-- Advertisement --

                           

-- Advertisement --

Canadian Art

Features

Images Festival: So Long, AV Club

Various venues, Toronto Apr 3 to 13 2008
Artur Zmijewski  <i>Singing Lesson 2</i>  2003  Video still Artur Zmijewski Singing Lesson 2 2003 Video still

Artur Zmijewski <i>Singing Lesson 2</i> 2003 Video still

For many years it seemed as though contemporary film and video did not get enough screen time in traditional gallery spaces. Under-represented and relegated to dark corner nooks, galleries made video art seem about as appealing as the high school AV club. But with the opening of the annual Images Festival this week—which features 70 screenings, 36 installations, six live performances and dozens of talks, tours and panel discussions—things have clearly changed as “contemporary moving image culture” takes centre stage in galleries across Toronto.

At Gallery 44, a solo exhibition features films by Canadian artist Nelson Henricks, whose work attempts to organize the world’s chaotic stimuli through convoluted systems of bodily measurement and physical representation. In the film Countdown, for instance, the artist uses in-camera editing and his body’s own internal “clock” to count down from 30 using the numbers found on household objects like alarm clocks, measuring tapes and vitamin bottles. Most countdowns lead to a significant end event, but Henricks’s delineation of time turns back on itself, creating an infinite anti-climactic loop. (120-401 Richmond St W, Toronto ON)

While Henricks’s work attempts to transpose temporal moments into visual signs, next door at the Women’s Art Resource Centre, four Brazil-based artists consider the translatability of social and psychic geographies through a series of interactive installations in “Translations/Traduções.” Alice Miceli’s Chernobyl Project uses a lead pinhole camera to map the geography of radioactive fallout, while Giselle Beiguelman and Vera Bighetti’s Improbable Architectures project sets up an environment where viewers can activate and manipulate Second Life avatars in an otherworldly virtual landscape. (122-401 Richmond St W, Toronto ON)

Meanwhile, across town at Gallery TPW, the Warsaw-based artist Arthur Zmijewski’s recent videos, including the documenta-featured Them, portray the results of his discomforting and sometimes violent social experiments. And in Eddo Stern’s solo show at Interaccess, violence and perversity are relocated to the virtual realm of online role-playing games in “Ogres, Halflings, Night Elves & Chuck Norris.” (56 Ossington Ave & 9 Ossington Ave, Toronto ON)

This article was first published online on April 10, 2008.

RELATED STORIES

  • New York: City of Art and the End of the Future

    Four days is not nearly enough time to tour four art fairs, Chelsea’s galleries and a set of major museum exhibitions, but the experience made for a long weekend to remember in New York at the end of March.

  • Angela Grauerholz: The Complexity of Simplicity

    The Montreal photographer Angela Grauerholz has had a long and distinguished career. In this new exhibition of recent work she returns to early form with delicate images of interior spaces, albeit photographed this time in sumptuous colour.

  • Condé & Beveridge: The Social Conscience of Canadian Art

    You might call Carole Condé and Karl Beveridge the social conscience of the Canadian art world. For more than 30 years, the Toronto art duo has immersed themselves in the everyday issues and conditions of organized labour and community movements across the country.

 

FOUNDATION NEWS

More Foundation news

ONLINE

  • Will Munro: Ecstatic Legacies

    In 2010, at the age of 35, Toronto artist/DJ/promoter/activist Will Munro succumbed to brain cancer. Here, David Balzer reviews the first big survey of Munro’s work, which makes apparent how talented, prolific and perceptive this creator was.

  • Painting Canada: Artistry in the UK

    The Dulwich Picture Gallery’s recent Group of Seven show was one of the UK museum’s biggest hits ever, drawing 41,000 visitors. The attention was deserved, writes Sarah Milroy, as the exhibition offered new insights even to seasoned Canadian-art observers.

  • David Altmejd: In the Belly of the Beast

    The Occupy movement has galvanized the way we think about haves and have-nots. But where do artists fit in? As Joseph R. Wolin observes in this review of David Altmejd’s show at the Brant Foundation, context can be as powerful as content in determining the split.

  • A Stake in the Ground: When Language Wounds

    What happens to identity when our relationship to land and language is disrupted? This is a key question raised in “A Stake in the Ground,” an exhibition of works by 25 First Nations artists, curated by Nadia Myre, that’s currently at Montreal gallery Art Mûr.

  • Canadianartschool.ca: Tips for a Successful Winter Term

    Our education and careers site has just posted more stories and tips to help students achieve a great winter term. Highlights include a profile of internationally renowned fashion designer Jeremy Laing, a Q&A on grad schools and more.

More Online

- Advertisements -



- Advertisements -
Report a problem