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CorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2021 exhibition

Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?

September 10 – October 23, 2021
  • Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography
    Isabel Okoro, 02, from the series If you knew how we got here, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.
Isabel Okoro, 02, from the series If you knew how we got here, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.

Conceived as a Black, feminist, collaborative process that encourages relation building and forefronts care, Is Love A Synonym for Abolition? presents the work of emerging Toronto-based artists Isabel Okoro and Timothy Yanick Hunter. Informed by the sharing of source materials and conversations with curator Liz Ikiriko and advisor Katherine McKittrick, the exhibition features photography, archival footage, poetry, sound, and sculptural installation.

Timothy Yanick Hunter, Love Together 03, 2021. Courtesy of the artist.
Timothy Yanick Hunter, Love Together 03, 2021. Courtesy of the artist.

Is Love a Synonym for Abolition? draws its title from scholar Saidiya Hartman’s essay “The End of White Supremacy, An American Romance,” published in the June 2020 issue of BOMB Magazine. Hartman lays bare the very real, sobering pain of Black existence within an age-old white supremacist system. The summer of 2020 was a fever dream, alighting cities on fire. For Black people, the continued police brutality, public killings, and the chosen inaction by those in power was too great a pain to be silenced or carried alone. Times like these are noted, written about, and reflected on while the behemoth structures of empire continue to consume and extract with absolute disregard for human life. How do we continue in the face of hopeless futures brought into presence by hopeless pasts? What does it mean to consider abolition in an age of continued Black death and an ongoing global pandemic?

Timothy Yanick Hunter, Love Together 01, 2021. Courtesy of the artist.
Timothy Yanick Hunter, Love Together 01, 2021. Courtesy of the artist.

This exhibition may not be a resolute answer and yet it creates possibility within an impossible time. Okoro and Hunter disrupt the linearity of our present tense to break the structural silence that maintains Blackness in a sunken place. Amid this age of COVID-19, when human physical presence is hyper-realized and limited, when embodied connections must be mitigated, they create environments that attend to bodies, psyches, passions, and conflicts. Through discussions, the artists encourage and support each other in their process and research. Extending their relationship into the gallery, a shared workspace created by both artists, equipped with influential texts, photocopies, and additional materials, is offered for visitors to engage in collective thinking and making.

Isabel Okoro, 01, from the series If you knew how we got here, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.
Isabel Okoro, 01, from the series If you knew how we got here, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.
Isabel Okoro, 03, from the series If you knew how we got here, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.
Isabel Okoro, 03, from the series If you knew how we got here, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.

A Nigerian, self-taught photographer, Okoro uses visual storytelling to consider colonial histories of the Afro-diaspora while also envisioning futures of Black love and autonomy. Her series If You Knew How We Got Here (2021) is a parable that contemplates cultural lineages, transatlantic movement, and home/lands. Using poetry and traditional colour and black-and-white film photography, Okoro sensitively depicts intimacy between friends and lovers, kindred relations that might be falsely perceived as fragile. Photographing both in Canada and Nigeria, Okoro confidently shows us lives fortified through tenderness and connections that transcend geographic territories.

Timothy Yanick Hunter, Love Together 02, 2021. Courtesy of the artist.
Timothy Yanick Hunter, Love Together 02, 2021. Courtesy of the artist.

Working with rare film clips, ‘90s R&B tracks, liner notes, poems, and correspondence, Hunter creates video mashups projected onto sculpted surfaces. These layers of diasporic ephemera span a range of cultural references, from Franz Fanon to Whitney Houston, and offer meditations on the amorphous qualities of time and space. In the worlds he conjures, our labour and dreams are united with our ancestors binding the past and present, not only through our admiration but also through our shared struggles. He presents ways of being both physically and virtually nurtured, offering these nostalgic images and sounds as instructions, ceremonies, and samplings to usher us through a portal of reflection to find a future that surpasses basic survival.

This past year of online conversations between artists, curator, and advisor reinforce a collective understanding of how precious and necessary it is to build supportive Black creative outlets, particularly in this anxiety-inducing time. In Dear Science and Other Stories (2021), Katherine McKittrick writes: “I imperfectly draw attention to how seeking liberation and, reinventing the terms of black life outside normatively negative conceptions of blackness, is onerous, joyful, and difficult, yet unmeasured and unmeasurable. Mnemonic black livingness. My heart makes my head swim.”

