CANADA NOW: New Photography Acquisitions

Sep 14–Dec 3,  2022
Artists
  • Kablusiak
  • SĂ©amus Gallagher
  • Zachary Ayotte
  • Rebecca Bair
  • Isabel M. MartĂ­nez
  • Luther Konadu
  • JJ Levine
  • Morris Lum
  • Kali Spitzer
  • Alyssa Bistonath
    Kali Spitzer, Melaw Nakehk’o II, from the series An Exploration of Resilience and Resistance, 2015. Courtesy of the artist and the Ryerson Image Centre. Purchase, Canada Now Photography Acquisition Initiative, with funds from Edward Burtynsky and Nicholas Metivier, 2021
Kali Spitzer, Melaw Nakehk’o II, from the series An Exploration of Resilience and Resistance, 2015. Courtesy of the artist and the Ryerson Image Centre. Purchase, Canada Now Photography Acquisition Initiative, with funds from Edward Burtynsky and Nicholas Metivier, 2021

CANADA NOW features works by ten emerging and mid-career artists from across the country who employ photographic media to engage with issues of identity and belonging. Their work represents diverse lived experiences, highlighting various aspects of visibility and resilience. Traditional approaches to portraiture are displayed alongside poetic works, some using the trope of the fragment, trace, or spirit to communicate narratives of embodiment and displacement.

I Wish U Were Here (2021) by Zachary Ayotte (Edmonton) is a meditation on the artist’s experience as a gay man travelling through the Western United States with his partner. Other series similarly exploring personal identity and experience through the lens of performative self-portraiture include akunnirun kuupak (2019) by Kablusiak (Calgary), in which the artist adopts the dead-pan guise of a ghost against the backdrop of their ancestral home to address themes of diaspora and displacement. Rebecca Bair (Vancouver) likewise engages with her position as a Black woman in Reach & Coil (Découpé) (2021), a unique, mural-sized polyptych specifically commissioned for The Image Centre. A second commission presented is a new work in the series A Slippery Place (2019–21) by Séamus Gallagher (Halifax), who poses among elaborate photo-sculptural sets and costumes inspired by drag culture and video game aesthetics.

Group identity is a unifying theme of works including Figure as Index (2018–21) by Luther Konadu (Winnipeg), an evolving investigation of the self in the context of the artist’s community of individuals from the African diaspora. In Queer Portraits (2012–19), JJ Levine (Montreal) fashions revealing and intimate portrayals of loved ones in carefully staged domestic settings. Female and gender-non-conforming friends and family likewise serve as subjects for Kali Spitzer (Vancouver) in An Exploration of Resilience and Resistance (2015–18), whose arresting portraits are based on tintypes and are accompanied by oral histories. Morris Lum (Toronto) engages with his Chinese diaspora community through portraits of places rather than people, in an ongoing study of the vernacular spaces of Chinatowns across North America.

In Isolation Photographs (2020–21), Alyssa Bistonath (Toronto) engages with her community in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic and its effects on the people and environments in her life. Also a response to the artist’s experience of the pandemic is From Walking so Much in Circles, I Will End up Making a Sphere (2020) by Isabel M. Martínez (Toronto)—created using experimental photographic techniques without the use of a camera, these “sun/moon drawings” reference the cyclical and uncertain nature of history.

The exhibition showcases a selection from the 60 works that join the collection of The Image Centre through the support of the Canada Now Photography Acquisition Initiative, conceived in the spring of 2020 by photographer Edward Burtynsky and Nicholas Metivier Gallery in response to the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Canadian artists. Proceeds from the sale of Burtynsky’s portfolio Natural Order were designated to The Image Centre and the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) in support of the acquisition of works by twenty Canadian artists, ten to be selected by each institution. The Image Centre’s exhibition will be followed by a presentation of the AGO’s related acquisition in 2023.

Curated by Denise Birkhofer

Presented by The Image Centre in partnership with CONTACT

Kablusiak is an Inuvialuk who creates art in a variety of mediums including, but not limited to, lingerie, soapstone, Sharpie, bed sheets, felt, and words. Their work explores the dis/connections between existence in Inuit diaspora while maintaining family and community ties, the impacts of colonization on Inuit gender and sexuality expressions, as well as on health, wellbeing, and the everyday. Kablusiak holds a BFA from AUArts in Mohkinstsis, where they are currently based. Their work can be found in the collections of the Indigenous Art Centre, the Art Gallery of Alberta, and Global Affairs Visual Art Collection among others.

