The “Eh” List of Canadians at 2012 CONTACT Photography Festival

Larry Towell Village elder and daughter

© Larry Towell/Magnum Photos

The 16th annual CONTACT Photography Festival officially launches tonight in Toronto. The festival has grown into the largest photography event in the world, and this year more than 1000 local, national and international artists will exhibit their work in venues across the city. A lot of great photographers from around the world will be showing off their work, but since this is a site for Canadian photographers I wanted to highlight a few of the great exhibits by some our outstanding local talent.

Larry Towell & Donovan Wylie: Afghanistan
One of my own home grown heros is Larry Towell, and his work will be showcased together with that of Donovan Wylie. Towell and Wylie are both members of Magnum Photos, one of the most prestigious photographic agencies in the world. Their exhibit features images from Afghanistan, however, the two photographers explore the consequences of the conflict from very different perspectives. Towell’s black and white photographs reveal the devastating effects of war on the citizens, soldiers, and landscapes of Afghanistan. Donovan Wylie’s colour photographs document watchtowers and operating bases built by the Canadian military for surveillance and defense of the surrounding terrain.

Larry Towell & Donovan Wylie: Afghanistan
May 5–July 8
Opening May 4, 6–8:30pm
Institute for Contemporary Culture, Royal Ontario Museum
100 Queen’s Park
Toronto M5S 2C6
Mon–Thu, 10–5:30pm
Fri, 10–8:30pm
Sat–Sun, 10–5:30pm

Lynne Cohen: Nothing Is Hidden

Lynne Cohen

© Lynne Cohen

Lynne Cohen is an American-Canadian photographer who has lived and worked in Canada since 1973, initially in Ottawa, and in Montreal since 2005. With the exception of a handful of architectural exteriors dating from the early 1970s, Cohen’s art has largely been confined to investigating the interiors of domestic, industrial, leisure, and educational institutions. Her cool, deliberate, beautiful, and intriguing images, precisely executed, and infused with uninflected light, reveal a great deal about the scope and limitations of our abilities to control chaos and make sense of the external world. They confront the contradictions and ambiguities of this often ludicrous and sometimes poignant visual drama that unfolds behind closed doors.

Lynne Cohen: Nothing Is Hidden
May 3–June 30
Design Exchange
234 Bay St
Toronto M5K 1B2
Mon–Fri, 10–5pm
Sun–Sun, 12–5pm

Johan Hallberg-Campbell: Coastal

Johan Hallberg-Campbell

© Johan Hallberg-Campbell

Raised in the Highlands of Scotland, Johan Hallberg-Campbell is a freelance photographer, living and working between Toronto and the UK since immigrating to Canada in 2007. A photographer with an enduring interest in the idea of “place,” Campbell tells the stories of the outport communities on the south-west coast of Newfoundland through still and moving images. Capturing the people and landscape, he creates a valuable document of a fading way of life.

Johan Hallberg-Campbell: Coastal
April 21–July 15
Opening April 20, 6–10pm
Harbourfront Centre
235 Queens Quay W
Toronto M5J 2G8
Mon–Sun, 10–9pm

Deborah Samuel: ELEGY

Deborah Samuel Barred Owl

© Deborah Samuel


Deborah Samuel is a Canadian photographer currently living in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Samuel’s exhibit ELEGY is a project borne out of loss and anger. Loss came with the passing of loved ones; anger, in the wake of the environmental degradation caused by the 2010 BP oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. After she was prevented from photographing oil-slicked birds in Louisiana, Samuel took an intimate tack, placing the skeletons of avians and other animals on a flatbed scanner. The resulting series of images capture a meditative and haunting portrait of natural fragility, a narrative of survival and death that speaks to the struggles faced by all living creatures. Depicting the beauty of the natural form and the complexity of the structures that sustain life on our planet, the exhibition features a selection of 33 photographs, including ten commissioned by the ROM using specimens from their collection.