And so, we swim, and we dance, laugh, fight, sing, create, and share among ourselves to make worlds out of worlds built to destroy us.

Curated by Liz Ikiriko

Installation Images

  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo
  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo
  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo
  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo
  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo
  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo
  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo
  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo

Frida Orupabo Woman with book / Woman with snake

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Collage-based murals that confront and dismantle historically destructive forces against Black women...

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Collapsing sensations of belonging and uprootedness through layers of landscapes from near...

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An international perspective on documentary practices during a period of profound change...

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Three generations of African American artists consider how photographs continue to shape...

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Erik Kessels & Thomas Mailaender Play Public

The Bentway

An interactive playscape brings archival images of an iconic fairground into a...

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Jimmy James Evans, Jeff Bierk For Jimmy

Billboard - Dupont & Perth, Dupont & Emerson Billboards

A declaration of love from Jeff Bierk to his collaborator, Jimmy James...

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FTW - Forever Two Wheels

The Cardinal Gallery
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Laia Abril A History of Misogyny Chapter Two: On Rape

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A critical examination of the prejudices and misconceptions that perpetuate sexual violence...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Group Exhibition I am my own muse

Corkin Gallery
Archives 2021 exhibition

Photography Is Hard

Daniel Faria Gallery
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

First Look First

Daniels Spectrum
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Thirza Schaap Plastic Ocean

Davisville Subway Station

Addressing environmental waste through photographs of elaborate sculptures constructed from discarded plastic...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Kim Hoeckele epoch, stage, shell

Dupont and Dovercourt Billboard

Appropriating large-scale structures normally used for advertising to challenge preconceptions of beauty...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?

Gallery 44

A collaborative project that aims to disrupt the structural silence of Black...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Group Exhibition We Buy Gold

Gallery TPW

LGBTQ+ artists foreground the longings and contradictions of their queer realities...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Group Exhibition Force Field

Garrison Common, Fort York

Reimagining a colonial military site as a place of peaceful inclusivity...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Figure as Index

Harbourfront Centre parking pavilion

Deepening community ties through a participatory approach to group photography...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Max Dean and Collaborators Still—Your Bubble

Itinerant Photo Studio

A fully automated portrait studio captures COVID social bubbles for posterity...

Archives 2021 Public Art

FACETS OF SELF

Jinks Art Factory
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Civil Disobedience

John B. Aird Gallery

Exploring key tensions in Black male culture across space and time...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Kelly Fyffe-Marshall, Ebti Nabag, Aaron Jones Three-Thirty

Lester B. Pearson CI, Malvern Public Library, Doris McCarthy Gallery

Investigating the way people exercise power through the construction, manipulation, and occupation...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Gods Among Us

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Documenting the unconventional places where newcomers gather to build spiritual, social, and...

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Generating a new sublime from interventions into the archives of Canadian landscape...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Onyeka Igwe THE REAL STORY IS WHAT’S IN THAT ROOM

Mercer Union

Addressing the problematic histories of film archives left behind by two abandoned...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Taiyo Onorato & Nico Krebs Future Perfect

Metro Hall

Images of an endangered tropical paradise expose the consequences of indifference and...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Krista Belle Stewart, Fatma Bucak Acts of Erasure

MOCA Toronto

Interrogating perceptions of cultural identity, indigeneity, and the notion of the nation-state...

Archives 2021 exhibition

She Has Something To Say

Olga Korper Gallery
Archives 2021 exhibition

Botanica Colossi

PAMA

Large-scale images highlight the embedded complexities of everyday plant life ...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Vid Ingelevics & Ryan Walker A Mobile Landscape

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Documenting the fluctuating landscape of an extensive revitalization project...

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Group Exhibition Movers and Makers

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Black diaspora artists respond to this moment of extraordinary cultural, social, political,...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Chris Myhr The Prefix Prize

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The inaugural winner of a new annual prize explores the transformative power...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Lili Huston-Herterich, Jenni Crain, Nicole Coon In an Archipelago

Runnymede and Ryding Billboards, Pumice Raft

A billboard project and exhibition focus on the transitory and ephemeral aspects...

