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

Natalie Wood Performing Change

September 10 – October 30, 2020
  • John B. Aird Gallery
  • Charles Street Video
Natalie Wood, The Fall, (video still from Time Will Come), 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Natalie Wood, Sleep, (video still from Touched by a Soucouyant), 2015. Courtesy of the artist.
Natalie Wood, Prayer, (video still from Time Will Come), 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Natalie Wood, Dip, (video still from Time Will Come), 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Natalie Wood, Praying, (video still from Time Will Come), 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Natalie Wood, Mirror Image, (video still from Time Will Come), 2018. Courtesy of the artist.

Performing Change is a survey of lens-based work, participatory performance, and installations made over the last decade by Trinidadian-born, Toronto-based artist Natalie Wood. Positioned across two venues, Wood’s work reflects on the fugitive and the imaginary as forms of resistance to colonialism and slavery’s afterlife. It counters heteronormativity by presenting rarely seen imagery showing intimacy and tenderness between Black women. Using a cinema verité approach, the artist celebrates Black women’s lives and loves.

Wood’s interdisciplinary artwork exists at the intersections of popular culture, gender, Black feminism, sexuality, and race. She weaves together queer Afro-Caribbean diasporic women’s experiences within aesthetic frameworks, reinforcing the idea that Black is beautiful and that queer love IS love. Performing identity actively and constantly produces and reproduces the self that is presented to the world—because humans absorb the ideals and expectations of the surrounding culture, living queerness necessitates performing identity as a mechanism for survival. When cultures are in opposition to one’s natural self, individuals must also perform change. This occurs once self-love takes place, which then makes it possible to resist and disrupt culturally defined normativity.

Wood’s video Time Will Come (2018) exemplifies the ways in which Black women hold each other up and arrive at self-love. It shows a relationship open to interpretation, possibly between mother and daughter, mentor and mentee, friends, or lovers—aspects of each exist in most relations between women. Viewers are given a glimpse into the domestic and working worlds that Black women inhabit and that are just now beginning to circulate in popular culture. Wood’s video is not Hollywood or The L Word, however, because her work is not a straightforward narrative. Rather, it presents a window into a secret psychological framework that is non-binary and non-traditional.

In Touched by a Soucouyant (2015), Wood explores a Caribbean myth in which, by night, a woman transforms herself into a ball of fire and sucks the blood of her victims. This video (filmed on the artist’s and actors’ mobile phones) depicts an encounter with a soucouyant. In this piece, the taboo of forbidden love is readdressed as a celebratory event.

To create Bananagram/Bakergram (2013–20), Wood brings together live performance and a video projection. She presents Josephine Baker’s dance sequence in the film Princess Tam Tam (1935) unfolding in reverse in order to create alternative narratives and engage with the pain of assimilation and misrepresentation. In the film, Baker stars as a Tunisian woman introduced into Parisian society, but in real life, Baker was an American-born French entertainer, as well as an agent of the resistance and a civil rights activist. For the Bananagram performance, Wood occupies a back-lit desk beneath the projection and writes quotes from Baker and Frantz Fanon onto bananas that are handed out to the audience, a metaphor for the “primitive” role in which Baker was cast.

Wood’s timely cinematic work theorizes and maps models of imagined and sustained cultural resistance and resilience onto new-media formats, providing viewers new tools with which to engage the social imaginary. Wood’s work is positive, offers hope, shows love, is aspirational, and as such one can describe hers as a practice that is bridge-building, or in the artist’s words: “performs change.”

Presented by John B. Aird Gallery in partnership with Charles Street Video and CONTACT

Curated by Carla Garnet

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 exhibition

Natalie Wood Performing Change

September 10 – October 30, 2020
  • John B. Aird Gallery
  • Charles Street Video
Natalie Wood, The Fall, (video still from Time Will Come), 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Natalie Wood, Sleep, (video still from Touched by a Soucouyant), 2015. Courtesy of the artist.
Natalie Wood, Prayer, (video still from Time Will Come), 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Natalie Wood, Dip, (video still from Time Will Come), 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Natalie Wood, Praying, (video still from Time Will Come), 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Natalie Wood, Mirror Image, (video still from Time Will Come), 2018. Courtesy of the artist.

Performing Change is a survey of lens-based work, participatory performance, and installations made over the last decade by Trinidadian-born, Toronto-based artist Natalie Wood. Positioned across two venues, Wood’s work reflects on the fugitive and the imaginary as forms of resistance to colonialism and slavery’s afterlife. It counters heteronormativity by presenting rarely seen imagery showing intimacy and tenderness between Black women. Using a cinema verité approach, the artist celebrates Black women’s lives and loves.

Wood’s interdisciplinary artwork exists at the intersections of popular culture, gender, Black feminism, sexuality, and race. She weaves together queer Afro-Caribbean diasporic women’s experiences within aesthetic frameworks, reinforcing the idea that Black is beautiful and that queer love IS love. Performing identity actively and constantly produces and reproduces the self that is presented to the world—because humans absorb the ideals and expectations of the surrounding culture, living queerness necessitates performing identity as a mechanism for survival. When cultures are in opposition to one’s natural self, individuals must also perform change. This occurs once self-love takes place, which then makes it possible to resist and disrupt culturally defined normativity.

Wood’s video Time Will Come (2018) exemplifies the ways in which Black women hold each other up and arrive at self-love. It shows a relationship open to interpretation, possibly between mother and daughter, mentor and mentee, friends, or lovers—aspects of each exist in most relations between women. Viewers are given a glimpse into the domestic and working worlds that Black women inhabit and that are just now beginning to circulate in popular culture. Wood’s video is not Hollywood or The L Word, however, because her work is not a straightforward narrative. Rather, it presents a window into a secret psychological framework that is non-binary and non-traditional.

In Touched by a Soucouyant (2015), Wood explores a Caribbean myth in which, by night, a woman transforms herself into a ball of fire and sucks the blood of her victims. This video (filmed on the artist’s and actors’ mobile phones) depicts an encounter with a soucouyant. In this piece, the taboo of forbidden love is readdressed as a celebratory event.

To create Bananagram/Bakergram (2013–20), Wood brings together live performance and a video projection. She presents Josephine Baker’s dance sequence in the film Princess Tam Tam (1935) unfolding in reverse in order to create alternative narratives and engage with the pain of assimilation and misrepresentation. In the film, Baker stars as a Tunisian woman introduced into Parisian society, but in real life, Baker was an American-born French entertainer, as well as an agent of the resistance and a civil rights activist. For the Bananagram performance, Wood occupies a back-lit desk beneath the projection and writes quotes from Baker and Frantz Fanon onto bananas that are handed out to the audience, a metaphor for the “primitive” role in which Baker was cast.

Wood’s timely cinematic work theorizes and maps models of imagined and sustained cultural resistance and resilience onto new-media formats, providing viewers new tools with which to engage the social imaginary. Wood’s work is positive, offers hope, shows love, is aspirational, and as such one can describe hers as a practice that is bridge-building, or in the artist’s words: “performs change.”

Presented by John B. Aird Gallery in partnership with Charles Street Video and CONTACT

Curated by Carla Garnet

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.