The era of the pandemic-pivot is finally over, or at least it is for Art Toronto. The country’s oldest and largest international art fair returns to the Metro Toronto Convention Centre this weekend, and after two years of virtual and hybrid programming, they’ll be doing things 100 per cent IRL.
Will it be a throwback to the Before Times? Not quite. Yes, in some ways, it’s very much the event you remember: a sort of trade show of contemporary art that gathers commercial galleries from Canada and around the world. More than 90 exhibitors will appear at the fair this year, looking to connect with collectors and curators who’ll be treading some 17,000 square metres of hall space. But beyond the art-world dealings, there’s also talks, daily tours and a spate of programming including an exhibition that puts Canadian art, and the role of the fair itself, into context.
That reflective side of the fair is something director Mia Nielsen has been cultivating since she joined Art Toronto in 2019. At that year’s edition, Nielsen introduced a public-art program, a section that’s evolved and expanded for 2022. Large-scale works by Joseph Tisiga, Divya Mehra and Native Art Department International are among those featured, but the all-new development for 2022 is a “Focus” exhibition that offers a sort of museum moment amid the marketplace. Titled “held open,” the show assembles 16 works that have been selected from participating Art Toronto galleries, a mix of new and historical pieces. Recent works by Toronto-based artist Nadia Belerique, for example, are bookended by photographs from Nan Goldin and General Idea.
Marie-Charlotte Carrier is the curator of the exhibition; originally from Quebec City, she currently works at the Hayward Gallery in London. The show has a relatively open premise, she tells CBC Arts, but in gathering both new and historical works, she’s telling a story about “the ways we relate to one another and the non-human.” She’ll be leading tours of the exhibition daily. (Further details are available on the Art Toronto website.)
The addition of a curated section that purposefully turns its attention to Canada — its galleries, artists and curators — is an idea Nielsen’s waited three years to launch. “An exhibition structure within an art fair is very unusual,” she told CBC Arts. We reached her by phone to learn a little more about her vision for the fair.
CBC Arts: The Focus exhibition “held open” is a new initiative this year. What was the original idea behind launching that section? What did you want to add to the Art Toronto experience?
The Focus section used to be about looking out into the world, you know — like bringing back an experience from a different country or geographic location.
When I started in 2019, and got to know the exhibitors a little better, something that struck me was the extraordinary quality of the work that they were bringing.
That extraordinary quality you mentioned: I don’t know if you can distill it, but what were you seeing from Canadian exhibitors that punches above our weight?
Ooh, it’s not necessarily something that’s easy to answer in a word. There are so many artists who are being recognized in a big way. Esmaa Mohamoud is one of them. Caroline Monnet is another, just kind of off the top of my head. Rajni Perera — she just had this huge show in Glasgow.
Canadian art used to be thought of as regional. Maybe it’s globalization, maybe it’s social media, maybe it’s that many artists are physically getting out of Canada for projects, for residencies. But Canadian art is participating in an international dialogue that is very dynamic. Five Canadian artists were in the Venice Biennale this year including Tau Lewis and Shuvinai Ashoona [who was awarded a Special Mention]. And you see that in the fair.
So seeing what’s happening internationally gave you even more impetus to launch an exhibition about what’s happening here in Canada instead of looking outwards?
Yes, exactly.
With the Focus exhibition I wanted to create an opportunity to elevate that conversation and let these artists bring in works that are ambitious, that are museum quality — and new.
It’s really taking a broad look at the exhibitors that come to the fair and bringing together a group of artists from different regions.
These works would already be seen — they would already be represented in the fair. But the exhibition itself creates this moment of pause.
One thing: the works are not exclusively Canadian, but they’re all by artists who are represented by our galleries. Nan Goldin’s work is in the exhibition as well as Alicia Henry’s. A curator came in — Mary-Charlotte Carrier — and pulled threads on themes that she saw across the show floor.
Now that the exhibition is up, have you discovered any interesting perspectives or highlights?
Sharona Franklin was really interesting to me. She was someone Marie-Charlotte introduced me to, and the works she made for the show have not been seen before.
