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Archives 2021 Public Art

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

May 1, 2021 – March 31, 2022
  • Lester B. Pearson Collegiate Institute, north façade
  • Malvern Public Library, south façade
  • Doris McCarthy Gallery
    Ebti Nabag, I’m Listening, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.
Ebti Nabag, I’m Listening, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.

*Please note: The exhibition at Doris McCarthy Gallery closes December 11, 2021. The outdoor installations will remain on view until March 2022.

Situated in the Scarborough community of Malvern, Three-Thirty performs a map-making exercise, highlighting and connecting streets, paths home, and the spaces in between. Through a series of commissioned projects incorporating collage, portraiture, archival images, video, and performance, Aaron Jones (Pickering), Ebti Nabag (Toronto), and Kelly Fyffe-Marshall (London/Toronto/Jamaica) interrogate where, how, and with whom knowledge can be centred.

Aaron Jones, Untitled, 2018
Aaron Jones, Untitled, 2018

iii.
The cartographer says
no—
What I do is science. I show
the earth as it is, without bias.
I never fall in love. I never get involved with the muddy affairs of land.
Too much passion unsteadies the hand. I aim to show the full
of a place in just a glance.

iv.
The rastaman thinks, draw me
a map of what you see
then I will draw a map of what you never see and guess me whose map will
be bigger than whose?
Guess me whose map will tell the larger truth?

—Kei Miller, The Cartographer tries to map a way to Zion

Ebti Nabag, The Bubble of Youth, 2020. Installation view, Lester B. Pearson Collegiate Institute, 150 Tapscott Road, Scarborough. Courtesy of the artist and Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Ebti Nabag, The Bubble of Youth, 2020. Installation view, Lester B. Pearson Collegiate Institute, 150 Tapscott Road, Scarborough. Courtesy of the artist and Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.

Three-Thirty is a multi-site exhibition that draws on youth after-school culture as a site of possibility and meaning making in which young people assert how they mark, claim, and inhabit their community. It is an extension of how youth encode what they create as part of a culture through fashion, language, and the shared presence of their bodies. The act of acknowledging these forms of codification complicates the blanket notion that these spaces, and inevitably the people inhabiting them, are without authority or agency. The project aims to explore how people can influence their environments when they are told they do not have the power to do so. Using the public spaces of local high school Pearson Collegiate Institute, the Malvern Public Library, and the Doris McCarthy Gallery at the University of Toronto Scarborough, Nabag, Jones, and Fyffe-Marshall explore the role of systems, built form, voice, and presence in transforming space.

Working closely with students of Pearson Collegiate Institute, Nabag’s life-size portraits of high school students, Bubble of Youth (2020) celebrate the gestures, body language, fashion, and friendships entangled in the high school experience. Built in the late 1970s, Pearson Collegiate was intentionally designed to use hallways, lighting, and classroom location to replicate the “complete neighbourhood” of the surrounding community. Mounted on one of the school’s external walls, Nabag’s photo-based mural integrates elements of the building’s brickwork and interior design into the imagery, visually weaving together the students and their surroundings to imagine ways young people create their own spaces inside and outside of school. Nabag’s work can also be found at University of Toronto Scarborough, inside and outside the Doris McCarthy Gallery.

Aaron Jones, Seeing Knowledge, 2020. Installation view, Malvern Public Library, 30 Sewells Road, Scarborough. Courtesy of the artist and Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Aaron Jones, Seeing Knowledge, 2020. Installation view, Malvern Public Library, 30 Sewells Road, Scarborough. Courtesy of the artist and Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.

For Seeing Knowledge (2020), on the façade of the Malvern Public Library and at the Doris McCarthy Gallery, Jones extends his collage and assemblage practice to create imagery sourced through the branch’s Rita Cox Black and Caribbean Heritage book collection. This resource, housed at only three other Toronto Public Library branches, is recognized as one of the most significant and comprehensive collections of Black, Caribbean, and Canadian literature in Canada. This particular library branch, also sharing the neighborhood recreation centre, is a pivotal cultural marker for young people in Malvern. Jones’ work generates provocative and compelling juxtapositions between Malvern’s archival materials and images found in the Cox collection that speak to issues of Blackness, history, and Canadiana.

Kelly Fyffe-Marshall, POWER, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.
Kelly Fyffe-Marshall, POWER, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.

