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Archives 2023 exhibition

Jane Jin Kaisen Braiding and Mending

April 29 – August 5, 2023
  • The Image Centre
    Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery

The two-channel video Braiding and Mending features South Korean-Danish artist Jane Jin Kaisen sitting with her sisters and nieces in a circle, the camera revolving around them in calm, meditative movements. Each participant combs and braids the hair of the woman in front of her, connecting them all in a perpetual cycle. The braiding becomes a memory-making gesture, and a process of mutual care and healing.

Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery

The following is an excerpt from Crystal Mun-Hye Baik’s “To Gather, To Part, To Return: An Aesthetics of Abandonment” in the exhibition catalogue Jane Jin Kaisen: Community of Parting (Seoul: Art Sonje Center, 2021; pp84–8).

To Gather

In Jane Jin Kaisen’s dual-channel video installation Braiding and Mending (2020), a gathering of women sit in a circle, attending to one another through the braiding of hair. The camera revolves around the circle to capture the intimacy of the scene through close-up views of hands and faces: each woman is connected to the woman in front of her through the act of braiding and the smoothing out of hair. Describing the gathering as “a mutual healing and memory-making act,” Kaisen shares that the women depicted in the video include herself alongside her sisters and nieces. Unfolding in slow and rhythmic movements, the shared process of braiding within this circle of women transforms into a collective act of repair.

Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery

[…] This tender scene of gathering is entwined with a different set of images, or (an)other archive, that remains beyond the frame but is nevertheless evoked by the word “mending.” Mending, after all, implies that the work of repair is necessary to attend to an unresolved history of harm and violence that conditions a web of relationships. Yet, this very history of harm may remain obscured from or invisible to the naked eye. With this mind, […] the curative scene of proximity, touch, and familial connection in Braiding and Mending is haunted by a radically different aesthetic – one that I provisionally describe as an aesthetic of abandonment.

Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery

To Part

[…] Braiding and Mending […] is concerned with racialized and gendered genealogies of social kinship produced by war, colonialism, militarized occupation, and separation in Korea. These genealogies include sex workers affiliated with the US military and Korean transnational adoptees raised in Europe, such as Kaisen. An enterprise that emerged after 1945, Korean transnational adoption crystallized at the crossroads of US military occupation; heteropatriarchy and white supremacy; a near absence of social welfare support for South Korean citizens; and a Christianized discourse of American humanitarianism. Scholars Arissa Oh and SooJin Pate emphasize that US military intervention in Korea, combined with a Christianized humanitarian impulse, framed Western families as altruistic saviors of “destitute orphans” from “Asiatic” countries. Birth mothers, especially those affiliated with US servicemen, were socially stigmatized and ostracized by Korean society.

Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery

Throughout the 1950s and early 1960s, most Korean children adopted were multiracial (born to Korean mothers and US military servicemen) and for decades, most overseas adoptees were young girls or assigned female at birth. The consequences of South Korea’s transnational adoption policy have been tremendous, on a systemic and personal level. Between 1950 and 2000, almost 200,000 children were exported to North America and Europe, with an estimated $3.3 billion (US dollars) generated as revenue. In some cases, siblings including twins were separated at birth, while children at times were told by adoption agencies that their birth families had passed away, even if this was untrue.”

Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery

Curated by Gaëlle Morel

  • Jane Jin Kaisen is an artist, filmmaker, and Professor of the School of Media Arts at The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts. Her practice spans the mediums of video installation, narrative experimental film, photography, performance, and text, and is informed by extensive interdisciplinary research and long-term engagement with diverse communities. Engaging topics such as memory, migration, borders, and translation, she activates the field where lived experience and embodied knowledge intersect with larger political histories. She represented Korea at the 58th Venice Biennale and has exhibited her work in a wide range of international contexts.

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Archives 2023 exhibition

Jane Jin Kaisen Braiding and Mending

April 29 – August 5, 2023
  • The Image Centre
    Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery

The two-channel video Braiding and Mending features South Korean-Danish artist Jane Jin Kaisen sitting with her sisters and nieces in a circle, the camera revolving around them in calm, meditative movements. Each participant combs and braids the hair of the woman in front of her, connecting them all in a perpetual cycle. The braiding becomes a memory-making gesture, and a process of mutual care and healing.

Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery

The following is an excerpt from Crystal Mun-Hye Baik’s “To Gather, To Part, To Return: An Aesthetics of Abandonment” in the exhibition catalogue Jane Jin Kaisen: Community of Parting (Seoul: Art Sonje Center, 2021; pp84–8).

To Gather

In Jane Jin Kaisen’s dual-channel video installation Braiding and Mending (2020), a gathering of women sit in a circle, attending to one another through the braiding of hair. The camera revolves around the circle to capture the intimacy of the scene through close-up views of hands and faces: each woman is connected to the woman in front of her through the act of braiding and the smoothing out of hair. Describing the gathering as “a mutual healing and memory-making act,” Kaisen shares that the women depicted in the video include herself alongside her sisters and nieces. Unfolding in slow and rhythmic movements, the shared process of braiding within this circle of women transforms into a collective act of repair.

Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery

[…] This tender scene of gathering is entwined with a different set of images, or (an)other archive, that remains beyond the frame but is nevertheless evoked by the word “mending.” Mending, after all, implies that the work of repair is necessary to attend to an unresolved history of harm and violence that conditions a web of relationships. Yet, this very history of harm may remain obscured from or invisible to the naked eye. With this mind, […] the curative scene of proximity, touch, and familial connection in Braiding and Mending is haunted by a radically different aesthetic – one that I provisionally describe as an aesthetic of abandonment.

Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery

To Part

[…] Braiding and Mending […] is concerned with racialized and gendered genealogies of social kinship produced by war, colonialism, militarized occupation, and separation in Korea. These genealogies include sex workers affiliated with the US military and Korean transnational adoptees raised in Europe, such as Kaisen. An enterprise that emerged after 1945, Korean transnational adoption crystallized at the crossroads of US military occupation; heteropatriarchy and white supremacy; a near absence of social welfare support for South Korean citizens; and a Christianized discourse of American humanitarianism. Scholars Arissa Oh and SooJin Pate emphasize that US military intervention in Korea, combined with a Christianized humanitarian impulse, framed Western families as altruistic saviors of “destitute orphans” from “Asiatic” countries. Birth mothers, especially those affiliated with US servicemen, were socially stigmatized and ostracized by Korean society.

Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery
Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery

Throughout the 1950s and early 1960s, most Korean children adopted were multiracial (born to Korean mothers and US military servicemen) and for decades, most overseas adoptees were young girls or assigned female at birth. The consequences of South Korea’s transnational adoption policy have been tremendous, on a systemic and personal level. Between 1950 and 2000, almost 200,000 children were exported to North America and Europe, with an estimated $3.3 billion (US dollars) generated as revenue. In some cases, siblings including twins were separated at birth, while children at times were told by adoption agencies that their birth families had passed away, even if this was untrue.”

Jane Jin Kaisen, Braiding and Mending, 2022 (still image from two-channel video). Courtesy the artist and Martin Asbaek Gallery

Curated by Gaëlle Morel

  • Jane Jin Kaisen is an artist, filmmaker, and Professor of the School of Media Arts at The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts. Her practice spans the mediums of video installation, narrative experimental film, photography, performance, and text, and is informed by extensive interdisciplinary research and long-term engagement with diverse communities. Engaging topics such as memory, migration, borders, and translation, she activates the field where lived experience and embodied knowledge intersect with larger political histories. She represented Korea at the 58th Venice Biennale and has exhibited her work in a wide range of international contexts.

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Bloodline

The McMichael

Meryl McMaster (b. Ottawa, 1988) is a leading contemporary artistic voice, producing...

Archives 2023 exhibition

Aziz Hazara Bow Echo

Mercer Union

Berlin-based artist Aziz Hazara’s practice is deeply engaged with the geopolitics and enduring...

Archives 2023 exhibition

Karabo Mooki Dogg Pound Days

Meridian Arts Centre

In the series featured in this exhibition, South African photographer Karabo Mooki...

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Writing Without Words: The Autoportraits of Hélène Amouzou

Metro Hall

Togolese-Belgian photographer Hélène Amouzou creates distinctive imagery through long exposures, generating photographic...

