CONTACT's 30 Edition, May 2026 - Register Now
Festival GalleryEditorialPhotobooksArchivesSupportersAboutFundraiserDonate
CorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2022 Public Art

Anastasia Samoylova FloodZone

April 26 – May 30, 2022
  • Davisville Subway Station
    Anastasia Samoylova, Fountain, 2017. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Fountain, 2017. Courtesy of the artist

Anastasia Samoylova’s large-scale, sundrenched images draw attention to rising water levels encroaching on Miami and other Florida shorelines. Signs of the impending disaster are not always easy to see, often eclipsed by bright colours, seductive facades, and our collective will to overlook them. But Samoylova finds hints of future catastrophe all around, hidden in plain sight in construction hoarding, storefront reflections, eroding concrete, and tangled tree roots.

Les images à grande échelle d’Anastasia Samoylova, baignées de soleil, attirent l’attention sur la montée des eaux qui gagne Miami et d’autres rivages de Floride. Les signes de la catastrophe imminente ne sont pas toujours faciles à détecter, souvent éclipsés par des couleurs vives, des façades séduisantes et notre volonté collective de les ignorer. Mais Samoylova décèle des indices de la future catastrophe tout autour, à la vue de tous, dans les amoncellements de constructions, les reflets des vitrines, le béton qui s’érode et les racines d’arbres enchevêtrées.

Anastasia Samoylova, Construction in Sunny Isles, 2018. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Construction in Sunny Isles, 2018. Courtesy of the artist

Full of moments of striking beauty and electric energy, FloodZone exposes the tensions among the power of nature, the destruction caused by human overconsumption, and the spectacle of distraction designed to draw attention away from both. Gathered together, Samoylova’s images serve as subtle warnings embedded in a tender document of a place—Miami, and planet earth—on the brink of transformation.

Anastasia Samoylova, Graffiti Cup, 2018. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Graffiti Cup, 2018. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Hand, 2017. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Hand, 2017. Courtesy of the artist

Born in Russia but already living in the US, Samoylova moved to Miami in 2016, a leap of faith that coincided with a shift away from her studio-based practice, a plunge into full-time freelance work, and a deeper feeling of being settled in her adopted country. She would often spend mornings looking at photography books before taking to the streets with her camera. Early observations, some of which would become the foundations of FloodZone, began as a way of understanding a new city, and of defining an approach to documenting the public realm from a range of perspectives and contexts: outsider, woman, mother, documentary photographer. Seeking a position without agenda or explicit subject, Samoylova’s images are rich in their differences and feel free, part of a flow of curiosity and discovery.

Anastasia Samoylova, Manatee Rescue Van, 2019. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Manatee Rescue Van, 2019. Courtesy of the artist

Miami, it turns out, is the perfect stage for an increasingly fragile ecosystem—and for the elaborate diversions we’ve built up as flimsy defense. As Samoylova became more attuned the elusive signs of slowly seeping water and other cues of climate change, hurricane Irma swept in in the fall of 2017, announcing unequivocally the awesome power of nature and the absurdly inadequate infrastructure in place to protect human life and the built environment from its ravages. Irma was, at the time, the most powerful hurricane on record in the open Atlantic, only to be surpassed two years later by Dorian. Samoylova was stranded with her family, without gas or running water, and her experience of Irma provoked fear—a mechanism as capable of inciting action as it is paralysis.

Anastasia Samoylova, Cargo Ship, 2017. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Cargo Ship, 2017. Courtesy of the artist

For Samoylova, the hurricane brought focus to the significance of what she was seeing—not just the environmental disaster, but the unrelenting propaganda of an idealized vision of place that seemed designed to cover over more disturbing realities. Influenced by the Russian propaganda of her youth, Samoylova was quick to read the nuances of this dance, and to recognize Miami as, in her words, “a scale-model collage of itself.” Like many cities, it’s been subsumed by images and reflections, eager to mirror the desired lifestyles of its inhabitants—tourists and residents alike. Eventually the distinctions between “reality” and “image” become hard, if not impossible, to parse.