Film director Kelly Fyffe-Marshall’s three-channel video installation, POWER (2020), shown at the Doris McCarthy Gallery, depicts recent interviews with an intergenerational group of Black people who are asked what power looks like for them now. The video, a pointed visual of the times, shows interviewees removing their personal protective equipment (fabric face masks) to respond to a question laced with undertones of Blackness, power, and global events. Exhibiting this immersive installation at a university art gallery allows Fyffe-Marshall to reach a local population, while speaking to the complex and multidimensional aspects of community, voice, and sense of place, centred on the voice of Black people.

Kelly Fyffe-Marshall, POWER, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artist and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Kelly Fyffe-Marshall, POWER, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artist and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.

While Three-Thirty attends to youth living in a particular place, the questions at its foundation extend broadly to ask how spaces, communities, and land are shared, written onto, and transformed by those who are often not seen as powerful. Presented in the era of a Black Lives Matter and a global pandemic, these questions have never been more urgent.

Aaron Jones, Seeing Knowledge, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artist and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Aaron Jones, Seeing Knowledge, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artist and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Three-Thirty, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artists and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Three-Thirty, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artists and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Ebti Nabag, The Bubble of Youth, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artist and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Ebti Nabag, The Bubble of Youth, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artist and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.

Curated by Anique Jordan

  • Aaron Jones is an artist, curator, entrepreneur known for his work with collage. Working with lens-based mediums, he refers to himself as an image-builder, weaving together diverse materials from books, magazines, newspapers, and personal photos to forge captivating characters and alternate realities. These objects and images to explore the inherent possibilities in world-building and abstraction. Jones seeks to expand canonical Blackness, employing found images, and other tools to build characters and spaces that reflect upon the nuances of his own upbringing and current life, as a way of finding peace. Jones is represented by Zalucky Contemporary, Toronto.

Frida Orupabo Woman with book / Woman with snake

460 King St W

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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...

Archives 2021 Public Art

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

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

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

Taiyo Onorato & Nico Krebs Future Perfect

Metro Hall

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

Archives 2021 Public Art

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

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

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

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

Calico & Camouflage: Assemble!

Yonge-Dundas Square

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

Archives 2021 Public Art

Maya Fuhr Living In A Material World

The J Spot
Archives 2021 Public Art

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

the plumb – vitrines
Archives 2021 Public Art

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 Public Art

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

May 1, 2021 – March 31, 2022
  • Lester B. Pearson Collegiate Institute, north façade
  • Malvern Public Library, south façade
  • Doris McCarthy Gallery
    Ebti Nabag, I’m Listening, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.
Ebti Nabag, I’m Listening, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.

*Please note: The exhibition at Doris McCarthy Gallery closes December 11, 2021. The outdoor installations will remain on view until March 2022.

Situated in the Scarborough community of Malvern, Three-Thirty performs a map-making exercise, highlighting and connecting streets, paths home, and the spaces in between. Through a series of commissioned projects incorporating collage, portraiture, archival images, video, and performance, Aaron Jones (Pickering), Ebti Nabag (Toronto), and Kelly Fyffe-Marshall (London/Toronto/Jamaica) interrogate where, how, and with whom knowledge can be centred.

Aaron Jones, Untitled, 2018
Aaron Jones, Untitled, 2018

iii.
The cartographer says
no—
What I do is science. I show
the earth as it is, without bias.
I never fall in love. I never get involved with the muddy affairs of land.
Too much passion unsteadies the hand. I aim to show the full
of a place in just a glance.

iv.
The rastaman thinks, draw me
a map of what you see
then I will draw a map of what you never see and guess me whose map will
be bigger than whose?
Guess me whose map will tell the larger truth?

—Kei Miller, The Cartographer tries to map a way to Zion

Ebti Nabag, The Bubble of Youth, 2020. Installation view, Lester B. Pearson Collegiate Institute, 150 Tapscott Road, Scarborough. Courtesy of the artist and Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Ebti Nabag, The Bubble of Youth, 2020. Installation view, Lester B. Pearson Collegiate Institute, 150 Tapscott Road, Scarborough. Courtesy of the artist and Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.

Three-Thirty is a multi-site exhibition that draws on youth after-school culture as a site of possibility and meaning making in which young people assert how they mark, claim, and inhabit their community. It is an extension of how youth encode what they create as part of a culture through fashion, language, and the shared presence of their bodies. The act of acknowledging these forms of codification complicates the blanket notion that these spaces, and inevitably the people inhabiting them, are without authority or agency. The project aims to explore how people can influence their environments when they are told they do not have the power to do so. Using the public spaces of local high school Pearson Collegiate Institute, the Malvern Public Library, and the Doris McCarthy Gallery at the University of Toronto Scarborough, Nabag, Jones, and Fyffe-Marshall explore the role of systems, built form, voice, and presence in transforming space.