Deborah Samuel: ELEGY
March 29–July 2
Royal Ontario Museum
100 Queen’s Park Cres
Toronto M5S 2C6
Mon–Thu, 10–5:30pm
Fri, 10–8:30pm
Sat–Sun, 10–5:30pm

Jon Rafman: The Nine Eyes of Google Street View

Jon Rafman

© Jon Rafman

Jon Rafman is a visual artist who lives and works in Montreal. Rafman’s ongoing series The Nine Eyes of Google Street View is the product of painstaking research that compiles a fascinating array of incidental moments captured by Google’s Street View cameras. When Rafman reframes an image sourced from the Google site, he reintroduces the human gaze into the picture and reasserts the importance of the individual. Often featuring people (their faces blurred for legal reasons) the artist catalogue’s everyday dramas that would otherwise probably never be seen beyond their specific location. Rafman aligns himself with the historical role of the artist to capture the moral dimension in ambiguous contexts.

Jon Rafman: The Nine Eyes of Google Street View
May 3–June 2
Opening May 3, 6–9pm
Angell Gallery
12 Ossington Ave
Toronto M6J 2Y7
Wed–Sat, 12–5pm

The shows above are from the Contact Primary or Featured Exhibitions, but there are lots of other notable exhibitions from great Canadian photographers. Here’s a few that other readers have let me know about. If you have any shows to recommend, please post a comment here, or on our facebook page, and I’ll add them to this list.

Per Kristiansen has two shows: Piles at Mjölk in the Junction and Skulls at Cava Restaurant. The Piles series continues with the theme of repetition, capturing and bringing to the forefront the uniqueness of seemingly similar subjects, while the Skulls series is a special project created for acclaimed chef Chris McDonald’s tapas restaurant, Cava. The challenge was to utilize the chef’s collection of pig skulls to create a photo series focusing on Cava’s extensive charcuterie menu and Iberian-based cuisine. Kristiansen combines high-contrast lighting and decorative arrangements to create modern vanitas that celebrate the source of a delicious food, and remind the viewer of the animal’s ultimate sacrifice.

Samantha Allen’s exhibition The Craigslist Project is at the ARTiculations: Earl Selkirk Gallery. It asks the question “what happens when you deliver great art to an unsuspecting public?”, and features a diverse collection of photographic work presented as a series of postings on the online classifieds platform. View the ads, read actual responses, and discover how compelling images and alluring text can evoke unexpected emotions and reactions.

Canadian Photographer Donald Weber wins at Sony World Photography Awards 2012

Donald Weber Sony World Photography Awards 2012

©Donald Weber (VII Photo)

Canadian photographer Donald Weber was announced as a winner of the 2012 Sony World Photography Awards on April 26th in London, England. Weber won the Current Affairs Photographer of the Year for his series Life in the Exclusion Zone.

Donald Weber’s series was taken in Odaka, which lies on the northeastern coast of Japan. It was once home to 13,000 people, but today it is almost a ghost town. When the earthquake and tsunami of March 11 triggered blasts at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, a 20 km radius exclusion zone was imposed by the Japanese government. Within this zone, radiation emissions have been registered at four times the level considered safe for humans. Odaka is only 15 km north of the plant. A few days after the Exclusion Zone was created, Donald was one of the first photographers to document life inside the zone.

Prior to photography, Weber originally trained as an architect and worked with Rem Koolhaas in The Netherlands. He freelanced for the international press and has since devoted himself to the study of how Power deploys an all-encompassing theatre for its subjects; what he records is its secret collaboration with both masters and victims. Weber is the recipient of the Lange Taylor Documentary Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship and a World Press award, amongst others.

Weber was presented with his prize of Sony camera equipment at the Sony World Photography Awards Gala ceremony at the Hilton Hotel in London’s Park Lane. The evening culminated with the announcement of American photographer Mitch Dubrowner as the winner of the coveted L’Iris d’Or – the 2012 Sony World Photography Awards Photographer of the Year for his extraordinary series of images, Storms.

In addition to Weber’s award for Current Affairs, two other Canadians also won The Moving Image Award. Natasha Nicholson and Michael McDougall from Toronto won for their short film Dead Languages, a beautiful and dark tale of a rabbit recipe with the subtext of a poisoning. It is inspired by old world paintings with rich colours, textures and lighting.

[Read more...]

Montréal photographer shoots self-portraits with 17 years of digital cameras

Montreal photographer Marc Aubry with the Kodak DCS 100

Montreal photographer Marc Aubry's 1991 self-portrait with the 1.3MP Kodak DCS 100

Montréal photographer Marc Aubry has produced a 17-year series of self-portraits that also documents the first two decades of mainstream digital photography. Aubry was an early adopter of digital cameras, and in 1991 he bought the very first commercially available digital SLR: the 1.3-megapixel Kodak/Nikon DCS 100. He took a picture of himself with the camera, and continued the tradition with each new camera he bought until the Panasonic Lumix G1 in 2008. The images are a fascinating history of the changes that digital cameras have undergone since their introduction and it’s interesting to see some of the long forgotten modesl. Does anyone remember the Agfa Actioncam?

