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Show & Tell at Akin River

Akin River Studios
September 16, 2019 by Akin Collective in Event

Next month Akin's very own Erin Candela and Özge Aytekin are hosting a relaxed and fun ‘Show and Tell for Artists’ at Akin's River studios (7 Labatt Avenue, 3rd floor).

This Show & Tell will kick off at 6:00pm and Akin members and other Toronto artists are invited to show completed works or works in progress and get friendly feedback and answers from their peers in a casual studio setting.

Feel free to bring art to share, bring a friend or two, bring snacks or drinks or just bring yourself! Come for the conversation or just to meet other artists and makers. This is a FREE public event - everyone is welcome!

Accessibility:
Akin River is not currently an accessible location. Akin regrets this barrier to access. The front entrance to the building has 4 steps with handrail on left side only. there is no ramp available.

Our first floor studio has no additional steps, but one must pass through two doors leading to the hallway which are not automated. To access our third floor studio there 20 stairs to 2nd floor and then another set of 20 stairs to the 3rd floor. There are two doors you must walk through on the second floor to get to the stairs to the third floor. These doors are not automated.

All genders bathrooms are on the first and second floors of the building. Bathrooms do not have automated doors and the toilets are not raised. There are no grab bars in the bathroom and the stalls are narrow. Doors to the bathrooms are narrow and the door is heavy. Bathrooms are locked to the public and require a key to enter.

There is no elevator for regular use in the building.

Getting here by TTC:
Both the Dundas #505 and King #504 Streetcar have stops at River street, approximately a block or two away.

Parking:
Parking is extremely limited, but is 1h free on Labatt Ave, and 3h free on River Street.

Learn more here
September 16, 2019 /Akin Collective
akin river, river, regent park, Show & tell
Event

Call for Artists: Nia Artist in Residence

Nia Centre for the Arts
September 15, 2019 by Akin Collective in Call for Submissions

After an incredible first year, Nia Centre for the Arts is re-launching their Artist-in-Residence program.

Deadline to apply: Sunday, September 22, 2019, 11:59pm.

The first program of its kind in Canada to provide access to shared studio space, exclusive and customized professional development opportunities that support artistic growth - all with the goal of building the creative capacity of Afro-diasporic artists.

GOALS FOR THE RESIDENCY

  1. Accessibility & Inclusion: Address the lack of safe and inclusive spaces for Black artists. 

  2. Professional Development: Create spaces to support emerging artists to hone their talents.

  3. ​Community Building: Create opportunities for the community to experience artistic works rooted in Afro-diasporic traditions.

​Residents will have access to:

  • Shared studio space for 4 months

  • Curatorial Guidance

  • Opportunity to present your work & receive feedback

  • Conversations with artists and leaders in Toronto’s arts & cultural community

  • Professional Development workshops

  • An artist fee + materials budget

The program will culminate with an exhibition of works produced by the residents in February 2020; dates to be confirmed.

Why we need a Black Arts Centre? Artists, elders, supporters and alumni share their experiences with Nia Centre and answer the question of, why, more than ever, we need a Black Arts Centre.

The Artist-in-Residence program is open to all, however, preference will be given to artists from the African Diaspora. 

Learn more here
September 15, 2019 /Akin Collective
residency, residencies, call for submissions, nia
Call for Submissions

Anda Pop Up: Reflection On the Don

Secret Location Announced Hours Prior to the Event
September 13, 2019 by Akin Collective in Event

Anda tells the hidden stories of this city that we love so much. Over the past 2 years we have done so in-format of an artist residency. This Anda event is a pop-up event that will engage in art and conversation over the course of one evening. At this event we will gather in an unclaimed space which is both known and hidden to those of us who call Toronto home.

We will be planting ourselves in a space whose ownership feel confusing at best and use that as a platform to discuss our evolving relationship with ownership of space. We will explore the idea of space - who lost it, who has it, and who will possess it?

But perhaps like all Anda events, the space we gather in will evoke as many questions as it answers.

What belongs to mother nature?
What belongs to native stewards of our lands?
What belongs to the commons?
What belongs to people?
What belongs to the city?
Who is the city? Corporations? Citizens?

Indigenous peoples have been stewards the lands of Kanada for many years prior to us, the settlers. Since then we have seen a steady increase in privatization of public spaces and utilities.