SĂ©amus Gallagher is a non-binary photo and new media artist currently based in Kjipuktuk (Halifax, Nova Scotia). They graduated from NSCAD University with a double major in Photography and Expanded Media (BFA 2019). Their work has shown in festivals/exhibitions across Canada, as well as in Germany, England, Switzerland and Los Angeles. They are the recipient of the 2017 AGO | AIMIA Photography Scholarship, the 2018 NSCAD Student Awards, and the 2019 BMO 1st Art! Awards. They were also recently longlisted for the 2019 and 2021 Scotiabank New Generation Photography Awards. Since 2019, Gallagher has worked in partnership with IOTA Institute.

Zachary Ayotte is a visual artist based in Edmonton working primarily with photography and installation. With light and form, he uses depictions of bodies and space to explore gender and sexual identity, power, distance and experiences of the unknown. A sense of otherworldliness hovers over his work. Interested in the relation that intimacy and familiarity have to disconnection and uncertainty, Ayotte allows the forces in his work to elide and collide, generating tension. This process allows him to embrace and comment on the superficiality of the photographic image, exploring it as both a manipulation of light and a mode of delivering information

Rebecca Bair is an interdisciplinary artist based in Vancouver, the traditional and ancestral territories of the Coast Salish peoples. Her research explores the possibilities of representation and identity through abstraction and non-figuration. Bair uses multimedia approaches and Sun collaborations to illustrate her exploration of identity and intersectionality, through the lens of her own experience as a Black Woman on Turtle Island. Her artistic, professional, and educational goals aim to celebrate Black plurality, as well as enable interpersonal and intercultural care. Her work acts as a vehicle through which the complexities of history and identity can be uncovered, redefined, and expressed.

Isabel M. MartĂ­nez is a Toronto-based visual artist who spent her formative years in Santiago de Chile. She has exhibited internationally in solo and curated group shows in galleries, art centres, festivals, and biennials in Canada, the UK, the United States, Chile, France, Brazil, Colombia, Spain, and the Netherlands. Her work has been featured in FOAM Magazine, The Creators Project, The Huffington Post, and Prefix Photo Magazine. MartĂ­nez holds a BFA from Universidad CatĂłlica de Chile and an MFA from the University of Guelph in Canada.

Luther Konadu is an artist and writer based in Winnipeg (Treaty One). He is the editor of Public Parking, a publication for critical thought and tangential conversations. His writing has appeared in Canadian Art, Aperture, BlackFlash, Akimbo, and Border Crossings. His studio activities are realized through photographic processes that give way to sculptural elements, acknowledging the legacies of the photographic medium as an interpretive site for generating new conventions and expanding fixed narratives. Konadu received the 2019 New Generation Photography Award and was one of the recipients of the 2020 Sobey Art Award. His work has been exhibited nationally and internationally.

JJ Levine is an image-based artist living in Tiohti:áke/Montreal, known for his compelling body of work in portraiture. Represented by ELLEPHANT (Montreal), Levine’s artwork has been exhibited at museums and galleries internationally. A major retrospective of his work, JJ Levine: Queer Photographs, is currently on view at the McCord Museum (Montreal). His images have been featured in such publications as Photography and Culture, CV Photo, Esse, Slate, The Guardian Observer, and Society. Levine holds an MFA in Photography from Concordia University. In 2015, he self-published two artist books: Queer Portraits: 2006-2015 and Switch. Levine’s art practice balances a queer ethos with a strong formal aesthetic.

Morris Lum is a Toronto-based Trinidadian-born photographer/artist whose work explores the hybrid nature of the Chinese-Canadian community through photography, form, and documentary practices. His work also examines the ways in which Chinese history is represented in the media and archival material. Lum’s work has been exhibited and screened across Canada and the United States.

Kali Spitzer

Vancouver-based artist Kali Spitzer’s work embraces the stories of contemporary BIPOC, Queer, and trans bodies, creating representation that is self-determined. Spitzer’s collaborative process is informed by the desire to rewrite the visual histories of indigenous bodies beyond a colonial lens. Kaska Dena from Daylu (Lower Post, British Columbia) on her father’s side and Jewish from Transylvania, Romania, on her mother’s side, Spitzer’s heritage deeply influences her work as she focuses on cultural revitalization through her art. Her work has been featured in international exhibitions including Women: A Century of Change at the National Geographic Museum, and Larger than Memory: Contemporary Art From Indigenous North America at the Heard Museum.

Alyssa Bistonath is a filmmaker and photographer living in Toronto. She focuses on themes of memory and belonging. Bistonath, the daughter of Guyanese immigrants, endeavours to look at modes of representation by investigating nostalgia, exploring evidence, and interrupting the archive. Most recently, she was featured in the Art Gallery of Ontario’s Art in the Spotlight and in Canadian Art for her series Isolation Photographs. Her work includes Portals (2018), a video installation commissioned by the City of Toronto for Nuit Blanche, and the documentary Why We Fight (2016), which won Best Canadian Short at the Regent Park Film Festival. Bistonath has her Masters of Fine Arts and teaches at Toronto Metropolitan University.