You can view all of the images in Aubry’s Flickr set entitled Ma Collection de Reflex Numérique.

Three Canadian photographers named as finalists for the 2012 Scotiabank Photography Award

scotiabank photography awards 2012Three well-known Canadian photographers have been named as finalists for the 2012 Scotiabank Photography Award (SPA). The SPA Shortlist announcement was made on Friday, March 16 at the bank’s headquarters in downtown Toronto. Now in its second year, the SPA was created to raise the international profile of Canada’s leading photographic artists and is the largest annual peer reviewed celebration of excellence in Canadian contemporary photography.

The 2012 Scotiabank Photography Award Shortlist Finalists are:

Fred Herzog, Vancouver, British Columbia
Nominated by: Robert Enright, Professor and University Research Chair in Art Theory and Criticism University of Guelph, Waterloo, Ontario & Senior Contributing Editor Border Crossings Magazine, Winnipeg, Manitoba

Arnaud Maggs, Toronto
Nominated by: Doina Popescu, Director, Ryerson Image Centre, Toronto, Ontario

Alain Paiement, Montreal
Nominated by Anne-Marie Ninacs, Independent Researcher and Curator, Montreal, Quebec

This year’s SPA jury is comprised of William A. Ewing, Director of Curatorial Projects, Thames & Hudson/London/New York/Paris/Singapore/Hong Kong/Melbourne; Karen Love, Manager of Grants and Publications and Independent Curator, Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver, British Columbia and Ann Thomas, Photographs Collection, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario. The jurors reviewed a submitted body of work from 12 nominees put forward by a panel of the country’s leading photographic arts experts ranging from art gallery directors, curators, practicing artists, professors, writers and critics in all parts of Canada.

“The SPA awards were established to celebrate the vision of Canadian artists who all have a unique way of telling a story through the lens of a camera,” explained Jane Nokes, Director of the Fine Art Collection and Corporate Archives at Scotiabank. “The awards recognize contemporary Canadian photographer artists whose work is not only enjoyed by but also adds to the richness of communities across the country. It is our hope, that as SPA finalists they will experience further recognition and be inspired to continue creating exceptional work.”

The SPA winner will receive a cash prize of $50,000.00, book and exhibition at CONTACT in 2013 – in total the award has a value of more than $100,000.00. The book will be published and distributed world-wide by internationally-renowned art photography publisher Steidl (Germany). The winner will also be featured at their own curated exhibition at the following year’s Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival.

The SPA was conceived and developed by Ed Burtynsky, one of Canada’s most respected photographers and Jane Nokes, Director of the Fine Art Collection and Corporate Archives at Scotiabank Group. Mr. Burtynsky serves as Chair of the SPA and Jane Nokes is the Award’s Executive Director. Both serve on the Board of the Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival, the largest photography festival in the world.

This year’s SPA winner will be announced May 9, 2012. For more information please visit: http://www.scotiabankphotoaward.com/index.html

Canon Canada announces the highly anticipated EOS 5D Mark III Digital SLR camera

Canon 5D Mark III DSLROn the 25th anniversary of its world-renowned EOS System, Canon Canada today announced the new EOS 5D Mark III Digital SLR camera. Positioned between the popular EOS 5D Mark II camera and Canon’s top-of-the-line professional EOS-1D X model, the EOS 5D Mark III delivers superb image quality. Key features include:

• 22.3-megapixel full-frame Canon CMOS sensor.
• High-performance DIGIC 5+ Imaging Processor.
• 61-point High Density Reticular Autofocus (AF) System.
• Six frames-per-second (fps) continuous shooting speed.

The Canon EOS 5D Mark III Digital SLR camera is expected to be available across Canada at the end of March with an estimated retail price of $3,799.99. The EOS 5D Mark III will also be available with the EF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM zoom lens in a kit for an estimated retail price of $4,649.99.

Also announced today where the new Speedlite 600EX-RT, the first professional Speedlite on the market with a built-in wireless radio transmitter, and the Speedlite Transmitter ST-E3-RT.

Read the full press release after the jump [Read more...]