November 29, 2009

Ryerson Gallery Holiday Show and Sale in Toronto

Ryerson Gallery Holiday Show and Sale

Silent Auction, Preview and Bidding
November 21 to December 10

Bids close at 5 PM, Thursday, December 10

Gala Reception, Draw and Awards
Thursday, December 3, 6 - 10 PM

Announcing the 2009 Give Us Your Best Shot Winner
Selected by Bonnie Rubenstein, Artistic Director

CONTACT Toronto Photography Festival

Book Launch: Emergence
Celebrating thirty years of emerging artists!

Co-published by Gallery 44 and Ryerson University

Winning bids: payment and pick-up of works
December 11 and 12, noon to 5 PM at Ryerson Gallery

Ryerson Gallery thanks all its sponsors:

Adina Photo and Custom Frames I Canadian Art Magazine I ColourGenics I Downtown Camera I Dufflets I Elpro I Gallery 44 I Gallery TPW I PFACS - Ryerson University I Pikto I Prefix Photo I Scaramouche / Morden Yolles I School of Image Arts I Steam Whistle I Stephen Bulger Gallery I Studio of Edward Burtynsky I Toronto Black and White I Toronto Image Works

Gallery Hours: Wednesday - Saturday, 12 - 5 PM

80 Spadina Ave., Suite 305, Toronto ON M5V 2J4

www.ryersongallery.ca

The Malcolmson Collection at Presentation House Gallery in North Vancouver

The Malcolmson Collection
Until December 20, 2009

On exhibit at Presentation House Gallery is a selection of photographs from one of Canada's most unique and significant art collections, shown for the first time in a public gallery. Over the past twenty-five years Ann and Harry Malcolmson, who live in Toronto, have assembled a rare collection of vintage photographs that span the history of the medium. After a long period of collecting contemporary art, they were gradually drawn to early twentieth-century experimental photography, and then began to investigate nineteenth-century material before expanding into classic modernist and contemporary works. This exhibition selected from over two-hundred photographs offers a rare opportunity to witness the scope and depth of this remarkable collection, that reveals the scholarship, intuitions and passions of the collectors.

The exhibition features iconic as well as anonymous images that underscore the Malcolmson’s interest in experimental approaches to the medium, from Fox Talbot to Robert Frank. The beginnings of photography is represented by salted paper prints from paper negatives of the mid-1840s and twenty-first century photography, by several of Vancouver’s most notable contemporary artists. This range of images draws links between the earliest innovations in the medium to those of today; for instance, Gustave Le Gray’s 1850s seascape produced from two negatives precedes the collage techniques of modernist photography that continue in digital practices. While alluding to historical developments and stylistic periods, the exhibition knits together images from diverse contexts, genres and time frames. The significance of photography as both an artistic practice and mode of perception is considered in relation to its profound impact on visual culture and social history. Many of the nineteenth-century images resulted from commissions for empirical records of significant events and social conditions evident in the pictures of archeological and urban sites. In the twentieth century, more fragmented and prosaic views of the world dominate.

Photography as an act of drawing with light is made palpable throughout the exhibition, from the long exposures that fail to still the breath of a subject, to photograms that record movements of light on paper, to a film montage of moving reflections. Human figures often appear veiled and immaterial, as if apparitions. The surrealist impulse to conflate mind and body and to evoke psychic space is expressed in the bodily distortions of the many phantasmagoric figurative works. A grouping of portraits evolves from stiff formal portraiture of sitters posing in conscious self-portrayal to an increasing focus on isolated gestures and fleeting moments of someone caught offguard. While associated with naturalism, the artificial spatial effect of photographic optics evident in the condensed spaces and surface details of the nineteenth-century landscapes becomes more pronounced in the skewed and montaged perspectives called for by the chaotic energies and visual dynamics of modern cities. Abstraction and visuality itself as subject matter are prevalent threads in the exhibition.

The exhibition reveals how developments in camera and print technologies impacted “the new vision.” The unique character of each vintage print emphasizes the very materiality of photographs—their physical surfaces, the patinas of aging and accidents of chemicals interacting with paper. These visual effects emphasize the mysterious, elusive qualities of photographic images as traces of a moment in time and the strong poetic and elegiac mood in The Malcolmson Collection. A vitrine of publication materials offers clues to the importance of the book form, especially albums and portfolios, to the history of the medium.