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Dana Claxton Scotiabank Photography Award

Ryerson Image Centre, Main Gallery

Investigating the body, the socio-political, and the spiritual within realms of Indigenous...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Susan Dobson Slide | Lecture

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Revisiting obsolete slide collections to expose their problematic methods of representation...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Group Exhibition New Generation Photography Award

Ryerson University

Six award-winning emerging photographers convey a broad range of social and personal...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Emmanuelle Léonard Deployment

Salah J. Bachir New Media Wall

Experiencing the everyday challenges faced by military personnel in the Arctic...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Pejvak A Passage

shell
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Still - Living Through Cancer and COVID

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2021 exhibition

Małgorzata Stankiewicz Lassen (This Is An Emergency)

Street-level sites throughout Toronto

Disorienting landscapes that reflect collective anxieties about climate change and environmental challenges...

Archives 2021 exhibition

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Greg Staats for at least one day, you should continue to breathe clearly

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Restoring Indigenous presence to a historical paper mill...

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Two video works draw from intimate familial connections to consider complex social...

Archives 2021 exhibition

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Archives 2021 primary exhibition

ANTHEM: Expressions of Canadian Identity

Virtual
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Everything Else in the Universe: A Father-Son Road Trip

Virtual
Archives 2021 exhibition

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Virtual
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

globanomics

Virtual
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Limping Forward, Looking Back - Part 2

Virtual
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

City Spirits

Virtual
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Look Back to Move Forward (Regarder en arrière, pour aller de l'avant)

Virtual, Le Labo
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Excerpts

Virtual, Paul Petro Contemporary Art
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Christina Leslie: The Album

Virtual, The Robert McLaughlin Gallery
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Calico & Camouflage: Assemble!

Yonge-Dundas Square

Activating a populous urban centre with Indigenous signs of protest ...

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Lucy Alguire Catching Byways Flies

Alliance Française Gallery
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Hannah Somers I Found A Place

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Isabel M. Martinez The Distance of an Echo

Angell Gallery
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Tasman Richardson Kali Yuga

Arsenal Contemporary
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Tsēmā Igharas, Ileana Hernandez Camacho, Alana Bartol Groundwork

Critical Distance
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Anthony Gebrehiwot From Boys to Men: The Road to Healing

Doris McCarthy Gallery Vitrines
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Jason van Bruggen Lowland: Beside the Rising Tide

Evergreen Brick Works
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

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Hearth Gallery
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Maya Fuhr Living In A Material World

The J Spot
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Group Exhibition FLESH ON THE FLOOR

Patel Brown East
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Anique Jordan Nowing: a political history of the present

Patel Brown Gallery
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Blair Swann The well is deep, you can never fill it

the plumb – vitrines
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Craig Rodmore, Atanas Bozdarov Every Step on Queen Street West & Every Ramp on Queen Street West

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Amanda Arcuri, Ryan Van Der Hout Fire and Dust

United Contemporary
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Hal Wilsdon, Noga Cadan Zones of Regulation

Virtual
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Michael Wolf Street View

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Will Munro Every Action Tethered

Virtual, Paul Petro Contemporary Art
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Laura Kay Keeling The Advantages of Tender Loving Care

Weston GO/UP Station
Archives 2021 Public Art
CorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2021 exhibition

Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?

September 10 – October 23, 2021
  • Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography
    Isabel Okoro, 02, from the series If you knew how we got here, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.
Isabel Okoro, 02, from the series If you knew how we got here, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.

Conceived as a Black, feminist, collaborative process that encourages relation building and forefronts care, Is Love A Synonym for Abolition? presents the work of emerging Toronto-based artists Isabel Okoro and Timothy Yanick Hunter. Informed by the sharing of source materials and conversations with curator Liz Ikiriko and advisor Katherine McKittrick, the exhibition features photography, archival footage, poetry, sound, and sculptural installation.

Timothy Yanick Hunter, Love Together 03, 2021. Courtesy of the artist.
Timothy Yanick Hunter, Love Together 03, 2021. Courtesy of the artist.