Anastasia Samoylova, Construction in South Beach II, 2018. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Construction in South Beach II, 2018. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Park Avenue, Miami Beach, 2018. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Park Avenue, Miami Beach, 2018. Courtesy of the artist

Samoylova’s project seeks out the cracks in these facades, the edges of their frames, to expose the menace of what lurks beneath and around them. There is no clear pattern to discern here, no typography or recurring motif. Instead, Samoylova brings together an array of approaches, including street photography, staged still-lives, and aerial views, working in colour and in black-and-white. The purple hue of the stain on a concrete overpass betrays the high octane fuel of luxury vehicles that speed past below; stacked shipping containers disappear at the dock as the humongous vessels that carry them float idly by; a perfect rectangle of water appears out of place, a pool for mining adjacent to the protected wetlands of the Everglades. In one image, what appears to be a postcard depicting gushing water sits tucked in amid rusting pipes, a metaphor for Samoylova’s larger project, and for our own complicit self-sabotage.

Anastasia Samoylova, Wave, 2017. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Wave, 2017. Courtesy of the artist

Displayed throughout Davisville Station, FloodZone takes up the space of traditional advertisements, asking viewers to consider the dissonance among present desire and hope for the future. The effect of climate change may be most palpable at the edges for now—but as these images show, the interconnections among things implicate us all. As news headlines are increasingly dominated by new evidence of impending climate disaster, we live, much like a photograph, in a suspended state, the vision of our future as yet unclear.

Curated by Sara Knelman

  • Anastasia Samoylova is a Russian-born American photographer who moves between observational photography, studio practice, and installation. Her work explores notions of environmentalism, consumerism, and the picturesque. She has recently held exhibitions at Kunst Haus Wien; Chrysler Museum of Art, HistoryMiami Museum; Kunsthalle Mannheim, and Museum of Fine Arts, Le Locle. In 2022 Samoylova was shortlisted for the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize and will present an extensive solo exhibition at the Eastman Museum (Rochester, NY). Her work is in the collections of the Perez Art Museum Miami, the Museum of Contemporary Photography Chicago, and the Wilhelm-Hack Museum, among others. Her two monographs, FloodZone and Floridas, were published by Steidl in 2019 and 2022.

Installation Images

  • Anastasia Samoylova, FloodZone, installation at Davisville Subway Station, Toronto, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and CONTACT. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid
  • Anastasia Samoylova, FloodZone, installation at Davisville Subway Station, Toronto, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and CONTACT. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid
  • Anastasia Samoylova, FloodZone, installation at Davisville Subway Station, Toronto, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and CONTACT. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid
  • Anastasia Samoylova, FloodZone, installation at Davisville Subway Station, Toronto, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and CONTACT. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid
  • Anastasia Samoylova, FloodZone, installation at Davisville Subway Station, Toronto, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and CONTACT. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid
  • Anastasia Samoylova, FloodZone, installation at Davisville Subway Station, Toronto, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and CONTACT. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid

Jorian Charlton Georgia

460 King St W

Asserting a powerful Black presence in the city, challenging colonial histories of...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Mahtab Hussain An Ocean in a Drop: Muslims in Toronto

Aga Khan Museum

A new visual narrative of Muslim experience and identity in Toronto...

Archives 2022 exhibition

John Delante Finding Comfort Under the Sky

Alliance Française Gallery

Using photography to navigate the experiences of a first-generation immigrant...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Anne-Marie Cloutier Teen Spirit

Alliance Française Gallery

An exploration of “teenagehood,” when childhood collides with adulthood...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition New Generation Photography Award

Arsenal Contemporary

Emerging photographers probing the challenges in contemporary representations of identity, culture and...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Morgan Sears-Williams Impermanent Embrace

Arsenal Contemporary
Archives 2022 exhibition

Jorian Charlton Out of Many

Art Gallery of Ontario

Exploring new ways of thinking about Jamaican-Canadian culture, and reimagining the family...