So who protects and owns this land? Who looks after the interests of its future stewards?

This event will host a series of experiences, using art to bridge the conversation.

The flow will take you through a journey of heart, intellect and soul.
-Guided Sound Meditation
-Indigenous History
-Panel Discussion on Spaces
-Live Performances

Learn more here
September 13, 2019 /Akin Collective
stories, story telling, anda, toronto, indigenous history, space, Performance
Event

Akin Vitrine Gallery + Erin Candela

Akin Vitrine Gallery - Dupont
September 13, 2019 by Akin Collective in Event, Exhibitions, Member News, Vitrine

We are delighted to introduce our current Akin Vitrine Gallery artist, Akin King alumi, soon to be Akin MOCA artist and staff member Erin Candela. Erin’s work will be on exhibit in our galleries beginning at 1485 Dupont for the month of September and then 1747 St. Clair Avenue West for the month of October.

Erin Candela is a Canadian artist originally from northern BC, currently living in Toronto. Often using historical documents such as photographs, public school books, nature encyclopedias and community journals, themes of Memory and identity are frequently present in her drawings. Ideas of North, Canadian landscape, and portentous depictions of wild creatures and characters are also common and contribute to a scattered and ambiguous narrative.

Things Go So Wrong?
Mixed Media
Dimensions Variable
2019

To contact the artist:
Instagram: @candles_
#Akinvitrine
www.erincandela.ca

Akin Collective + Akin Projects are excited to present our 2019 programming in two Vitrine Galleries located at Akin Dupont and Akin St. Clair. These miniature galleries feature the diverse talent of our members with travelling installations rotating each month. Each artist will be featured for the first month at Dupont and second month at St. Clair. For more information about our artists and our programming, join us on Instagram @akinvitrine.

‘Things Go So Wrong?’ will be on view for the month of September in our Dupont Akin Vitrine Gallery, located in the Clock Factory Building at 1485 Dupont Street (entrance on Campbell Avenue). Find Akin Studio 215 on the second floor and follow the sign into the hallway around the corner. The building is open from 9am to 6pm, Monday to Saturday.

The exhibition will then travel to the Akin St. Clair Vitrine Gallery and be on view for the month of October at 1747 St. Clair Avenue West. Gallery is street level and can be viewed at any time.

Learn more here
September 13, 2019 /Akin Collective
Akin Vitrine Gallery, akin vitrine, Akin Dupont, exhibition
Event, Exhibitions, Member News, Vitrine

Fall + Winter Workshops at Contemporary Textile Studio Coop

Contemporary Textile Studio Cooperative
September 12, 2019 by Akin Collective in Education, Event

SILKSCREEN PRINTING
with Sharon Epstein
OCTOBER 5, 19, 26 & NOVEMBER 9, 16, 23
Spend three Saturdays building your skills and knowledge of the silkscreen printing process with an experienced instructor who will guide you through the technical and creative aspects of this exciting technique. Open to all skill levels.

WOVEN MATERIALITY - WEAVE A MULTI-FUNCTIONAL CLOTH
with Amanda Wood
SEPTEMBER 15
This workshop will introduce traditional cloth weaving techniques within a contemporary, materials based context. Students will work on pre-warped Ashford rigid heddle looms to create a textured multi-functional cloth. Suitable for all skill levels.

STUDIO PRINT NIGHT
with Erin MacKeen
TUESDAYS (6:00 - 9:00 pm)

Are you looking for a space to work on a printing project? Join us for Print Night and get access to our fully-equipped space to work independently. Technical assistance and screen preparation services available.

Learn more here
September 12, 2019 /Akin Collective
textile, textiles, workshop, Silkscreening, print
Education, Event

Charmaine Lurch, Sycorax Man, 2019, photo credit: Toni Hafkenscheid

Charmaine Lurch: Compounding Vision

RiverBrink Art Museum
September 12, 2019 by Akin Collective in Exhibitions, Member News

Compounding Vision by Charmaine Lurch at RiverBrink Art Museum

September 12, 2019 – February 1, 2020

Join us Thursday September 12th from 5 – 7 p.m. to celebrate the opening of Compounding Vision by Akin Sunrise artist Charmaine Lurch curated by Debra Antoncic.