Is Love a Synonym for Abolition? draws its title from scholar Saidiya Hartman’s essay “The End of White Supremacy, An American Romance,” published in the June 2020 issue of BOMB Magazine. Hartman lays bare the very real, sobering pain of Black existence within an age-old white supremacist system. The summer of 2020 was a fever dream, alighting cities on fire. For Black people, the continued police brutality, public killings, and the chosen inaction by those in power was too great a pain to be silenced or carried alone. Times like these are noted, written about, and reflected on while the behemoth structures of empire continue to consume and extract with absolute disregard for human life. How do we continue in the face of hopeless futures brought into presence by hopeless pasts? What does it mean to consider abolition in an age of continued Black death and an ongoing global pandemic?

Timothy Yanick Hunter, Love Together 01, 2021. Courtesy of the artist.
Timothy Yanick Hunter, Love Together 01, 2021. Courtesy of the artist.

This exhibition may not be a resolute answer and yet it creates possibility within an impossible time. Okoro and Hunter disrupt the linearity of our present tense to break the structural silence that maintains Blackness in a sunken place. Amid this age of COVID-19, when human physical presence is hyper-realized and limited, when embodied connections must be mitigated, they create environments that attend to bodies, psyches, passions, and conflicts. Through discussions, the artists encourage and support each other in their process and research. Extending their relationship into the gallery, a shared workspace created by both artists, equipped with influential texts, photocopies, and additional materials, is offered for visitors to engage in collective thinking and making.

Isabel Okoro, 01, from the series If you knew how we got here, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.
Isabel Okoro, 01, from the series If you knew how we got here, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.
Isabel Okoro, 03, from the series If you knew how we got here, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.
Isabel Okoro, 03, from the series If you knew how we got here, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.

A Nigerian, self-taught photographer, Okoro uses visual storytelling to consider colonial histories of the Afro-diaspora while also envisioning futures of Black love and autonomy. Her series If You Knew How We Got Here (2021) is a parable that contemplates cultural lineages, transatlantic movement, and home/lands. Using poetry and traditional colour and black-and-white film photography, Okoro sensitively depicts intimacy between friends and lovers, kindred relations that might be falsely perceived as fragile. Photographing both in Canada and Nigeria, Okoro confidently shows us lives fortified through tenderness and connections that transcend geographic territories.

Timothy Yanick Hunter, Love Together 02, 2021. Courtesy of the artist.
Timothy Yanick Hunter, Love Together 02, 2021. Courtesy of the artist.

Working with rare film clips, ‘90s R&B tracks, liner notes, poems, and correspondence, Hunter creates video mashups projected onto sculpted surfaces. These layers of diasporic ephemera span a range of cultural references, from Franz Fanon to Whitney Houston, and offer meditations on the amorphous qualities of time and space. In the worlds he conjures, our labour and dreams are united with our ancestors binding the past and present, not only through our admiration but also through our shared struggles. He presents ways of being both physically and virtually nurtured, offering these nostalgic images and sounds as instructions, ceremonies, and samplings to usher us through a portal of reflection to find a future that surpasses basic survival.

This past year of online conversations between artists, curator, and advisor reinforce a collective understanding of how precious and necessary it is to build supportive Black creative outlets, particularly in this anxiety-inducing time. In Dear Science and Other Stories (2021), Katherine McKittrick writes: “I imperfectly draw attention to how seeking liberation and, reinventing the terms of black life outside normatively negative conceptions of blackness, is onerous, joyful, and difficult, yet unmeasured and unmeasurable. Mnemonic black livingness. My heart makes my head swim.”

And so, we swim, and we dance, laugh, fight, sing, create, and share among ourselves to make worlds out of worlds built to destroy us.

Curated by Liz Ikiriko

Installation Images

  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo
  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo
  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo
  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo
  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo
  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo
  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo
  • Isabel Okoro, Timothy Yanick Hunter, Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?, installation view, Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography, September 10 – October 23, 2021. Courtesy of the artists and Gallery 44. Photo: Darren Rigo

Frida Orupabo Woman with book / Woman with snake

460 King St W

Collage-based murals that confront and dismantle historically destructive forces against Black women...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Land/s

Aga Khan Museum

Collapsing sensations of belonging and uprootedness through layers of landscapes from near...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Group Exhibition Documents, 1960s – 1970s

Art Gallery of Ontario

An international perspective on documentary practices during a period of profound change...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Dawoud Bey, John Edmonds, Wardell Milan Dawoud Bey, John Edmonds, Wardell Milan

Art Gallery of Ontario

Three generations of African American artists consider how photographs continue to shape...

