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Greg Girard: Eyes on Asia

Monte Clark Gallery, Toronto Jul 21 to Aug 21 2011
Greg Girard <em>Chan Cam Street View</em> 2010 Courtesy the artist and Monte Clark Gallery Greg Girard Chan Cam Street View 2010 Courtesy the artist and Monte Clark Gallery

Greg Girard <em>Chan Cam Street View</em> 2010 Courtesy the artist and Monte Clark Gallery

Drawn from Greg Girard’s recent publication Hanoi Calling: One Thousand Years Now, this exhibition of photographs continues to stake out his role as a discerning camera eye on Asia’s developing economies. As with his earlier Shanghai pictures, the new work shows the overlapping spaces and architectures of a burgeoning city in the process of bridging its millennium-old past with the 21st century. Currently, the city is undergoing a boom, with Hanoi and its six million people seeing the intense arrival of manufacturing and service industries that have spilled over from development in China. In his photos, Girard shows us a quiet nighttime Hanoi where messy urban pieces come together under a seductive, and often colourful, light that lends an exotic, almost tropical dimension to the images. The makeshift openness of workshops, cafés and apartments shape dense street scenes with a lingering, if generally unseen, human energy that lifts the photographs from a pure documentary function into being more like impressions of lived experience. Girard’s Hanoi sleeps, but it is very much alive.

This article was first published online on August 18, 2011.

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