Toronto-based artist Charmaine Lurch interrogates complex histories of humans and the environment. This exhibition presents the artist’s recent work exploring borders and boundaries, in painting, photography, sculpture and installation.

The exhibition runs from September 12th, 2019 – February 1, 2020 at RiverBrink Art Museum (116 Queenston Street, Queenston).

Charmaine Lurch is a sculptor, painter and installation artist who creates work that imagines inside and outside of history, involves quiet moments of joy, and draws our attention to human-environmental relationalities. an inherent sense of movement resides in the pieces. Lurch maps belonging and representation in space and place, outside of normative racial scripts. Her work has been exhibited at The Art Gallery of Ontario, Durham Art Gallery, the Montreal museum of art, Royal Ontario Museum , Station Gallery, Toronto Centre for the Arts, The Gladstone, Nuit Blanche, the National Gallery of Jamaica, and more.

Learn more here
September 12, 2019 /Akin Collective
exhibition, Sculpture, Installation
Exhibitions, Member News

Surface Play | Lindy Fyfe and Ruth Adler

Samara Contemporary
September 11, 2019 by Akin Collective in Exhibitions

Samara Contemporary is pleased to present ​Surface Play,​ an exhibition of work by Canadian textile artists Lindy Fyfe and Ruth Adler, curated by Rafi Ghanaghounian. The exhibition is an exploration of the artists’ respective investigations into textile as painting. Both Adler and Fyfe employ textiles as the chief component in their work, however their approaches contain more similarities than their outcomes.

Fyfe, who works with recycled fabric from thrift shops, breathes new life into discarded materials through harnessing their existing forms and patterns, translating them into new compositions. This creative and intuitive process results in abstract compositions that strongly reference the masters of modernist painting including Rothko and Mondrian, but also hint at the earth’s topographic surfaces.

Adler’s similar creative impulse is reflected in the vibrant assemblages she constructs through material conversations. When looking at the structural appearance of her works, it becomes clear that Adler gains inspiration from anatomy and architecture, among other things. Utilizing textile remnants as well as water-based inks and paints, her pieces reference the aesthetics of fashion and other cultural forms.

When: On view now. Exhibition runs till September 29 

Where: Samara Contemporary, 156 Augusta Ave, Kensington Market

ABOUT RUTH ADLER

Ruth Adler’s work has been exhibited internationally since the 1980s. She has presented numerous solo exhibitions including, Jim Kempner Fine Art (New York), Lonsdale Gallery (Toronto) and Lorber Gallery (Tel Aviv). In the 80s and throughout the 90s she ran her own t-shirt label in Tel Aviv and designed t-shirts for Marci Lipman (Toronto). Ruth received awards and grants for her work including a Bravo Fact award for her video “How Yellowknife Got Its Name.” She has also did commissions for the Iroquois Hotel (New York) and The Schneider Children's Medical Centre (Petach Tiqvah, Israel). In 2000 Ruth began making her digital circles on paper that are currently represented by Artstar (New York). Ruth currently lives and works in Toronto and Tel Aviv.

ABOUT LINDY FYFE

Lindy Fyfe is a visual artist based in Toronto where she maintains an active studio practice concentrating on painting, fabric construction, drawing and collage. In 2010 The Robert McLaughlin Gallery presented 'Confluence', a major solo exhibition surveying Fyfe's work across her full range of media. In 2014 she installed a solo exhibition of fabric work as a component of World of Threads, Oakville, and participated in Fibreworks 2014, at the Cambridge Galleries. In 2015 Fyfe was selected as a finalist for the Salt Spring National Art Prize exhibition in British Columbia, was included in the annual Art With Heart auction in Toronto, and had a solo exhibition, titled Shift Twist, at Verso Gallery in Toronto. In 2016 she installed Tilt, a site-specific work at *QueenSpecific in Toronto. In 2019 her work will be included again in the annual Art With Heart auction to be held at the Art Gallery of Ontario.

Learn more here
September 11, 2019 /Akin Collective
samara contemporary, art exhbition, exhibition
Exhibitions

Grant Writing 101 for Artists in Communities and Schools

North York Civic Centre - Council Chambers
September 11, 2019 by Akin Collective in Event, Education

October 2 / 6:00-8:00pm / North York Civic Centre - Council Chambers - 5100 Yonge Street, North York, ON

PWYC (Suggested Donation $5 to help defray Akin’s costs) / Please RSVP at https://bit.ly/2kDb4aB

Due to popular demand, we have decided to offer another grant writing workshop in October!