Archives 2021 exhibition

North of Long Tail

Artscape Wychwood Barns, Virtual
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Leyla Jeyte if they saw me, i would live

BAND Gallery

Portraits that forge connections to a Kenyan community and their everyday experiences...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Erik Kessels & Thomas Mailaender Play Public

The Bentway

An interactive playscape brings archival images of an iconic fairground into a...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Jimmy James Evans, Jeff Bierk For Jimmy

Billboard - Dupont & Perth, Dupont & Emerson Billboards

A declaration of love from Jeff Bierk to his collaborator, Jimmy James...

Archives 2021 Public Art

FTW - Forever Two Wheels

The Cardinal Gallery
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Laia Abril A History of Misogyny Chapter Two: On Rape

CONTACT Gallery

A critical examination of the prejudices and misconceptions that perpetuate sexual violence...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Group Exhibition I am my own muse

Corkin Gallery
Archives 2021 exhibition

Photography Is Hard

Daniel Faria Gallery
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

First Look First

Daniels Spectrum
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Thirza Schaap Plastic Ocean

Davisville Subway Station

Addressing environmental waste through photographs of elaborate sculptures constructed from discarded plastic...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Kim Hoeckele epoch, stage, shell

Dupont and Dovercourt Billboard

Appropriating large-scale structures normally used for advertising to challenge preconceptions of beauty...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Is Love a Synonym for Abolition?

Gallery 44

A collaborative project that aims to disrupt the structural silence of Black...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Group Exhibition We Buy Gold

Gallery TPW

LGBTQ+ artists foreground the longings and contradictions of their queer realities...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Group Exhibition Force Field

Garrison Common, Fort York

Reimagining a colonial military site as a place of peaceful inclusivity...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Figure as Index

Harbourfront Centre parking pavilion

Deepening community ties through a participatory approach to group photography...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Max Dean and Collaborators Still—Your Bubble

Itinerant Photo Studio

A fully automated portrait studio captures COVID social bubbles for posterity...

Archives 2021 Public Art

FACETS OF SELF

Jinks Art Factory
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Civil Disobedience

John B. Aird Gallery

Exploring key tensions in Black male culture across space and time...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Kelly Fyffe-Marshall, Ebti Nabag, Aaron Jones Three-Thirty

Lester B. Pearson CI, Malvern Public Library, Doris McCarthy Gallery

Investigating the way people exercise power through the construction, manipulation, and occupation...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Gods Among Us

Malvern Town Centre

Documenting the unconventional places where newcomers gather to build spiritual, social, and...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Jon Sasaki Homage

The McMichael

Generating a new sublime from interventions into the archives of Canadian landscape...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Onyeka Igwe THE REAL STORY IS WHAT’S IN THAT ROOM

Mercer Union

Addressing the problematic histories of film archives left behind by two abandoned...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Taiyo Onorato & Nico Krebs Future Perfect

Metro Hall

Images of an endangered tropical paradise expose the consequences of indifference and...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Krista Belle Stewart, Fatma Bucak Acts of Erasure

MOCA Toronto

Interrogating perceptions of cultural identity, indigeneity, and the notion of the nation-state...

Archives 2021 exhibition

She Has Something To Say

Olga Korper Gallery
Archives 2021 exhibition

Botanica Colossi

PAMA

Large-scale images highlight the embedded complexities of everyday plant life ...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Vid Ingelevics & Ryan Walker A Mobile Landscape

Port Lands

Documenting the fluctuating landscape of an extensive revitalization project...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Group Exhibition Movers and Makers

Prefix ICA

Black diaspora artists respond to this moment of extraordinary cultural, social, political,...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Chris Myhr The Prefix Prize

Prefix ICA

The inaugural winner of a new annual prize explores the transformative power...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Lili Huston-Herterich, Jenni Crain, Nicole Coon In an Archipelago