Archives 2022 exhibition

We Have Found Each Other

Art Gallery of Ontario

Mining personal archives, institutional collections, music, and oral histories to chart and...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Raymond Boisjoly From age to age, as its shape slowly unravelled

Art Gallery of Ontario

An incisive remediation of archival material, exploding colonial notions of Indigeneity...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Miao Ying A Field Guide to Ideology

Art Museum

A parodic and critical take on internet culture as a complex space...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition As We Rise: Photography from the Black Atlantic

Art Museum at the University of Toronto
Archives 2022 exhibition

Brendan George Ko Monarch Butterflies at El Rosario II

Artscape Youngplace Billboard

Documenting an epic transcontinental journey...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Durga Rajah & Tommy Calderon Fixations: Thoughts on Time

Artspace Gallery

Exploring physical, psychological, and cultural conceptions of time in relation to photography...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Memory Work Collective Memory Work

The Bentway

Situated at the Strachan Gate entrance to the Bentway, Memory Work is...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Mahtab Hussain Tajvin Kazi and Rishada Majeed

Billboard at Dupont and Dufferin

A new visual narrative of Muslim experience and identity in Toronto...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Alberto Giuliani Surviving Humanity

Brookfield Place

Documenting global projects that endeavour to ensure ecological and societal longevity...

Archives 2022 exhibition

monica maria moraru An Ant in the Mouth of a Furnace

Bunker 2 Projects

A mixed-media installation evoking the spaces on either side of the camera's...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Adam Swica Daybreak

Christie Contemporary

An homage to light's ephemeral apparitions...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Carlos & Jason Sanchez New Work

Christopher Cutts Gallery

Compelling staged scenes ignite the imagination...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Tyler Mitchell Cultural Turns: CONTACT Gallery

CONTACT Gallery

Deconstructing oppressive barriers, dreaming everyday utopias into being...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition I am my own muse

Corkin Gallery
Archives 2021 exhibition

Group Exhibition OF THE SACRED

Critical Distance

Exploring the role of belief under the conditions of our age...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Brendan George Ko The Forest is Wired for Wisdom

Cross-Canada Billboards, Strachan and King Billboards

A poetic and luminous look at the wonder and complexity of the...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Judy Chicago The Natural World

Daniel Faria Gallery
Archives 2022 exhibition

Anastasia Samoylova FloodZone

Davisville Subway Station

Nature's power in conflict with the menace of human desire...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Jimmy Manning Floe / Flow

Devonian Square

An installation of delicate, monumental beauty warning of things to come...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Sunset Watch

Dianna Witte Gallery

A delicate balance between absence and presence evokes life's ephemeral nature...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition Now You See Me

Doris McCarthy Gallery

Questioning the complex cultural and gender-related politics that underlie representation...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Tyler Mitchell Cultural Turns: Billboards in Toronto

Dupont and Dovercourt Billboard

Keeping alive the polychromatic nature of Black experiences, holding the vastness of...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Sandra Brewster Roots

Evergreen Brick Works

Embedding and activating Black diasporic narratives in the urban wilderness...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Suzanne Morrissette with Clayton Morrissette What does good work look like?

Gallery 44

Exploring how familial exchanges produce Indigenous art histories...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition a soft landing

Gallery TPW
Archives 2022 exhibition

Mobilizing Conscience: Art + Protest

Goethe-Institut Toronto

Appropriating contemporary images to highlight photography's role as an instrument of protest...

Archives 2022 exhibition

From Here to Eternity. Sunil Gupta, A Retrospective

The Image Centre

A comprehensive selection of works exemplifying a unique, transcontinental, queer photographic vision...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Mauvais Genre/Under Cover: A Secret History of Cross-Dressers

The Image Centre

A photographic collection offering a candid look into the hidden worlds of...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Dominique Blain Dérive/Drift

The Image Centre

A delicate, composite seascape commemorating the countless migrants who sail in search...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Red All Over: World War II Press Photographs From the Sovfoto Agency

The Image Centre

Interrogating practices of photojournalism in photographs made in the USSR and Eastern...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Scotiabank Photography Award: Deanna Bowen. Black Drones in the Hive

The Image Centre

Drawing on collections and archival materials, Bowen weaves together narrative threads...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Andréanne Michon états d’esprit – states of mind

The Image Centre

A mixed-media installation addressing the dramatic forces of the Anthropocene and its...

Archives 2022 exhibition

CANADA NOW: New Photography Acquisitions

The Image Centre

Ten Canadian artists employing photographic media to engage with issues of identity...