Join Akin and the Ontario Arts Council to learn more about how to apply for grants from the people that give them. Please note: this workshop will focus on grants offered by the OAC but much of the information provided can easily be applied to grants from other organizations.

Writing grants is a significant part of many artist's careers - so let's learn how to do it properly! This interactive workshop will explore the process of planning, writing and submitting grant proposals to different governing bodies. As a major funder themselves, the Ontario Arts Council provides direction and advice on the grant writing process and the various the dos and don'ts of everything from creating your budget to organizing your support material and work plan. Following this, there will be an extensive Q&A period.

Accessibility Info:
North York Civic Centre is wheelchair accessible. Please let us know of any other accessibility needs so that we can assist you. Email janet@akincollective.com by September 23rd, 2019 and we will do our best to accommodate you! Thank you.

Akin Projects would like to thank the City of Toronto for their kind donation of space to host this event.

About the Presenter:
Maura Broadhurst is the Cross-Sectoral Associate Officer at the Ontario Arts Council. In this capacity she manages the Arts Service Organizations programs as well as other project programs in the discipline and activity sections of the Council. Prior to her work at the Council, Maura was the Curator at the Latcham Gallery, the public art gallery in Stouffville, Ontario for over a decade. She has also worked at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection as an Educator and Program Coordinator, London Regional Art & Historical Museums, the Living Arts Centre in Mississauga, Canadian Stage Company and Desrosiers Dance Theatre.

Learn more here
September 11, 2019 /Akin Collective
grants, Grant, grant writing, Workshop, oac, ontario arts council, north yoek
Event, Education

VEER way out of line by Kai Hart

The Corridor Gallery
September 10, 2019 by Akin Collective in Exhibitions, Member News

Exhibition September 3rd - 22nd, The Corridor Gallery

Explosive new paintings by Kai Hart, recent graduate from Centennial College’s Fine Arts Studio program. Intense and expressive large scale paintings take over the Corridor Gallery. City banners, urban caves, rumble, ancient symbology, this exhibition is way out of line!

event information here
September 10, 2019 /Akin Collective
Akin St Clair, artist, exhibition
Exhibitions, Member News

The Gift Shop Show at Arts Etobicoke Storefront Gallery

Storefront Gallery at Arts Etobicoke
September 10, 2019 by Akin Collective in Call for Submissions

Arts Etobicoke is hosting our members and artists in a unique exhibition, “The Gift Shop” Show in the Storefront Gallery at Arts Etobicoke this festive season! This curated show will run from November 15, 2019 to December 20, 2019. We are now accepting applications from artists and artisans who make unique, handmade works; including fine art, jewellery, clothing/textiles, crafts, food products, etc. to be a part of this experiential exhibition. This opportunity is free to participate, however, the Gallery Committee will be making selections as to what makes it into the show.

“The Gift Shop” Show is a well-curated and uniquely designed gift shopping experience in The Storefront Gallery at Arts Etobicoke. This show will have a variety of arts and crafts from many disciplines.We want to showcase craft and design from the diverse artists, members, and artisans that live, work, and play in our community.

The Storefront Gallery at Arts Etobicoke will be transforming into an unusual art and design walk-in shop complete with an extravagant window display. The gallery will be decorated and designed with the help of our After-School Arts Drop-In youth around the theme of illuminating celebration. space will be transformed using fluorescent, neon, pop colours, lights and glow in the dark paints. This display will add sparkle and shine to the objects on sale.

If you want to be a part of this awesome spectacle, please submit images of considering size and price point.

Arts Etobicoke is hosting our members and artists in a unique exhibition, “The Gift Shop” Show in the Storefront Gallery at Arts Etobicoke this festive season! This curated show will run from November 15, 2019 to December 20, 2019. The Gallery is open Monday - Saturday.

