Maha Munaf Photography Exhibition – “Faces & Places”

Maha Munaf Photography Exhibition – “Faces & Places”

Maha Munaf Photography Exhibition – “Faces & Places”

Join us for the opening of Maha Munaf’s solo exhibition, Faces & Places, taking place on February 11th from 6pm at the lower gallery in Toronto Centre for the Arts, where Maha will lead a guided artist-tour of the exhibition at 6:30pm.

Some of the images featured in the exhibition document places that are forever altered by history. Contextually the photographs from the Aleppo series now capture and speak to everyday moments which have become significant as the physical and the human geography of the space is altered by historical events.

Maha uncovers the connection between immortal art, people and their everyday lives.
The juxtaposition of old and new, modern and ancient, new growth and decay as well as the capturing of moments we always speed by, invites viewers to take pause and contemplate a moment in time.

The reception will feature a musical performance by The Levon Ichkhanian LEVANT trio.

Levon was born in Beirut Lebanon in 1964 into a musically rich Armenian family. His father Edouard is a renowned Musical Director of Middle Eastern Artists. His Uncle, Professor Joseph Ichkhanian is the founder of the classical guitar program at the Beirut Conservatory of Music and Uncle Jacques was a master Flamenco guitarist. Levon’s cousin, Hovannes Darbinian, was the world’s leading scholar and performer of the Armenian Tar and choir master for the oldest cathedral in the world – Etchmiadzin, in Armenia.

 

Exhibition runs February 10-24, 2016
Tuesday/ Wednesday 1-5pm
Friday 1-8pm
*after hours and weekend viewings by appointment, please contact melissa@northyorkarts.org

Reception and Artist-Run Tour on February 11, 2016
6-8pm

Toronto Centre for the Arts, Lower Gallery
5040 Yonge Street

Jack Ford Photography Collection: Exhibit at the Lower Gallery, Toronto Centre for the Arts

Jack Ford Photography Collection: Exhibit at the Lower Gallery, Toronto Centre for the Arts

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Jack Ford Photography Collection: Exhibit at the Lower Gallery, Toronto Centre for the Arts

 

At 20, Jack Ford saw the world through a different lens, when he joined the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) and landed a spot in the, 414 Photo Unit Squadron.

During the Second World War, he carried a small accordion style camera with him at all times, his job was to document history in action:  civilians and children on the roadside, aerial views of bombed towns and sometimes still burning German enemy targets.

In order to shoot the aerial shots, a special camera was mounted behind the pilot of a Spitfire airplane. Together, he and his squadron took thousands of photos. Processing would take place in a rushed manner in the back of a truck, somewhere on the side of the road.

His most memorable event was soon after D-Day, when Winston Churchill unexpectedly showed up with British Field Marshall, Bernard Montgomery and King George VI for a surprise visit near Caen, France. Jack, a kid at the time, was shaking with fear, hardly able to hold the camera steady.

After the war, as an advertising executive in Toronto, Jack continued his affiliation with photography, when he worked with images and creative story boards to develop new ad campaigns.

For five years he has lived in the veterans’ residence at Sunnybrook. Each week he visits his wife and true love Joan, who is in a nursing home only a short distance from the hospital. Along with distance, dementia has come between them.

Some days she knows he is there and other times he’s not so sure. “It’s not the way I planned things would be, but I’ve come to accept it,” he says.

At the Veterans Centre, Jack looks forward to regular sessions in the photography studio with his art therapist. Together, they work with Jack’s collection, discussing the different wartime scenes and scanning them onto a large iMac computer.

“Even though I have macular degeneration and have very little sight left now, I have realized a new passion for photography and best of all my collection of old war photos, has been brought back to life!”

Conversations In Flux

Conversations In Flux

Conversations In Flux: Visible presence unfolding in time and space

Conversations in Flux consists of three multimedia, multidimensional sculpture and paint installations,  used to animate evidence of a visible black presence in North American Landscapes.

The objects, constructed with wire and paint, are bent and shaped into various forms depicting black populations inside and outside of hyper-visible and invisible states of blackness. “My concern as a visual artist in the area of visibility requires that I examine how black subjects maneuver between the points of hyper-visibility and invisibility, to get from one point to the other, you have to move”, said Lurch.  “Marking visibility and making art requires me to envision the black subject visible in time and space”.

Opening Reception: September 17, 6 – 8:30 pm September 15-October 9 Tues-Fri 1-4 pm or by appointmentToronto Centre for the Arts, Lower Gallery5040 Yonge StreetContact: melissa@northyorkarts.orgTelephone 416-733 9388 x7065www.tocentre.com

Canadian Athletes: A Flame Within History

Canadian Athletes: A Flame Within History

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Canada’s professional portrait artists salute the upcoming Pan American Games in a month-long exhibition, Canadian Athletes: A Flame within History.

The event is part of the summer Cultura Festival in Mel Lastman Square, in the heart of North York.

July 3-28, 2015
Opening reception: July 4, 5-8pm 
Toronto Centre for the Arts, Lower Gallery
5040 Yonge St.

Gallery Hours:
Tuesday to Friday: 1-5pm
Fridays: 6-8pm
Weekends: Schedule will vary – please check website for details.

For details visit:www.portraitsociety.ca or email info@portraitsociety.ca.

Opening reception sponsored by:

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