January 19, 2010

Sammy Baloji - Vues de Likasi now open at Contact Gallery in Toronto

Sammy Baloji - Vues de Likasi
January 14 - March 14, 2010

CONTACT launches the new year with Vues de Likasi, a solo exhibition by Congolese photographer Sammy Baloji in the CONTACT GALLERY.

Baloji’s photographic and sound installation analyzes contemporary African identity through the ethnography, architecture, and urban landscape of Likasi. The photographs of the reconstructed streetscape, with its obvious signs of a civilization built before, during, and after the Belgian colonial period, reveal the artist’s interest in the daily life of Congolese people. As a result of the strict government ban on photographing public buildings, Vues de Likasi is a rare depiction of the city’s cultural and industrial legacies, Encircling the gallery, Baloji’s 55 meter long assembled panorama of images documents the city’s past within the day-to-day activity of the present, revealing a complex portrait of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

>p> Sammy Baloji was born in 1978 and lives in Lubumbashi, Democratic Republic of Congo. His work has been exhibited extensively in Africa and in Europe, including the Musée du Quai Branly, Paris and the Royal Museum for Central Africa, Tervuren, Belgium. Baloji was recently featured in CAPE07, Cape Town, Le Tarmac de la Villette, Paris, Rencontres africaines de la photographie, Mali and le Mois de la Photo, Montreal. A traveling exhibition of his work is currently in preparation by the Museum for African Art, New York. He was a finalist for the Prix Pictet in 2009, a recipient of the Prince Claus Award in 2008 and received two awards at the 2007 African Photography Biennial in Bamako, Mali. Baloji is represented by Axis Gallery, New York.

CONTACT would like to thank Gaëlle Morel and Le Mois de la Photo à Montréal for their assistance in making this exhibition possible and gratefully acknowledges the support of Scotiabank, the Government of Canada's Economic Action Plan and Celebrate Ontario.

CONTACT fosters and celebrates the art and profession of photography with an annual month-long festival in May and newly initiated year-round programming in the gallery.

www.contactphoto.com