Applications are due by: September 15, 2019 at midnight
Successful Applicants will be notified by: September 30, 2019

Learn more here
September 10, 2019 /Akin Collective
gift shop show, arts etobicoke, call for submissions
Call for Submissions

Legal Intersections: Intro to Artist Contracts

OCAD University
September 09, 2019 by Akin Collective in Event

Legal Intersections is a four-part series addressing legal issues of importance to artists, designers, and cultural workers. The series is presented in collaboration with the Artists’ Legal Advice Services, the Centre for Emerging Artists and Designers at OCAD University, and the Edward P. Taylor Library & Archives at the Art Gallery of Ontario.

This next installment in the Legal Intersections series will feature a panel discussion about contracts for artists. Topics will including:

  • What is an agreement?

  • The relationship between parties to an agreement

  • Exhibition rights

  • Assigning work(s)

  • Commissions

  • Employment agreements / consultants

Our Panelists

Paul Sanderson
Barrister and Solicitor, Owner Sanderson Entertainment Law

Since being called to the Ontario bar in 1983, Paul has been in private practice and has practiced entertainment and arts law exclusively. He is currently a sole practitioner in the firm Sanderson Entertainment Law. Paul is the author of the legal texts “Musicians and the Law in Canada” (Carswell Legal Publication), now in its fourth edition, Music Law Handbook for Canada Volume I and II (Seraphim Editions) and Artists' Contracts: Agreements for Visual and Media Artists (CARFAC Ontario) now in its 3rd edition. As a visual artist, Paul began photographing after receiving his law degree in 1981. He has studied photography at Ryerson Polytechnic University with Henry Gordillo and Peter Lindsay has photographed throughout Canada, U.S., the Caribbean and Europe.

Artists' Legal Advice Services (ALAS) is a non-profit that, for over 30 years, has provided free legal advice to artists living in Ontario. ALAS and its volunteers run a free legal clinic, workshops and provide resources for artists to help them better understand their legal questions. Find out more at www.alasontario.ca.

Learn more here
September 09, 2019 /Akin Collective
workshop, legal advice, artist, artist contracts
Event

Arts Etobicoke's Holiday Market at Cloverdale Common

Cloverdale Common - Cloverdale Mall
September 09, 2019 by Akin Collective in Call for Submissions

Arts Etobicoke is hosting our first ever Holiday Market in the Cloverdale Common inside Cloverdale Mall this holiday season! We are now accepting applications from artists and artisans who make unique, handmade works; including fine art, jewellery, clothing/textiles, crafts, food products, etc. to be vendors in this Holiday Market.

This curated market will run December 6-8th and December 13-15th from 11-6pm Fridays/Saturdays and 12-5pm Sundays. Vendors must table their products for one full weekend.

After the submissions have been reviewed and tables are assigned, Arts Etobicoke will contact applicants who have indicated interest in exhibiting both weekends if there is availability.

Applications are due by: September 15, 2019 at 11:59pm
Successful Applicants will be notified by: September 30, 2019
If you have any questions contact: holidaymarket@artsetobicoke.com

Arts Etobicoke was established in 1973 to provide a united voice for the local arts community, we are recognized as one of Canada's finest community arts councils. We are proud to support established and aspiring artists of all ages and backgrounds with a broad variety of activities and services, including arts education, advocacy, community space and much more.

Learn more here
September 09, 2019 /Akin Collective
arts etobicoke, holi, holiday market, eto
Call for Submissions

Borelson, 2018. Photo: Andrei Pora

Toronto Biennial of Art Announces Inaugural Programs

September 09, 2019 by Akin Collective in Exhibitions, Event

Toronto Biennial of Art (the Biennial) recently announced an extensive series of free public programs during the 10-week Exhibition that will take place during its inaugural edition, from September 21 to December 1, 2019. More than 70 local and international participants will lead talks, workshops, and performances that intersect with and expand ideas emerging from the 2019 Biennial’s central question: “What does it mean to be in relation?”

Led by Deputy Director and Director of Programs Ilana Shamoon, and conceived by Curator Clare Butcher and Associate Curator Myung-Sun Kim, the Biennial’s Programs team has developed five programming streams: Co-Relations, Currents, Storytelling, Tools for Learning, and the Toronto Biennial of Art Residency.

Programs will take place at more than 15 Biennial sites across Toronto. Conceived to extend beyond the event itself to activate the Biennial between editions, Programs is responsive to conversations that emerge during the inaugural Biennial and will precipitate ongoing projects, research, events, and partnerships that create a foundation for continued exchange into 2021.