Working closely with students of Pearson Collegiate Institute, Nabag’s life-size portraits of high school students, Bubble of Youth (2020) celebrate the gestures, body language, fashion, and friendships entangled in the high school experience. Built in the late 1970s, Pearson Collegiate was intentionally designed to use hallways, lighting, and classroom location to replicate the “complete neighbourhood” of the surrounding community. Mounted on one of the school’s external walls, Nabag’s photo-based mural integrates elements of the building’s brickwork and interior design into the imagery, visually weaving together the students and their surroundings to imagine ways young people create their own spaces inside and outside of school. Nabag’s work can also be found at University of Toronto Scarborough, inside and outside the Doris McCarthy Gallery.

Aaron Jones, Seeing Knowledge, 2020. Installation view, Malvern Public Library, 30 Sewells Road, Scarborough. Courtesy of the artist and Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Aaron Jones, Seeing Knowledge, 2020. Installation view, Malvern Public Library, 30 Sewells Road, Scarborough. Courtesy of the artist and Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.

For Seeing Knowledge (2020), on the façade of the Malvern Public Library and at the Doris McCarthy Gallery, Jones extends his collage and assemblage practice to create imagery sourced through the branch’s Rita Cox Black and Caribbean Heritage book collection. This resource, housed at only three other Toronto Public Library branches, is recognized as one of the most significant and comprehensive collections of Black, Caribbean, and Canadian literature in Canada. This particular library branch, also sharing the neighborhood recreation centre, is a pivotal cultural marker for young people in Malvern. Jones’ work generates provocative and compelling juxtapositions between Malvern’s archival materials and images found in the Cox collection that speak to issues of Blackness, history, and Canadiana.

Kelly Fyffe-Marshall, POWER, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.
Kelly Fyffe-Marshall, POWER, 2020. Courtesy of the artist.

Film director Kelly Fyffe-Marshall’s three-channel video installation, POWER (2020), shown at the Doris McCarthy Gallery, depicts recent interviews with an intergenerational group of Black people who are asked what power looks like for them now. The video, a pointed visual of the times, shows interviewees removing their personal protective equipment (fabric face masks) to respond to a question laced with undertones of Blackness, power, and global events. Exhibiting this immersive installation at a university art gallery allows Fyffe-Marshall to reach a local population, while speaking to the complex and multidimensional aspects of community, voice, and sense of place, centred on the voice of Black people.

Kelly Fyffe-Marshall, POWER, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artist and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Kelly Fyffe-Marshall, POWER, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artist and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.

While Three-Thirty attends to youth living in a particular place, the questions at its foundation extend broadly to ask how spaces, communities, and land are shared, written onto, and transformed by those who are often not seen as powerful. Presented in the era of a Black Lives Matter and a global pandemic, these questions have never been more urgent.

Aaron Jones, Seeing Knowledge, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artist and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Aaron Jones, Seeing Knowledge, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artist and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Three-Thirty, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artists and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Three-Thirty, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artists and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Ebti Nabag, The Bubble of Youth, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artist and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.
Ebti Nabag, The Bubble of Youth, 2020. Installation view, Doris McCarthy Gallery. Courtesy of the artist and Doris McCarthy Gallery. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.

Curated by Anique Jordan

  • Aaron Jones is an artist, curator, entrepreneur known for his work with collage. Working with lens-based mediums, he refers to himself as an image-builder, weaving together diverse materials from books, magazines, newspapers, and personal photos to forge captivating characters and alternate realities. These objects and images to explore the inherent possibilities in world-building and abstraction. Jones seeks to expand canonical Blackness, employing found images, and other tools to build characters and spaces that reflect upon the nuances of his own upbringing and current life, as a way of finding peace. Jones is represented by Zalucky Contemporary, Toronto.

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

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

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

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

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

Taiyo Onorato & Nico Krebs Future Perfect

Metro Hall

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

Archives 2021 Public Art

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

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

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

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

Calico & Camouflage: Assemble!

Yonge-Dundas Square

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

Archives 2021 Public Art

Maya Fuhr Living In A Material World

The J Spot
Archives 2021 Public Art

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

the plumb – vitrines
Archives 2021 Public Art

Laura Kay Keeling The Advantages of Tender Loving Care

Weston GO/UP Station
Archives 2021 Public Art

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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.