Blog

  • This is Paradise / Place as state of mind:The Cameron Public House and 1980s Toronto

    The crowd. Photo:Phil Anderson

    Curator Rae Johnson and Curator Cameron house co-owner Herb Tookey. Photo:Biserka Livaja

    Coalmine Canary, Napoleon Brousseau and Mike  Hansen. Photo:Biserka Livaja

    c0-curator and Cameron House co-owner Herb Tookey and photographer Biserka Livaja. Photo:Erella Gagnon

    Brian Video Photo: Biserka Livaja

    Lana lowon, Sandy Stagg Photo: Biserka Livaja

    Elinor Rose Galbraith and Amy Wilson. Photo: Biserka Livaja

    John Scott and Elinor Rose Galbraith.  Photo: Biserka Livaja

    Oliver Girling Photo:Biserka Livaja

    Mojah and friends. Photo: Biserka Livaja

    Keith Holding, Erella Baubella Photo: Biserka Livaja

    Photo: Biserka Livaja

    Andrew James Paterson and John Scott Photo: Phil Anderson

    Kim and Donna Lipchuk. Photo: Phil Anderson

    Marion Lewis and Charles Pachter. Photo:Biserka Livaja

    George Whiteside. Photo: Biserka Livaja

    Evan Pennyand Helen Choi. Photo: Phil Anderson

    Rae Johnson, Bruno Billio, Brian Burnett and friend. Photo: Phil Anderson

  • Teri Donovan:An Archeology of Time


    Attendees and Teri Donovan (third from the left) in front of, Remains, 7 x 15ft, mixed media on Mylar
    Visitors in front of, Aphrodite, 33 x 43in, mixed media on watercolour paper


    artists, Richard Mongiat, Bob Livingstone and Moira Clark in front of, Bookends, 6 x 9ft, acrylic on watercolour paper


    Visitors in front of, It Happened One Night, 5ft 6in x 7ft, oil and pencil on Mylar


    Attendees examining Bookends, 6 x 9ft, acrylic on watercolour paper

    Photo:David Williams

     

     

  • 50 Years of Art: Looking Back at the Future


    limited edition vases by June Pham


    TOAE founder Murray Koffler


    TOAE chairman Flavio Belli

  • Beyond our roots


    Zahira  the Bellydancer


    L-R  Curator, Alejandro Freeland (left),artist Lucero Milchorena (right) and friends


    artist, Rita Kamacho & artist, Jesus Mora


    artist, Ulysses Castellanos & curator ,Amelia Jimenez

    Photo: Phil Anderson

  • Sympathy for our Devils

    July 6 – 31, 2011
    Opening: July 6, 7pm-12am
    Steam Whistle Gallery
    255 Bremner Ave
    Toronto, ON
    416.362.2337
    info@steamwhistle.ca
    http://www.steamwhistle.ca/events/eventdetail.php?id=491

    Daniel Martins, Erick Castenada, Jaime Capell, Jordan McKie, and Matt Dyck
    Also featuring Tommy Zee and Paolo Diaque

    ‘Sympathy for our Devils is an exploration of the conscious and unconscious representations of masks in our society and culture. Masks transcend our conceptual limitations and boundaries and deliver us from societies trappings.

    Masks have for eons allowed people to protect themselves, disguise themselves and free themselves. Masks told stories, created magic, and turned myth into reality. Placing a mask over ones face allows for an exchange of power between the mask and the wearer. Masks are the conduit through which the artists message flows.’

  • Smiling Antimatter

    June 1 – July 3, 2011
    Steam Whistle Gallery
    255 Bremner Ave
    Toronto, ON
    416.362.2337
    info@steamwhistle.ca
    http://www.steamwhistle.ca/events/eventdetail.php?id=462

    Artists
    Vicki Nerino www.vickinerino.com
    Britt Wilson www.brittwilson.com
    Roben Nieuwland www.robennieuwland.com
    Ilichna Morasky www.strangerfamiliar.com
    Selena Wong www.selenawong.com
    Franzisca Barczyk www.fizab.com
    Ty Dunitz www.glitchritual.com
    Ale Diaz www.alediaz.com
    Eric Overton www.overton.ca/eric
    Hyein Lee www.hyeinlee.com

    “Smiling Antimatter” is a mixed media painting exhibition that will be featured at the Steam Whistle Brewery.