Co-Relations explores critical local issues—livability, access, interconnectivity—that extend ideas addressed in the Biennial’s first edition. The program demonstrates a deep commitment to placemaking in a series of performances and gatherings, including artist talks, participatory games, civic conversations, youth-engaged projects, workshops, and communal meals. Participants are invited into shifting and expanding dialogues that reveal our often invisible, intangible, or overlooked connections to each other and our environment. These unseen or unnoticed connections provide insights into how we can better build and sustain symbiotic relationships over time.

Currents is a platform for artist-led programming that invites visitors to engage directly with the creative and critical processes at work in the exhibition. This stream consists of talks, performances, symphonies, star-gazing, and ceremonies that trace ideas circulating within and beyond the Biennial’s main sites and connect with other exhibition locations. Be it through acts of restitution, revolutionary wearables, ways of knowing with the water, or the ethics of making, Currents asks participants to reconsider what it means to be in and out of relation in the context of artworks featured in this year’s Exhibition.

Storytelling seeks to shift the mediation of contemporary art away from conventional modes of interpreting and informing to narrating and embodying through weekly walks and conversations. An intergenerational and multilingual group of storytellers share personal insights and experiences of the city as they guide visitors through the exhibition’s site-specific installations, research, and generative proposals. Storytellers will bring submerged narratives to the surface in relation to the history and politics of Toronto’s shifting shoreline.

Tools for Learning is generated with Biennial participants and collaborators, and comprises group exercises, performative scores, proposals for collaborative thinking and making, artist interviews, and audio tours. Whether in the Biennial, the classroom, or at home, our multimedia toolbox can be put to use by educators, students, and other community members in connecting their own experiences and curricula with process-based, playful approaches to contemporary artistic practices.

The Toronto Biennial of Art Residency is an experimental platform for artists with socially engaged practices. It supports artists whose work is challenging disciplinary and aesthetic conventions to expand notions of community and enact social change at various scales. For its inaugural residency, the Biennial is proud to present Life of a Craphead, a collective whose work spans performance art, film, and curation.

Learn more here
September 09, 2019 /Akin Collective
toronto biennial of art, art exhbition, festival
Exhibitions, Event

Double Vision II: Clara Hirsch and Jake Hirsch-Allen

Gladstone Hotel
September 09, 2019 by Akin Collective in Exhibitions, Member News

September 12-22

2nd floor gallery

Opening reception: September 12, 7-10pm, everyone welcome!

Double Vision II is the continuation of a mother-son collaboration, first shown in Madrid in 2016. It brings together Akin Alum Clara Hirsch’s painted images and the photographs of Jake Hirsch-Allen. Double Vision II portrays the tension between urban space and the natural environment. The series illustrates Clara’s conflicted perspective: on the one hand, a delight in architecture, culture and the vitality of urban life; and on the other, her love of nature and organic forms. This series also includes four of Jake’s stand-alone photographs.

Image via: clarahirsch.com

Exhibition details here
LEarn more about the artists here
September 09, 2019 /Akin Collective
clara hirsch, art, exhibition, Gladstone Hotel, collaboration
Exhibitions, Member News

MOCA Artist Series: Stephanie Fortin, David Frankovich and Maggie McCutcheon

September 07, 2019 by Akin Collective in MOCA Artist Series, Member News

There are only a few weeks left in Year 1 of the Akin Studio Program at MOCA , a unique studio residency program in partnership with the Museum of Contemporary Art Toronto Canada.

Akin is honored to continue sharing profiles of the remarkable group of artists from our inaugural cohort in this final installation of the MOCA Artist Series. We have posted profiles of the artists throughout the summer and this is our final post; you can click here to see the entire series. Today we are happy to share profiles of three of the Year 1 artists, Stephanie Fortin, David Frankovich and Maggie McCutcheon.

Image source: https://stephaniefortin.com

Stephanie Fortin

Stephanie Fortin’s studio methods and research involve resist based techniques - clamping, folding, stitching, wrapping, ikat weaving, natural dye and pigments - plant, animal and mineral. Growing and harvesting dye plants and stitching.