Archives 2022 exhibition

The Optics of Science: Early Western Stereographs from The Dr. Martin Bass and Gail Silverman Bass Collection

The Image Centre

Focusing in on stereographic representations of Western science at a time of...

Archives 2022 exhibition

UNKNOWN RELATIVE: Ancestry / Photo / Paper / Image / Visuals

John B. Aird Gallery

An exploration of family, land, and the power of place in Mixed...

Archives 2022 exhibition

nichola feldman-kiss SIREN

Koffler Gallery

SIREN is a solo exhibition by the Toronto-based inter-disciplinary artist nichola feldman-kiss. The multi-layered...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Atong Atem Surat

Lansdowne and College Billboards

Restaging personal histories toward expansive new futures...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Lawrence Abu Hamdan 45th Parallel

Mercer Union

An evocative video and installation framing borders not as lines but rather...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Honam: An Akan Word for Body

Meridian Arts Centre

Engaging with a history of Black male visual representation, reflecting shifting notions...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Tyler Mitchell Cultural Turns: Metro Hall

Metro Hall

A decolonial praxis guiding the viewer toward freedom, liberation, joy, and celebration...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Land of Dreams

MOCA Toronto

An immersive experience focusing on global issues of displacement, migration, and geopolitical...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Shine On: Photographs from The BIPOC Photo Mentorship Program

Nathan Phillips Square

Exemplifying the creativity and range of perspectives of the emerging generation of...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Angela Grauerholz Instant Resemblances

Olga Korper Gallery

An examination of analogue and digital aesthetics and their relationships to time...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Wendy Coburn Fable for Tomorrow

Onsite Gallery

Exploring performances of gender, queerness, nations, environmentalism, and public protest...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Bidemi Oloyede I Am Hu(e)Man

PAMA

Collaborative yet self-styled portraits generate new space for Black men in the...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Katherine Melançon Night Blossoms

Patel Brown Gallery
Archives 2022 exhibition

Ho Tam The Greatest Stories Ever Told

Paul Petro Contemporary Art

Examining structures of power through splicing and remixing the iconography of global...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition What is Left

Paul Petro Contemporary Art

A group exhibition looking at memory, loss, and the aftermath of change...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition Only Reliable Narrators

the plumb

A group exhibition contemplating the influential power of narrative ...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Vid Ingelevics & Ryan Walker How to Build a River

Port Lands

A third instalment charting the progression of the massive Port Lands Flood...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Sasha Huber YOU NAME IT

The Power Plant

Investigating colonial residues left in the environment and conceiving of natural spaces...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Sasha Huber Rentyhorn

The Power Plant façade

Envisioning reparative interventions into the remaining traces of a vast colonial project...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Jeff Thomas Where Are You From?

Stephen Bulger Gallery

A retrospective look at the trajectory of Thomas's powerful photographic vision...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Aïda Muluneh Water Life

Textile Museum of Canada

Vivid images addressing the impact on local women and girls of living...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Claudia Andujar, Gisela Motta & Leandro Lima The Falling Sky

Trinity Square Video

An installation bringing a photograph, a cultural tradition, and the power of...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Ryan Van Der Hout Collecting Dust

United Contemporary

Reflecting on the rebirth borne of crisis and its collateral effects...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Andreas Rutkauskas The Prefix Prize

Urbanspace Gallery

Images reflecting the destructive and regenerative power of wildfires...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Jorian Charlton, Kadine Lindsay fi di gyal dem

Virtual

An intimate celebration of the interior lives of Black women...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition NOSTALGIA INTERRUPTED

Virtual, Doris McCarthy Gallery
Archives 2022 exhibition

Sanctuary Doors

Walmer Road Baptist Church
Archives 2022 Public Art

Esmaa Mohamoud The Brotherhood FUBU (For Us, By Us)

Westin Harbour Castle, Harbour Square Park

Focusing on the physical connection between Black male bodies by amplifying the...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Ayla Dmyterko Vyshyvani Kazky, Embroidered Stories

Zalucky Contemporary

Re-engaging the archival vestiges of cultural memory to embody their lasting traces...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Lara Almarcegui Guide to the Wastelands of Toronto

Examining the construction, development, uses, and implications of the unique Leslie Street...

