Lecture with Faisal Bhabha – Sept. 22

Join us September 22 at 6 pm for a very special lecture with Faisal Bhaba, Associate Professor at Osgoode Hall Law School, in support of the exhibition Memories of the Future!

Lawyer as Curator: How Art and Law Have More in Common Than We Thought

Law and fine arts are not typically viewed as complementary or related fields of study. Popular perceptions of lawyers and artists put them on opposite ends of the personality spectrum. Yet, both lawyers and artists trade in representations of truth, and use what they have in their toolkit to imagine, construct and revise the world according to their vision. There are many axes on which to explore the intersections of law and art: art as intellectual property; art as constitutionally protected freedom; art as liberation and healing; law as remedy; lawyering as role performance; law as literature; advocacy as storytelling; and so on. The talk will touch on all of these aspects but will land on an unexplored parallel: the lawyer as curator. Exploring overlapping theories and real-world examples, the talk will inspire lawyers, artists and the public at-large to think about inter-disciplinarity, solidarity, and social transformation through law and/or art, in new and expanded ways.

For more about Faisal Bhabha: https://www.osgoode.yorku.ca/faculty-and-staff/bhabha-faisal/

Memories of the Future

August 20 – October 17, 2015
Curated by Noa Bronstein and Katherine Dennis
Featuring works by Bambitchell and Aleesa Cohene

Memories of the Future is an annual, multi-site project that invites contemporary artists to respond to a theme through the creation of site and context specific installations at various historic houses and museums across Toronto. Employing a range of media and approaches, these interventions explore the layered narratives and hidden stories of our socio-material history. Using the visual language of the present and speculating on possibilities for the future, memories of the past are newly exposed, interpreted and remembered.

This exhibition is supported by the Toronto Arts Council and the Ontario Arts Council.

New Exhibition: “Memories of the Future”

Invitation to Memories of The Future Opening Reception

August 20- October 17, 2015

Memories of the Future
Curated by Noa Bronstein and Katherine Dennis
Featuring works by Bambitchell and Aleesa Cohene

Memories of the Future is an annual, multi-site project that invites contemporary artists to respond to a theme through the creation of site and context specific installations at various historic houses and museums across Toronto. Employing a range of media and approaches, these interventions explore the layered narratives and hidden stories of our socio-material history. Using the visual language of the present and speculating on possibilities for the future, memories of the past are newly exposed, interpreted and remembered.

Join us for a walkthrough with the artists on Thursday, August 20 at 5 pm, followed by an opening reception from 6 pm- 8 pm.

Can’t make it on Thursday? Join us for a walkthrough with the curators on Saturday, August 22 at 2 pm.

This exhibition is supported by the Toronto Arts Council and the Ontario Arts Council.

P0P F0LK T3XT1L3S in the News!

P0P F0LK T3XT1L3S

The exhibition P0P F0LK T3XT1L3S has been featured in Le Métropolitain and NOW Magazine!

The exhibition is only on until August 9 – don’t miss your chance to see it!
The gallery is open during regular museum hours: Tuesday to Friday 9:30-4:30, Saturday and Sunday 12-4:30. Admission to see P0P F0LK T3XT1L3S is free.

Knit-In, Saturday July 25, 12-4!

Do you stitch, knit, crochet, or embroider? Bring your handiwork and join us on July 25 from 12-4 for an afternoon of crafting in public at Campbell House Museum! Bring your own materials and enjoy free admission to our exhibition P0P F0LK T3XT1L3S and free refreshments!

In celebration of our exhibition P0P F0LK T3XT1L3S, a partnership with Le Labo, we’re hosting an afternoon of textile crafting at Campbell House! Join us from 12-4 on Saturday, July 25 in the Ballroom for complimentary refreshments and a creative space to work in! Please bring your own materials. All forms of textile art and craft welcome!

Harley Valentine returns to Campbell House

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ALWAYS FOREVER NOW
New sculptural Portal works by Harley Valentine

Go behind the scenes of the installation here: INSTALLATION DAY

Opening reception: Saturday, May 9th, from 1:00 to 4:00pm
Exhibition Dates: May 1 to June 20, 2015
EXHIBITION INTRODUCTION
By Francisco Alvarez

Harley Valentine’s striking new sculpture Always Forever, the latest in his series of Portals sculptures, rises in front of the Campbell House Museum like an apparition from another age.

On the face of it, the futuristic origami-like sculpture functions as a doorway between the bustle of 21st-century Queen Street West, Toronto’s locus of all things cool, and the stately Georgian architecture of the City’s oldest surviving building from the olde Town of York, built in 1822 (also considered quite cool in its day). But the title of this installation, Always Forever Now, suggests a grander idea – that the sculpture as installed here exists within a grander continuity of time, from the past, through the present and into the unknowable future.

No traditional rectangular doorway, Always Forever, for all its beautiful straight lines, facets and angles, also suggests a writhing form, caught frozen in the middle of its ages-long shapeshifting exertions. Valentine cleverly amplifies the portal’s movement potential in mesmerizing performances of contemporary dance, music and photography. The dancer sinuously crosses back and forth through the twisting red threshold, becoming a tender image of humanity, with all its complexity, emotion and temporality, framed within the permanence of classical architecture, the logic of science and engineering, and the irrational impulses of great art.

Francisco Alvarez is the principal of Mr. Pink Art Consultants, Executive Director of Heritage Toronto, and a former professional dancer.

 

AlwaysPortal1
Always Forever by Harley Valentine

www.harleyvalentine.com