    We heard the news. Scientists have finally produced mysterious antimatter atoms for the first time. We don’t know what it means, but we know that the future is here. We live in a science fiction world, a world our previous generation hadn’t even dreamed of. We converse with people on other continents face-to-face using video chat, watch movies on our cellphones and tweet our daily routine to everybody. How does it feel to be living and depending on high technology? What will tomorrow bring?

    Each artist captures the anxiety underlying the experience of living in a science fiction-like society with humour and carnivalesque grotesqueness.

  • Paradise Lost

    June 24 – Aug. 13, 2011
    Fly Gallery (a window for art)
    1172 Queen St. W.
    Toronto,ON
    tanyaread@yahoo.ca

    Fly Gallery group exhibition in conjunction with Paradise Now/This is Paradise

    Fly Gallery is a storefront window, offering a free alternative exhibition space for artists. Tanya Read and Scott Carruthers are the co-directors.

    After 12 years Fly Gallery is packing it in. Our mandate has been to keep art accessible and contribute to the cultural life of the street. Since 1999 the development of this stretch of Queen St. has changed the dynamic of that culture. One may call this development ‘Gentrification’. Often associated with negative connotations it is a reality of many urban neighbourhoods. Whether the development is a good or bad thing, it is a factor in why Fly is leaving Queen West. Is this Paradise Lost or a new beginning? The spirit of Fly will live on and we have invited artists to say goodbye with us.

    Participating artists: Shinobu Akimoto, Dave Anderson, Myfanwy Ashmore, Adam Brown, Tara Bursey, Julia Burton, Rita Camacho, Maureen Carruthers, Scott Carruthers, Carlo Cesta, Mark Connery, Rob Cruickshank, Rebecca Diederichs, Michael Enzbrunner, Matt Evans, Sybil Goldstein, Clint Griffin, Libby Hague, Katherine Harvey, Kathleen Hearn, Robert Hengeveld, Gordon Hicks, Sanja Huibner, Tina Huibner, Marcia Huyer, Matt James, Michelle Johnson, Rae Johnson, Kristiina Lahde, Mark Laliberte, Gary MacLeod, Allison McCall, Gavin McMurray,  Lorna Mills, Caroline Mosby, Katharine Mulherin, Lisa Neighbour, Stephen Niblock, Sandy Plotnikoff, Warren Quigley,Tanya Read, Kat Roy, Rupen, Lisa Deanne Smith, Fiona Smyth, Phil Taylor, Michael Toke, Jason Van Horne, Ehrling White

  • This is Paradise / Place as state of mind:The Cameron Public House and 1980s Toronto


    Sandra Meigs, Purgatorio, A Drinkingbout (Series of Drinkers – Smokey The Bar, No. 2), 1981. NGC Collection © CARCC

    Organized by the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art
    Curated by Rae Johnson and Herb Tookey.

    Curated by Rae Johnson and Herb Tookey.Organized by the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art
    This Is Paradise/ From the National Gallery of Canada Collection
    Curated by Rae Johnson and Jonathan Shaughnessy.
    The Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art is pleased to launch our sizzling summer exhibitions program featuring This is Paradise / Place as State of Mind: The Cameron Public House and 1980′s Toronto, and This is Paradise / From the National Gallery of Canada Collection. Following the exhibitions, Impulse Archaeology in 2007 and Art Metropole Top 100 in 2008, This Is Paradise is the third in MOCCA’s ongoing series that recall the rambunctious and fascinating history, evolution and context of contemporary culture in and around Toronto’s Queen Street West scene.
    This is Paradise/ Place as State of Mind: The Cameron House and 1980′s Toronto presents a selection of groundbreaking visual art, fashion, performance, music and theatre created by artists whose playground, sometime-home, laboratory, stage, gallery and canvas was the infamous Cameron Public House of the Queen Street West art scene of 1980’s Toronto.