Archives 2022 exhibition
CorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2022 Public Art

Anastasia Samoylova FloodZone

April 26 – May 30, 2022
  • Davisville Subway Station
    Anastasia Samoylova, Fountain, 2017. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Fountain, 2017. Courtesy of the artist

Anastasia Samoylova’s large-scale, sundrenched images draw attention to rising water levels encroaching on Miami and other Florida shorelines. Signs of the impending disaster are not always easy to see, often eclipsed by bright colours, seductive facades, and our collective will to overlook them. But Samoylova finds hints of future catastrophe all around, hidden in plain sight in construction hoarding, storefront reflections, eroding concrete, and tangled tree roots.

Les images à grande échelle d’Anastasia Samoylova, baignées de soleil, attirent l’attention sur la montée des eaux qui gagne Miami et d’autres rivages de Floride. Les signes de la catastrophe imminente ne sont pas toujours faciles à détecter, souvent éclipsés par des couleurs vives, des façades séduisantes et notre volonté collective de les ignorer. Mais Samoylova décèle des indices de la future catastrophe tout autour, à la vue de tous, dans les amoncellements de constructions, les reflets des vitrines, le béton qui s’érode et les racines d’arbres enchevêtrées.

Anastasia Samoylova, Construction in Sunny Isles, 2018. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Construction in Sunny Isles, 2018. Courtesy of the artist

Full of moments of striking beauty and electric energy, FloodZone exposes the tensions among the power of nature, the destruction caused by human overconsumption, and the spectacle of distraction designed to draw attention away from both. Gathered together, Samoylova’s images serve as subtle warnings embedded in a tender document of a place—Miami, and planet earth—on the brink of transformation.

Anastasia Samoylova, Graffiti Cup, 2018. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Graffiti Cup, 2018. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Hand, 2017. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Hand, 2017. Courtesy of the artist

Born in Russia but already living in the US, Samoylova moved to Miami in 2016, a leap of faith that coincided with a shift away from her studio-based practice, a plunge into full-time freelance work, and a deeper feeling of being settled in her adopted country. She would often spend mornings looking at photography books before taking to the streets with her camera. Early observations, some of which would become the foundations of FloodZone, began as a way of understanding a new city, and of defining an approach to documenting the public realm from a range of perspectives and contexts: outsider, woman, mother, documentary photographer. Seeking a position without agenda or explicit subject, Samoylova’s images are rich in their differences and feel free, part of a flow of curiosity and discovery.

Anastasia Samoylova, Manatee Rescue Van, 2019. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Manatee Rescue Van, 2019. Courtesy of the artist

Miami, it turns out, is the perfect stage for an increasingly fragile ecosystem—and for the elaborate diversions we’ve built up as flimsy defense. As Samoylova became more attuned the elusive signs of slowly seeping water and other cues of climate change, hurricane Irma swept in in the fall of 2017, announcing unequivocally the awesome power of nature and the absurdly inadequate infrastructure in place to protect human life and the built environment from its ravages. Irma was, at the time, the most powerful hurricane on record in the open Atlantic, only to be surpassed two years later by Dorian. Samoylova was stranded with her family, without gas or running water, and her experience of Irma provoked fear—a mechanism as capable of inciting action as it is paralysis.

Anastasia Samoylova, Cargo Ship, 2017. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Cargo Ship, 2017. Courtesy of the artist

For Samoylova, the hurricane brought focus to the significance of what she was seeing—not just the environmental disaster, but the unrelenting propaganda of an idealized vision of place that seemed designed to cover over more disturbing realities. Influenced by the Russian propaganda of her youth, Samoylova was quick to read the nuances of this dance, and to recognize Miami as, in her words, “a scale-model collage of itself.” Like many cities, it’s been subsumed by images and reflections, eager to mirror the desired lifestyles of its inhabitants—tourists and residents alike. Eventually the distinctions between “reality” and “image” become hard, if not impossible, to parse.