The themes that [Carrier] is exploring in held open — I thought it was a really beautiful and poignant concept. There’s a real interest in exploring vulnerability, particularly in the work of Sharona Franklin — her gelatin sculptures — and how Sharona’s work speaks so much to the disabilities she manages.
The Focus exhibition isn’t the only curated section at the fair. You’ve curated the public-art program, and as you’ve said in the past, growing that program is a priority of yours at Art Toronto. Is the launch of the Focus exhibition part of that vision?
Yeah, I would say it’s a nuance of that vision. You know, one of the things that I think is really interesting about Art Toronto as a fair is there are a number of important institutions from across the country that acquire from the fair. The AGO, of course, the National Gallery, the McMichael, the VAG, the Musée de beaux arts in Montreal. And so with the public installations and with the exhibition, I thought, here’s an opportunity. There are museums coming to acquire here. Let’s put something really exciting in front of them.
So one of the latest additions to the program is a really ambitious work from Divya Mehra. It’s a sculptural installation that’s 10 by 20 feet. It had to be moved in with two forklifts! It’s a really impressive work, and I think that one of the exciting things about coming to the fair is that you do get this hybrid experience where there are works by new artists — young artists, emerging artists — alongside historic works, alongside these huge installations.
So are major institutions the main audience you have in mind when putting the public-art program together?
That’s part of the audience, for sure. There are a lot of curators — independent curators and those affiliated with institutions who come from across Canada, but also some from the States too. They come to Art Toronto to do research and just see what’s going on, and so I think about that audience too. Like, what can I show that’s really inspiring?
In the case of Divya’s work, it was a sculpture that was in storage and here’s an opportunity to put it in front of this huge audience. Think about going to Nuit Blanche and seeing monumental work and how exciting and inspiring that is. I want to speak to the uninitiated. I want to give them an opportunity to see works that are inspiring — that you wouldn’t necessarily see in a commercial gallery, a private gallery, and also works that are defying the expectations of a commercial art fair. Like, you know, it’s not just a painting over the sofa.
It’s interesting to hear you talk about “uninitiated” curators. Between the public art program, and the Focus exhibition, it seems the fair feels a responsibility to make a statement: “this is what’s happening in Canadian contemporary art.”
Exactly.
Do you see that as the fair’s responsibility?
Well, I think the fair has an opportunity there. What you’re tapping into is a personal interest of mine. What is exciting to me about this role is that as the director I have an opportunity to look at the entire exhibition and think, how does this represent art in Canada and art from a Canadian perspective? How does Canadian art fit within an international framework? What is going to be inspiring and exciting for Canadian audiences to see?
This conversation has been edited and condensed.
Art Toronto. Oct. 27-30. Metro Toronto Convention Centre. www.arttoronto.ca
LONDON (AP) — With a few daubs of a paintbrush, the Brontë sisters have got their dots back.
More than eight decades after it was installed, a memorial to the three 19th-century sibling novelists in London’s Westminster Abbey was amended Thursday to restore the diaereses – the two dots over the e in their surname.
The dots — which indicate that the name is pronounced “brontay” rather than “bront” — were omitted when the stone tablet commemorating Charlotte, Emily and Anne was erected in the abbey’s Poets’ Corner in October 1939, just after the outbreak of World War II.
They were restored after Brontë historian Sharon Wright, editor of the Brontë Society Gazette, raised the issue with Dean of Westminster David Hoyle. The abbey asked its stonemason to tap in the dots and its conservator to paint them.
“There’s no paper record for anyone complaining about this or mentioning this, so I just wanted to put it right, really,” Wright said. “These three Yorkshire women deserve their place here, but they also deserve to have their name spelled correctly.”
It’s believed the writers’ Irish father Patrick changed the spelling of his surname from Brunty or Prunty when he went to university in England.
Raised on the wild Yorkshire moors, all three sisters died before they were 40, leaving enduring novels including Charlotte’s “Jane Eyre,” Emily’s “Wuthering Heights” and Anne’s “The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.”
Rebecca Yorke, director of the Brontë Society, welcomed the restoration.
“As the Brontës and their work are loved and respected all over the world, it’s entirely appropriate that their name is spelled correctly on their memorial,” she said.