EXHIBITIONS 2007
Projections

April
9 - June 17, 2007
A survey of projection-based works in the history of contemporary art in Canada, 1964-2007.
With David Askevold, Rebecca Belmore, Genivieve Cadieux, Janet Cardiff & George Bures Miller, Ian Carr-Harris, Christine Davis, Stan Douglas, Murray Favro, Wyn Geleynse, Rodney Graham, David Hoffos, Nestor Krüger, Mark Lewis, Kelly Mark, John Massey, Nathalie Melikian, Judy Radul, Gar Smith, Michael Snow, Jana Sterbak, Robert Wiens, Krzysztof Wodiczko.
Curated by Barbara Fischer
Projections is a major survey of projection-based works in the history of contemporary art in Canada from the mid-1960s to the present. Organized by the Justina M. Barnicke Gallery (Hart House), the exhibition is co-produced and presented by the three other major galleries of the University of Toronto: the Blackwood Gallery (Mississauga campus), the Doris McCarthy Gallery (Scarborough campus), and the University of Toronto Art Center (St. George campus).
Work by Nestor Krüger, Mark Lewis, and Judy Radul, is exhibited at the Blackwood Gallery
— SPECIAL EVENTS
— FUNDERS & PARTNERS
— CURATORIAL STATEMENT
— INSTALLATION VIEWS
— PRESS
^
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SPECIAL EVENTS
Opening Reception: Thursday April 8, 1-6 pm at the Justina M. Barnicke Gallery
^
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FUNDERS & PARTNERS



-Manulife Financial
-Charles Street Video
-Canadian Museums Assistance Program
-Department of Canadian Heritage
^
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CURATORIAL STATEMENT
The exhibition brings
together for the first time the particularly rich area of experimentation
with slide, film, and video projection that characterizes over four
decades of contemporary art in Canada. For most of the artists presented
in the exhibition, projection has been a major aspect and a defining
concern over many years, such as for Michael Snow and Murray Favro;
it may even constitute an ar tist’s entire practice, such as for
Stan Douglas or David Hoffos. In other instances, projection is part
of a larger body of work in diverse media ranging from sculpture to
sound and photography, such as it is for Geneviève Cadieux, Janet
Cardiff & George Bures Miller, Jana Sterbak, Rebecca Belmore, and
Robert Wiens, among others. Some of the works presented in this exhibition
are internationally recognized as seminal in the history of contemporary
art, and most will be shown in Toronto for the first time, including
works by David Askevold, Ian Carr-Harris, Nestor Krüger, Jana Sterbak,
and newly commissioned works by Nathalie Melikian and Kelly Mark. Together
these works encapsulate a history that exemplifies and provides insight
into why projection has become such an important and prevalent medium.
In this exhibition,
projection is both a medium and a subject. Realized in the form of sculpture,
slide-dissolves, 16mm film, and video, the works exploit both the experiential
and the metaphoric potential of projection as an analog for seeing,
imagining, dreaming, and knowing. Some works underplay and others exceed
the synchronized, integrated, or immersive effects of the most dominant
manifestation of projection in contemporary culture: cinema. If cinema
haunts the exhibition, its powers are suspended and its effects disentangled.
Instead of presenting a strict chronology, the exhibition focuses attention
on par ticular cinematic forms as they are taken apar t to emphasize
the conceptual implications of their components, which are reflected
in the structure of the exhibition. At the University of Toronto Art
Centre, some works focus our attention exclusively on the experience
of light, reflection, and illumination. Others point to the paradoxical
nature of the screen, where a text or image is cast to show the colouring
or shaping of a variously receptive and resistant surface that takes
part in constructing perception. Works presented at the Justina M. Barnicke
Gallery more explicitly inhabit the forms of cinema. They newly engage
and playfully dissociate the relationships bet ween voice and image,
the camera’s eye and the viewer’s body, and the construction
of cinematic spectacle. Finally, works presented at the Blackwood Gallery
and the Doris McCarthy Gallery share the projection of travels and journeys
into recorded and therefore virtual space, while irreverently undermining
the illusions and utopian dimensions of this projected place.
In earlier works
the emphasis is on isolating and parsing specific experiential effects,
whereas in more recent works a flowering of new cinematic and spatial
reconfigurations demonstrates our entanglement in mediation. In all
cases, however, the interest of the ar tists is in the way projection
allows us to look at how the world is seen—however distorted,
strangely recognized, or poignantly observed. Projection in contemporary
art in Canada serves less as a means to tell a story than as a means
of thinking through ideas about seeing and knowing, and of experimenting
with the conceptual, psychological, and political dimensions of the
relationship bet ween the two—which is where the history of this
work joins the analyses of mediation that have themselves been a powerful force in the intellectual legacy in this country.
Barbara Fischer
^
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INSTALLATION VIEWS
Blackwood Gallery

Nestor Kruger

Nestor Kruger

Mark Lewis

Mark Lewis

Mark Lewis

Judy Radul

Judy Radul

Judy Radul
^
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRESS
Adamo, Iliana. "Projections Exhibition Offers a Fresh Take on Cinema." The Newspaper. May 2007. >link
Adler, Dan. "Projections: A Survey of Projection-Based Works in Canada, 1964-2007." C Magazine 95. (Fall 2007). >link
Dick, Terence. "Projections." Border Crossings 103. (2007). >link
Dick, Terence. (Blog Review) Akimbo Blog. 7 Jun 2007. >link
Dixon, Guy. "Images Festival Hands Out Awards in Toronto." The Globe & Mail. 17 April 2007. >link
Goddard, Peter. "Where the Gallery & Cinema Meet." Toronto Star. 5 Apr 2007: G8. >link
Macdonald, Shana. "In Review: The Art of Viewing Light on a Surface." The Artery. (Summer 2007):6. >link
Milroy, Sarah. "Doing it in the Dark." The Globe & Mail. 5 May 2007. >link
Sandals, Leah. "Unfolding Frames." The National Post. 17 Jun 2007. >link
Woodley, E.C. "In Review: Projections." Canadian Art 24.3. (Fall 2007): 43. >link
^ |