Anastasia Samoylova, Construction in South Beach II, 2018. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Construction in South Beach II, 2018. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Park Avenue, Miami Beach, 2018. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Park Avenue, Miami Beach, 2018. Courtesy of the artist

Samoylova’s project seeks out the cracks in these facades, the edges of their frames, to expose the menace of what lurks beneath and around them. There is no clear pattern to discern here, no typography or recurring motif. Instead, Samoylova brings together an array of approaches, including street photography, staged still-lives, and aerial views, working in colour and in black-and-white. The purple hue of the stain on a concrete overpass betrays the high octane fuel of luxury vehicles that speed past below; stacked shipping containers disappear at the dock as the humongous vessels that carry them float idly by; a perfect rectangle of water appears out of place, a pool for mining adjacent to the protected wetlands of the Everglades. In one image, what appears to be a postcard depicting gushing water sits tucked in amid rusting pipes, a metaphor for Samoylova’s larger project, and for our own complicit self-sabotage.

Anastasia Samoylova, Wave, 2017. Courtesy of the artist
Anastasia Samoylova, Wave, 2017. Courtesy of the artist

Displayed throughout Davisville Station, FloodZone takes up the space of traditional advertisements, asking viewers to consider the dissonance among present desire and hope for the future. The effect of climate change may be most palpable at the edges for now—but as these images show, the interconnections among things implicate us all. As news headlines are increasingly dominated by new evidence of impending climate disaster, we live, much like a photograph, in a suspended state, the vision of our future as yet unclear.

Curated by Sara Knelman

  • Anastasia Samoylova is a Russian-born American photographer who moves between observational photography, studio practice, and installation. Her work explores notions of environmentalism, consumerism, and the picturesque. She has recently held exhibitions at Kunst Haus Wien; Chrysler Museum of Art, HistoryMiami Museum; Kunsthalle Mannheim, and Museum of Fine Arts, Le Locle. In 2022 Samoylova was shortlisted for the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize and will present an extensive solo exhibition at the Eastman Museum (Rochester, NY). Her work is in the collections of the Perez Art Museum Miami, the Museum of Contemporary Photography Chicago, and the Wilhelm-Hack Museum, among others. Her two monographs, FloodZone and Floridas, were published by Steidl in 2019 and 2022.

Installation Images

  • Anastasia Samoylova, FloodZone, installation at Davisville Subway Station, Toronto, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and CONTACT. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid
  • Anastasia Samoylova, FloodZone, installation at Davisville Subway Station, Toronto, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and CONTACT. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid
  • Anastasia Samoylova, FloodZone, installation at Davisville Subway Station, Toronto, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and CONTACT. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid
  • Anastasia Samoylova, FloodZone, installation at Davisville Subway Station, Toronto, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and CONTACT. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid
  • Anastasia Samoylova, FloodZone, installation at Davisville Subway Station, Toronto, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and CONTACT. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid
  • Anastasia Samoylova, FloodZone, installation at Davisville Subway Station, Toronto, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and CONTACT. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid

Jorian Charlton Georgia

460 King St W

Asserting a powerful Black presence in the city, challenging colonial histories of...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Mahtab Hussain An Ocean in a Drop: Muslims in Toronto

Aga Khan Museum

A new visual narrative of Muslim experience and identity in Toronto...

Archives 2022 exhibition

John Delante Finding Comfort Under the Sky

Alliance Française Gallery

Using photography to navigate the experiences of a first-generation immigrant...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Anne-Marie Cloutier Teen Spirit

Alliance Française Gallery

An exploration of “teenagehood,” when childhood collides with adulthood...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition New Generation Photography Award

Arsenal Contemporary

Emerging photographers probing the challenges in contemporary representations of identity, culture and...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Morgan Sears-Williams Impermanent Embrace

Arsenal Contemporary
Archives 2022 exhibition

Jorian Charlton Out of Many

Art Gallery of Ontario

Exploring new ways of thinking about Jamaican-Canadian culture, and reimagining the family...