These techniques blur transitions of line, shape and form; regardless of the attention in preparation and creation, there are unexpected moments that occur. The shape and imagery is dependent on the pressure applied during the resist - in kind, resist dyeing becomes an excellent metaphor for life. The process demands closeness, precision, physical and mental endurance that has a narrative of stress on both land and body. Opposing elements of control and lack of control, come together. The body and objects resist colour in the work. There is a directness and connection between the body, the land and colour, that materializes give-and take.

The abstraction grants choice reaction, engaging imagination. Asking viewers to be present and mindful, while contemplating the hidden circumstance of process and colour that go unseen at a scan; and enjoy looking at the same time.

www.stephaniefortin.com


Image source: http://davidfrankovich.com Photo by Teresa Ascencao

David Frankovich

David Frankovich (born 1985) is an artist based in Helsinki and Toronto working in performance and experimental media. They hold a BFA in Film and Video from York University, Toronto (2007) and are currently pursuing an MA in Live Art and Performance Studies from the Theatre Academy of the University of the Arts Helsinki. Their work is based in the body and its relation to others, including material, space and audience. They have exhibited internationally, including FADO Performance Art Centre (Toronto), Rhubarb Festival (Toronto), Mountain: Standard Time Performative Arts Festival (Calgary), Perform Now! Festival (Winterthur), ANTI – Contemporary Art Festival (Kuopio), CREATurE Live Art Festival (Kaunas), Cyprus International Performance Art Festival (Nicosia), Performance Studies International (Shanghai), Tonight (Helsinki) and Nomadic Arts Festival (Charciabałda and Warsaw).

www.davidfrankovich.com


Image Source: https://www.limitednobility.com

Maggie McCutcheon

Maggie McCutcheon studied Comparative Literature, copy writing, and creative writing and worked as a writer before realizing she was driven by a need to create something more enduring. She returned to school and studied Furniture Craft & Design at Sheridan College. Since graduating in 2016, she has been working for herself and producing custom pieces, commissions, and the occasional small run of original designs.

Limited Nobility is a Toronto-based, luxury furniture design and production company producing small runs of original designs as well as one-off commissions. It was created in 2017 by Maggie McCutcheon with one eye on languorous indulgence, the second on the significance of materials, and the third on true forms.

Each Limited Nobility piece is on nodding terms with the canon of the past as it embraces elegantly contemporary forms. She creates work that is at once opulent and luxurious without sacrificing purpose, comfort, or concept. McCutcheon believes unwaveringly in the beauty of materials and in the truths belying organic and pure forms.

www.limitednobility.com

Thank you for joining us for the MOCA Artist Series - stay tuned to the blog for our announcement about the Year 2 cohort of artists who are preparing to move into the studios at the Museum in October.

September 07, 2019 /Akin Collective
Member News, Akin MOCA, Moca artist series
MOCA Artist Series, Member News

MOCA Artist Series: Christian Butterfield, Jamie Ellis Pasquale and Stanzie Tooth

August 31, 2019 by Jen Pilles in MOCA Artist Series, Member News, Residency

There is only one month left in Year 1 of the Akin Studio Program at MOCA , a unique studio residency program in partnership with the Museum of Contemporary Art Toronto Canada.

Akin is honored to continue sharing profiles of the remarkable group of artists from our inaugural cohort. We have posted profiles of some of the artists throughout the summer and will continue until mid September; you can click here to see previous posts. Today we are happy to share profiles of three of the Year 1 artists, Christian Butterfield, Jamie Ellis Pasquale and Stanzie Tooth.

Image source: www.corkingallery.com/artists/contemporary/christian-butterfield

Christian Butterfield

Christian Butterfield is a young Torontonian artist working on the interception of mass media and the painting of the human form. Since 2016 he has been developing a series of portraits, exploring the traditions of painting and popular culture. He uses Time magazine as a source and includes text extracts onto painted faces to comment with humour on our current society. The words in his texts are signifiers in relation to the abstraction of the human figure. Christian Butterfield is represented by Corkin Gallery.

www.corkingallery.com/artists/contemporary/christian-butterfield


Image source: https://cargocollective.com/jamieellispasquale

Jamie Ellis Pasquale

Born in London, England where he attended the University of Greenwich studying for a bachelors in Landscape Architecture. Now living and working in Toronto where his work shows a nod to the classical history of representational and figurative painting. He is currently working on personal projects and progression in the field of portraiture.