    The exhibition provides an overview of 1980s Toronto and an art scene marked by collusion between creative angst, experimentation and vanguard explorations of a burgeoning image-based, media-saturated culture. Curated by active participants in the scene, Rae Johnson and Herb Tookey, the exhibition features an eccentric array of work in all media produced mostly in the 1980s by 47 artists who were key players on the scene, John Abrams, Stephen Andrews, Isaac Applebaum, Rebecca Baird, Napoleon Brousseau, Brian Burnett, Derek Caines, Pauline Choi, Barbara Cole, Cathy Daley, Tom Dean, Reid Diamond, Lynn Donoghue, Andy Fabo, Elinor Rose Galbraith & John Scott, Eldon Garnet, General Idea, Oliver Girling, Sybil Goldstein, Matt Harley, Hummers (Deanne Taylor, Janet Burke, Jennifer Dean, Alan Bridle),Tim Jocelyn, Rae Johnson, Donna Lypchuk, Peter MacCallum, Tanya Mars, HP Marti, Michael Merrill, Handsome Ned (Robin Masyk), Andrew James Paterson & Alan Fox, Evan Penny, Randy & Berenicci, John Scott, Joanne Tod, Renée Van Halm, Video Cabaret (Deanne Taylor & Michael Hollingsworth), Julie Voyce, Lorne Wagman, George Whiteside, Tony Wilson


    Joanne Tod, Having Fun? / The Time of Our Lives, 1984 Oil on canvas NGC Collection. © Joanne Tod

    In conjunction with the main space exhibition and the National Gallery of Canada at the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art program MOCCA presents the exhibition This is Paradise/ From the National Gallery of Canada Collection, that features seminal works of the era by Susan Britton, David Buchan, Tom Dean, General Idea, Tanya Mars, Sandra Meigs, John Scott, and Joanne Tod, This is Paradise/ From the National Gallery of Canada Collection, is curated by Rae Johnson and Jonathan Shaughnessy, Assistant Curator, Contemporary Art, National Gallery of Canada, and is organized by the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art and the National Gallery of Canada.

    These projects are a featured component of Paradise Now, an extensive, neighbourhood-wide program of concurrent exhibitions and events from the community-taking place throughout the summer celebrating the phenomena of 1980’s cultural production.

  • Vincenzo Pietropaolo in Retrospective


    Opening at De Luca Gallery
    June 16, Thursday 6 – 9


    Vincenzo Pietropaolo with a visitor


    Art dealer/gallery owner Corrado de Luca and artist Steve Rockwell

    Photo: Jes E. Sladojevic

  • This is Paradise / Place as state of mind:The Cameron Public House and 1980s Toronto

    Tom Dean, THIS IS PARADISE, inside the Cameron House. Image Credit: Peter McCallum, 1983. © Tom Dean


    JUNE 25 – AUGUST 21, 2011
    Opening celebration and reception: June 24, 8 to 11p.m.
    MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY CANADIAN ART
    925 Queen Street West,
    Toronto,ON M6J 1G8
    T: 416-395-0067
    www.mocca.ca
    Hours: Tues – Sun 11-6

    Organized by the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art
    Curated by Rae Johnson and Herb Tookey.
    This Is Paradise/ From the National Gallery of Canada Collection
    Curated by Rae Johnson and Jonathan Shaughnessy.

     This is Paradise/ Place as State of Mind: The Cameron House and 1980′s Toronto presents a selection of groundbreaking visual art, fashion, performance, music and theatre created by artists whose playground, sometime-home, laboratory, stage, gallery and canvas was the infamous Cameron Public House of the Queen Street West art scene of 1980’s Toronto. The exhibition provides an overview of 1980s Toronto and an art scene marked by collusion between creative angst, experimentation and vanguard explorations of a burgeoning image-based, media-saturated culture. Curated by active participants in the scene, Rae Johnson and Herb Tookey, the exhibition features an eccentric array of work in all media produced mostly in the 1980s by 47 artists who were key players on the scene, including Cathy Daley, Tom Dean, Lynn Donoghue, Andy Fabo, Eldon Garnet, General Idea, the Hummers (Deanne Taylor, Janet Burke Jennifer Dean, Alan Bridle), Tim Jocelyn, Evan Penny, John Scott, Joanne Tod and Renée Halm, and many more.