Archives 2023 Public Art

Jayce Salloum not the way things oughta be

MKG127

Vancouver-based artist Jayce Salloum presents an installation of photography, drawing, and sculptures...

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Impostor Cities

MOCA Toronto

The world we live in is the global generic city we experience...

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Robert Burley The Last Day of Work

Mount Dennis Library

Known for his inspiring colour vistas of urban architecture and landscape, Canadian...

Archives 2023 Public Art

Lynne Cohen Severance

Olga Korper Gallery

American-Canadian photographer Lynne Cohen (1944–2014) is known for her striking photographs of...

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Group Exhibition more-than-human

Onsite Gallery

more-than-human features ten contemporary artists who explore human-natural relationships through technology, promoting...

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Robert Kautuk Up Front: Inuit Public Art at Onsite Gallery

Onsite Gallery (exterior windows)

The Inuit Art Foundation and Onsite Gallery present Up Front: Inuit Public Art...

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Marlene Creates Between the Earth and the Firmament: Variations on a Theme, Newfoundland 2015–2022

Paul Petro Contemporary Art

This exhibition brings together a selection of photographic works by Newfoundland artist...

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FASTWÜRMS #VOLCANO_LOV3R

Paul Petro Contemporary Art

Based in the territory of Treaty 18, FASTWÜRMS’ witch queer #VOLCANO_LOV3R is...

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Vid Ingelevics & Ryan Walker Greenwork

Port Lands

Since 2019, Toronto-based artists Vid Ingelevics and Ryan Walker have photographically documented...

Archives 2023 Public Art

Anique Jordan these times, 2019

The Power Plant façade

Presented as a billboard on The Power Plant’s south façade, these times,...

Archives 2023 Public Art

Nabil Azab The Big Mess With Us Inside It

Pumice Raft

In tandem with the commissioned billboard project Just How We Found It,...

Archives 2023 exhibition

Nabil Azab Just How We Found It

Runnymede and Ryding Billboards

In tandem with his solo exhibition The Big Mess With Us Inside...

Archives 2023 Public Art

Sarah Anne Johnson Woodland

Stephen Bulger Gallery

For the past twenty years, Winnipeg-based artist Sarah Anne Johnson has devised...

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Seif Kousmate Waha (Oasis)

Strachan and King Billboards

Waha (“oasis” in Arabic) is Moroccan photographer Seif Kousmate’s three-year–long research-based project...

Archives 2023 Public Art

Sarah Palmer Wish You Were Here

Summerville Olympic Pools

In Wish You Were Here, Toronto-based photographer Sarah Palmer documents the world...

Archives 2023 Public Art

Karen Zalamea The Prefix Prize

Tangled Art + Disability

The recipient of the third annual Prefix Prize is Karen Zalamea, a...

Archives 2023 exhibition

Simon Shim-Sutcliffe The Machine Eclipsed by the Station

Towards Gallery

Simon Shim-Sutcliffe’s The Machine Eclipsed by the Station presents a new installation...

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Rodell Warner Heirlooms & Lenses

Trinity Square Video

This exhibition by Trinidad-born artist Rodell Warner features a series of animated...

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Group Exhibition Works in Practice

United Contemporary

Featuring works derived from the unique creative practices of Cassils, Suzanne Nacha,...

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Lara Almarcegui Guide to the Leslie Street Spit

Urbanspace Gallery

As acclaimed Spanish artist Lara Almarcegui's first solo exhibition in Canada, this...

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Long Time No See LONGING BELONGING * 100 YEARS 100 STORIES

Varley Art Gallery of Markham

Tackling Canada's colonialist history, this exhibition marks the 100th anniversary of the...

Archives 2023 exhibition

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

Anahí González Hacia Arriba / Upwards

Xpace Cultural Centre

Fuelled by an interest in the relationship between Mexico and Canada, the...

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Caroline Mauxion touch weight

Zalucky Contemporary

Using her experiences within the medical system as a point of departure,...

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Artist and Curator in Conversation: Jin-me Yoon with Euijung McGillis

Archives 2023 conversation

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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.