Archives 2022 exhibition

We Have Found Each Other

Art Gallery of Ontario

Mining personal archives, institutional collections, music, and oral histories to chart and...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Raymond Boisjoly From age to age, as its shape slowly unravelled

Art Gallery of Ontario

An incisive remediation of archival material, exploding colonial notions of Indigeneity...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Miao Ying A Field Guide to Ideology

Art Museum

A parodic and critical take on internet culture as a complex space...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition As We Rise: Photography from the Black Atlantic

Art Museum at the University of Toronto
Archives 2022 exhibition

Brendan George Ko Monarch Butterflies at El Rosario II

Artscape Youngplace Billboard

Documenting an epic transcontinental journey...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Durga Rajah & Tommy Calderon Fixations: Thoughts on Time

Artspace Gallery

Exploring physical, psychological, and cultural conceptions of time in relation to photography...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Memory Work Collective Memory Work

The Bentway

Situated at the Strachan Gate entrance to the Bentway, Memory Work is...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Mahtab Hussain Tajvin Kazi and Rishada Majeed

Billboard at Dupont and Dufferin

A new visual narrative of Muslim experience and identity in Toronto...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Alberto Giuliani Surviving Humanity

Brookfield Place

Documenting global projects that endeavour to ensure ecological and societal longevity...

Archives 2022 exhibition

monica maria moraru An Ant in the Mouth of a Furnace

Bunker 2 Projects

A mixed-media installation evoking the spaces on either side of the camera's...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Adam Swica Daybreak

Christie Contemporary

An homage to light's ephemeral apparitions...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Carlos & Jason Sanchez New Work

Christopher Cutts Gallery

Compelling staged scenes ignite the imagination...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Tyler Mitchell Cultural Turns: CONTACT Gallery

CONTACT Gallery

Deconstructing oppressive barriers, dreaming everyday utopias into being...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition I am my own muse

Corkin Gallery
Archives 2021 exhibition

Group Exhibition OF THE SACRED

Critical Distance

Exploring the role of belief under the conditions of our age...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Brendan George Ko The Forest is Wired for Wisdom

Cross-Canada Billboards, Strachan and King Billboards

A poetic and luminous look at the wonder and complexity of the...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Judy Chicago The Natural World

Daniel Faria Gallery
Archives 2022 exhibition

Anastasia Samoylova FloodZone

Davisville Subway Station

Nature's power in conflict with the menace of human desire...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Jimmy Manning Floe / Flow

Devonian Square

An installation of delicate, monumental beauty warning of things to come...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Sunset Watch

Dianna Witte Gallery

A delicate balance between absence and presence evokes life's ephemeral nature...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition Now You See Me

Doris McCarthy Gallery

Questioning the complex cultural and gender-related politics that underlie representation...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Tyler Mitchell Cultural Turns: Billboards in Toronto

Dupont and Dovercourt Billboard

Keeping alive the polychromatic nature of Black experiences, holding the vastness of...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Sandra Brewster Roots

Evergreen Brick Works

Embedding and activating Black diasporic narratives in the urban wilderness...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Suzanne Morrissette with Clayton Morrissette What does good work look like?

Gallery 44

Exploring how familial exchanges produce Indigenous art histories...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition a soft landing

Gallery TPW
Archives 2022 exhibition

Mobilizing Conscience: Art + Protest

Goethe-Institut Toronto

Appropriating contemporary images to highlight photography's role as an instrument of protest...

Archives 2022 exhibition

From Here to Eternity. Sunil Gupta, A Retrospective

The Image Centre

A comprehensive selection of works exemplifying a unique, transcontinental, queer photographic vision...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Mauvais Genre/Under Cover: A Secret History of Cross-Dressers

The Image Centre

A photographic collection offering a candid look into the hidden worlds of...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Dominique Blain Dérive/Drift

The Image Centre

A delicate, composite seascape commemorating the countless migrants who sail in search...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Red All Over: World War II Press Photographs From the Sovfoto Agency

The Image Centre

Interrogating practices of photojournalism in photographs made in the USSR and Eastern...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Scotiabank Photography Award: Deanna Bowen. Black Drones in the Hive

The Image Centre

Drawing on collections and archival materials, Bowen weaves together narrative threads...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Andréanne Michon états d’esprit – states of mind

The Image Centre

A mixed-media installation addressing the dramatic forces of the Anthropocene and its...

Archives 2022 exhibition

CANADA NOW: New Photography Acquisitions

The Image Centre

Ten Canadian artists employing photographic media to engage with issues of identity...

Archives 2022 exhibition

The Optics of Science: Early Western Stereographs from The Dr. Martin Bass and Gail Silverman Bass Collection

The Image Centre

Focusing in on stereographic representations of Western science at a time of...