Runnymede and Ryding Billboards, Pumice Raft

A billboard project and exhibition focus on the transitory and ephemeral aspects...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Dana Claxton Scotiabank Photography Award

Ryerson Image Centre, Main Gallery

Investigating the body, the socio-political, and the spiritual within realms of Indigenous...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Susan Dobson Slide | Lecture

Ryerson Image Centre, University Gallery

Revisiting obsolete slide collections to expose their problematic methods of representation...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Group Exhibition New Generation Photography Award

Ryerson University

Six award-winning emerging photographers convey a broad range of social and personal...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Emmanuelle Léonard Deployment

Salah J. Bachir New Media Wall

Experiencing the everyday challenges faced by military personnel in the Arctic...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Pejvak A Passage

shell
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Still - Living Through Cancer and COVID

Stephen Bulger Gallery
Archives 2021 exhibition

Małgorzata Stankiewicz Lassen (This Is An Emergency)

Street-level sites throughout Toronto

Disorienting landscapes that reflect collective anxieties about climate change and environmental challenges...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Looking Down - Looking In

StudioGallery106a
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Greg Staats for at least one day, you should continue to breathe clearly

Todmorden Mills

Restoring Indigenous presence to a historical paper mill...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Rehana Zaman Jupiter in Aries, Moon in Virgo

Trinity Square Video

Two video works draw from intimate familial connections to consider complex social...

Archives 2021 exhibition

Bonjour mon amour

Underscore Projects
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

ANTHEM: Expressions of Canadian Identity

Virtual
Archives 2021 exhibition

Everything Else in the Universe: A Father-Son Road Trip

Virtual
Archives 2021 exhibition

Constructions

Virtual
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

globanomics

Virtual
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Limping Forward, Looking Back - Part 2

Virtual
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

City Spirits

Virtual
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Look Back to Move Forward (Regarder en arrière, pour aller de l'avant)

Virtual, Le Labo
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Excerpts

Virtual, Paul Petro Contemporary Art
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Christina Leslie: The Album

Virtual, The Robert McLaughlin Gallery
Archives 2021 primary exhibition

Calico & Camouflage: Assemble!

Yonge-Dundas Square

Activating a populous urban centre with Indigenous signs of protest ...

Archives 2021 Public Art

Lucy Alguire Catching Byways Flies

Alliance Française Gallery
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Hannah Somers I Found A Place

Alliance Française Gallery
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Isabel M. Martinez The Distance of an Echo

Angell Gallery
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Tasman Richardson Kali Yuga

Arsenal Contemporary
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Tsēmā Igharas, Ileana Hernandez Camacho, Alana Bartol Groundwork

Critical Distance
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Anthony Gebrehiwot From Boys to Men: The Road to Healing

Doris McCarthy Gallery Vitrines
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Jason van Bruggen Lowland: Beside the Rising Tide

Evergreen Brick Works
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

HEAVY SHINE

Gardiner Museum
Archives 2021 featured exhibition

Iman Lahroussi, Mehran Mafi Bordbar, Melika Hashemi Dot by dot like a baby gazelle

Hearth Gallery
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Maya Fuhr Living In A Material World

The J Spot
Archives 2021 Public Art

Group Exhibition FLESH ON THE FLOOR

Patel Brown East
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Anique Jordan Nowing: a political history of the present

Patel Brown Gallery
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Blair Swann The well is deep, you can never fill it

the plumb – vitrines
Archives 2021 Public Art

Craig Rodmore, Atanas Bozdarov Every Step on Queen Street West & Every Ramp on Queen Street West

TYPE Books
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Amanda Arcuri, Ryan Van Der Hout Fire and Dust

United Contemporary
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Hal Wilsdon, Noga Cadan Zones of Regulation

Virtual
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Rachel Rozanski PERMA

Virtual, Artspace Gallery
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Michael Wolf Street View

Virtual, Bau-Xi Gallery
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Will Munro Every Action Tethered

Virtual, Paul Petro Contemporary Art
Archives 2021 juried call exhibition

Laura Kay Keeling The Advantages of Tender Loving Care

Weston GO/UP Station
Archives 2021 Public Art

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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.