127
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Lynne Cohen Fortifications

Olga Korper Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Abundance

Patel Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Dr. Jeanne Randolph Prairie Modernist Noir – The Disappearance of the Manitoba Telephone Booth

Paul Petro Contemporary Art
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Ho Tam The Yellow Pages

Paul Petro Contemporary Art
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Graeme Wahn Lamp in the Hand

Pumice Raft
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Megan Moore Specimens

The Robert McLaughlin Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Aleesa Cohene Kathy

shell
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Guillaume Simoneau MURDER

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Group Exhibition [De]/[Re]constructing place

Varley Art Gallery of Markham
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Jessica Thalmann two truths and a lie

Varley Art Gallery of Markham
Archives 2020 juried call exhibition

Aaron Jones Closed Fist, Open Palm

Zalucky Contemporary
Archives 2020 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.