Presentation House Gallery
333 Chesterfield Avenue North Vancouver BC V7M 3G9

www.presentationhousegall.com

Gallery 44 Celebrates Its 30th Anniversary with the Book Launch of "Emergence: Contemporary Canadian Photography", Party, and Exhibition

Gallery 44’s 30th Anniversary Events on December 3, 2009 from 6 -10pm:

Cake Cutting at 7:30pm I Raise a glass to the first 30 years with DJ Siquemu!
Wall to Wall | 3oth Anniversary Edition Exhibition and Sale of Photographs Dating From 1979 to 2009 by Gallery 44 Members and Friends

On Until December 19

A NEW PUBLICATION FROM GALLERY 44 ON CANADIAN CONTEMPORARY PHOTOGRAPHY

Emergence: Contemporary Canadian Photography
Co-published by Gallery 44 and Ryerson University

124 Pages | 5 Essays | Works by 30 Artists | 84 colour reproductions | $23.95

What emerges in the development of an image, in looking at a work of art, in the expansion of an artist’s career or practice?

To mark its 30 years of commitment to the advancement of photographic art in Canada Gallery 44 has produced a book of Canadian contemporary photography on the subject of emergence. The book is comprised of original essays by esteemed Canadian writers, curators and artists. Each writer was invited to explore the concept of emergence with reference to the work of artists who have exhibited at Gallery 44. These artists were in turn asked to choose the work of an emerging Canadian photographic artist to be published along side their own work in the book. This book is a major contribution to the discourse on contemporary photography, showing a broad-spectrum of photo-based work contextualized by engaging and informative texts. Emergence will appeal to artists, educators, students, curators, critics and any serious devotee to contemporary art.

Editor Sarah Parsons, in her introduction, speaks of “the important conceptual connection between photography, visibility and emergence”, as well as photography’s “more literal and technical relationship to emergence” this is a connection which each writer explores from a unique perspective in relation to select photographic artists.

Cover Image: Michael Taglieri, t for Thomson, from Wearing a raincoat in case it begins to rain, 2007

Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography

http://www.gallery44.org

Prefix Photo: Call for Submissions from Photographers and Writers

Call for Submissions from Photographers
Prefix Photo encourages submissions of new or previously unpublished photography for editorial consideration. Submissions should include visual support material in the form of digital files, 35mm slides, transparencies, work prints, laser prints, etc.; a written description of the work, if available; and a curriculum vitae of the artist. The number of images submitted remains at the discretion of the artist, with a recommended maximum of 20. Submissions are accepted on an ongoing basis and are reviewed twice annually: January 15 and July 15. Please send submissions to:

Tamara Toledo
Prefix Photo

124 - 401 Richmond Street West

Toronto, Ontario

M5V 3A8

Mailed support materials will not be returned unless accompanied by a self-addressed envelope with return postage or equivalent. Prefix Photo also accepts submissions by email to tamara@prefix.ca. Please follow the digital submission requirements below.

Proposals from young and emerging artists and from artists from all cultural and regional communities of Canada are particularly encouraged.

Digital Submission Requirements

72 dpi resolution I Maximum size of 1024 x 768 pixels I Files should be no larger than 500K I RGB format I Name each image file with your name, surname, the number and the title I Please send only up to 20 images

Call for Submissions from Writers
Prefix Photo encourages submissions of writer's outlines for new critical essays of 3000-4000 words in length, but does not consider completed manuscripts for publication. Outlines should be no more than 250 words in length, and may be supported by one or two previously published texts. Outlines are accepted at any time, but should be submitted at least six months in advance of a projected publication date. If accepted for publication, the deadline for the submission of the completed essay is approximately three months in advance of an issue's release. Prior to publication, writers will be consulted regarding editorial revisions and writer's fee. Please note that, in addition to critical essays, Prefix Photo also reviews proposals for literary features of 600-800 words. Submission materials will not be returned unless accompanied by a self-addressed envelope with return postage or equivalent.

For more information on the submissions process, please contact Tamara Toledo, Production Manager, T: 416-591-0357, E: tamara@prefix.ca.

Available Now - Prefix Photo 20: Archival Legacies

Prefix Photo 20: Archival Legacies

Prefix Institute of Contemporary Art is pleased to announce the release of the twentieth issue of Prefix Photo magazine. As the magazine embarks on its tenth-anniversary year, editor Scott McLeod addresses the theme of “archival legacies,” as follows: “This issue directs our gaze toward the vast array of physical materials that are archived in order to preserve our multiple histories. The archive – and the uses to which the archive can be put – facilitate the envisioning and elaboration of these sometimes competing, sometimes complementary histories. In this way, history is not left to languish in the past, but becomes available to be recuperated and animated not only in, but as the present.”