Archives 2022 exhibition

UNKNOWN RELATIVE: Ancestry / Photo / Paper / Image / Visuals

John B. Aird Gallery

An exploration of family, land, and the power of place in Mixed...

Archives 2022 exhibition

nichola feldman-kiss SIREN

Koffler Gallery

SIREN is a solo exhibition by the Toronto-based inter-disciplinary artist nichola feldman-kiss. The multi-layered...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Atong Atem Surat

Lansdowne and College Billboards

Restaging personal histories toward expansive new futures...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Lawrence Abu Hamdan 45th Parallel

Mercer Union

An evocative video and installation framing borders not as lines but rather...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Honam: An Akan Word for Body

Meridian Arts Centre

Engaging with a history of Black male visual representation, reflecting shifting notions...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Tyler Mitchell Cultural Turns: Metro Hall

Metro Hall

A decolonial praxis guiding the viewer toward freedom, liberation, joy, and celebration...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Land of Dreams

MOCA Toronto

An immersive experience focusing on global issues of displacement, migration, and geopolitical...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Shine On: Photographs from The BIPOC Photo Mentorship Program

Nathan Phillips Square

Exemplifying the creativity and range of perspectives of the emerging generation of...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Angela Grauerholz Instant Resemblances

Olga Korper Gallery

An examination of analogue and digital aesthetics and their relationships to time...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Wendy Coburn Fable for Tomorrow

Onsite Gallery

Exploring performances of gender, queerness, nations, environmentalism, and public protest...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Bidemi Oloyede I Am Hu(e)Man

PAMA

Collaborative yet self-styled portraits generate new space for Black men in the...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Katherine Melançon Night Blossoms

Patel Brown Gallery
Archives 2022 exhibition

Ho Tam The Greatest Stories Ever Told

Paul Petro Contemporary Art

Examining structures of power through splicing and remixing the iconography of global...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition What is Left

Paul Petro Contemporary Art

A group exhibition looking at memory, loss, and the aftermath of change...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition Only Reliable Narrators

the plumb

A group exhibition contemplating the influential power of narrative ...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Vid Ingelevics & Ryan Walker How to Build a River

Port Lands

A third instalment charting the progression of the massive Port Lands Flood...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Sasha Huber YOU NAME IT

The Power Plant

Investigating colonial residues left in the environment and conceiving of natural spaces...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Sasha Huber Rentyhorn

The Power Plant façade

Envisioning reparative interventions into the remaining traces of a vast colonial project...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Jeff Thomas Where Are You From?

Stephen Bulger Gallery

A retrospective look at the trajectory of Thomas's powerful photographic vision...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Aïda Muluneh Water Life

Textile Museum of Canada

Vivid images addressing the impact on local women and girls of living...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Claudia Andujar, Gisela Motta & Leandro Lima The Falling Sky

Trinity Square Video

An installation bringing a photograph, a cultural tradition, and the power of...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Ryan Van Der Hout Collecting Dust

United Contemporary

Reflecting on the rebirth borne of crisis and its collateral effects...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Andreas Rutkauskas The Prefix Prize

Urbanspace Gallery

Images reflecting the destructive and regenerative power of wildfires...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Jorian Charlton, Kadine Lindsay fi di gyal dem

Virtual

An intimate celebration of the interior lives of Black women...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Group Exhibition NOSTALGIA INTERRUPTED

Virtual, Doris McCarthy Gallery
Archives 2022 exhibition

Sanctuary Doors

Walmer Road Baptist Church
Archives 2022 Public Art

Esmaa Mohamoud The Brotherhood FUBU (For Us, By Us)

Westin Harbour Castle, Harbour Square Park

Focusing on the physical connection between Black male bodies by amplifying the...

Archives 2022 Public Art

Ayla Dmyterko Vyshyvani Kazky, Embroidered Stories

Zalucky Contemporary

Re-engaging the archival vestiges of cultural memory to embody their lasting traces...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Lara Almarcegui Guide to the Wastelands of Toronto

Examining the construction, development, uses, and implications of the unique Leslie Street...

Archives 2022 exhibition

Join our mailing list

Email marketing Cyberimpact

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.