These thoughts resonate strongly with the works of the artists and writers represented within the magazine, as follows:

Monika Kin Gagnon expands on the notion of “posthumous collaboration,” considering books and archives as material traces and triggers of memory, in an essay that is part homage, part letter to Gagnon’s late friend, poet and curator Nancy Shaw.

Jacob Korczynski presents a reading of the Pride Records series by Houston–based artist Jamal Cyrus. Korczynski interprets the series through the lens of the “cut,” as Cyrus slices through historical images via collage and through official histories via the rupture of fiction.

Jordan Troeller writes on the object-based photography of New York–based artist Zoe Leonard, responding to current discussions on digitalization and photography. She argues that far too much weight has been given to describing technology and far too little to examining its social and political effects.

Sudhatri Murthy, in her literary feature “Simple Time,” reflects upon a snapshot that mediates her unique experience – intimately connected and yet outside – of mothering twin boys.

Other contributors include Barbara Balfour, Rose Bouthillier, Neil Cummings and Marysia Lewandowska, Kyla Mallett, Stephen G. Rhodes, Gabor Szilasi, and more.

While quantities last.

Subscribe to Prefix Photo now and receive a free designer tote bag exclusive to Prefix Photo subscribers. Offer expires January 31, 2010

Prefix Photo is published by Prefix Institute of Contemporary Art, a registered charitable organization that fosters the appreciation and understanding of contemporary photography, media and digital arts. Prefix Photo is available by subscription and in fine bookstores and newsstands in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, Portugal, Spain, Greece, Turkey, Singapore and China.

For their assistance with the release party held for issue 20 in Toronto, Prefix Institute of Contemporary Art gratefully acknowledges its Supporting Sponsor Steam Whistle Brewing and its Official Catering Sponsor à la Carte Kitchen.

Prefix Photo is published with the assistance of its staff, volunteers and patrons, as well as the Ontario Arts Council and the Canada Council for the Arts. Prefix Photo also acknowledges the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Magazine Fund toward its editorial and production costs. The Ontario Arts Council is an agency of the Government of Ontario.

www.prefix.ca

Jock Sturges at Stephen Bulger Gallery in Toronto

Call for Entries - 3rd Annual International Juried Plastic Camera Show

3rd Annual International Juried Plastic Camera Show
Deadline for submissions - January 5, 2010

Located in San Francisco, RayKo Photo Centers competition is open to artists working with plastic cameras with plastic lenses. The more obsolete, flawed, and lo-tech, the better. Images should be taken with cameras with limited controls, such as Diana, Holga, Lubitel, Lomo, Banner, and Ansco. Beautiful prints from less-than-gorgeous cameras – that’s what we’re looking for!

"Best of Show" receives a $250 cash prize. There are also four additional juror awards: honorable mentions receive plastic cameras of your choosing.

Submission guidelines
Complete submission form I A non-refundable entry fee of $25 I Check or money order payable to RayKo Photo Center I Limit of 5 images per person I CD entries must be jpegs I Save files with artist’s last name and title of image I Contact information should be on the CD and CD case I Please note that any work deemed misrepresented by its CD will be declined I SASE or adequate postage for notification and return of CD, if desired I Late submissions or substitute images will not be hung

RayKo Photo Center
c/o Plastic Camera Show

428 Third Street

San Francisco, CA 94107

Submission of Accepted Work
The work must be framed or mounted with a wire affixed and ready to hang. No saw tooth hangers, please. Entries will be handled with the greatest care, however, RayKo assumes no liability for work on its premises. All works selected for exhibition must be for sale. RayKo will retain 40% commission on all work sold, so please price your work accordingly. Please note that images selected for the show may be used for promotion of the exhibition.

Eligibility
All work must be original and completed within the past five years. Works previously shown at RayKo are not eligible.

January 5, 2010 - Deadline for submissions
January 13 - Notification of juried results

February 20 - Deadline for shipped works

February 26 6-8pm - Opening reception

February 26 – April 17 - Exhibition on view

May 2 - Unsold works shipped by RayKo Photo Center

To download the submission form please visit
http://raykophoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/3rd-annual-plastic-camera-call-4-entries.pdf