Working from observations of nature and my immediate environment Jamie Ellis Pasquale creates objects of fascination that reflect his emotions. Paintings that are belonging to the essence of life and the nature of pure being. Inspired by art history and the formal definitions of painting, Jamie continues to push the boundaries of painting both representational and abstract to reflect a contemporary idiom previously not seen before from a black british artist.

https://cargocollective.com/jamieellispasquale


Image source: https://www.stanzietooth.com/collection/coming-home-2018

Stanzie Tooth

Canadian artist Stanzie Tooth works primarily in painting, though her practice also diverges into sculpture, collage and installation. Tooth holds a BFA from the Ontario College of Art & Design (2007) and an MFA from the University of Ottawa (2015), where she was awarded an Ontario Graduate Scholarship. Stanzie was the 2015 recipient of the Joseph Plaskett Award for Painting, through which she spent time traveling and creating new work, completing residencies in Berlin and Iceland, as well as self-directed research in Greece and Italy. She has been acknowledged for her work by Canadian Art Magazine, The Toronto Star, Now Magazine and Studio Beat. Her work is included in the collections of The Royal Bank, Toronto Dominion Bank, A.T. Tolley Collection and several private collections. Stanzie Tooth currently lives in Toronto. Stanzie is represented by General Hardware Contemporary.

www.stanzietooth.com


Stay tuned next weekend as we wrap up the Akin MOCA Artist Series with our final post!

August 31, 2019 /Jen Pilles
Akin MOCA, Moca artist series, Member News
MOCA Artist Series, Member News, Residency

Artist Project 2020 Information Session at Akin Lansdowne!

Akin Lansdowne
August 30, 2019 by Akin Collective in Event

Artist Project in partnership with Akin invites member artists to a cinq à sept meet and greet with the Artist Project team. Complimentary drinks and canapes will be provided.

Location: Akin Lansdowne, 87 Wade Avenue, 2nd Floor Studio

When: September 10th 2019, 5-7PM

FREE!

As Canada’s largest artist exhibited fair, Artist Project exists to create an environment that ignites enriching conversation for a more personal experience with art.

Join over 300 talented, independent, contemporary artists in showcasing and selling their work to over 16,00 art lovers and collectors this February 20-23rd at the Better Living Centre.

Applications close September 20th for the following sections of the fair;

MAIN
The fairs premier section of emerging or established artists working across many disciplines.

UNTAPPED
Untapped Emerging Artists is a juried competition that awards 20 of the country's best up-and-coming artists an opportunity to participate in a dedicated feature space at the fair.

ZINE
Introduced to the fair in 2019, the Zine section features 10-12 artists and art collectives.

Artist Project is also excited to welcome back Akin as our Non-Profit partner in 2020 as we work to further promote issues fundamental to current art practices and fundraise to help Akin with their ongoing programming and studio space efforts.

We look forward to seeing you there!

The Artist Project Team

Learn more here
August 30, 2019 /Akin Collective
artist project, artist opportunities, art fair, Akin lansdowne, information
Event

North York Arts: Beers and Brushes Fundraiser

Amsterdam Brewing Company
August 28, 2019 by Akin Collective in Event

North York Arts is holding our first fundraiser and we'd love for you to come! All proceeds from the event will go directly towards NYA's programs - ultimately helping us achieve our vision of an inclusive, engaged, and sustainable arts & culture community in North York.

When: October 24th 2019, 7-9PM

Where: Amsterdam Brewery, 45 Esandar Dr., Toronto

The night is all about coming together to showcase, celebrate, and support North York’s vast arts and culture sector. All proceeds from the event will go directly towards NYA's programs - ultimately helping us achieve our vision of an inclusive, engaged, and sustainable arts and culture community in North York.

The event will be hosted by Brant Matthews (otherwise known as FireGuy from Dispatch Talent), and will consist of DJed music by Love Music Initiative and live paintings from two of our Northbound Gallery Program artists, Jieun June Kim and Marina Nazarova. You can also look forward to finger foods, a DIY painting station, and even a chance to win some prizes.

Learn more here
August 28, 2019 /Akin Collective
north york arts, Fundraiser
Event

2018 IA Current exhibition, Preservation and Permanence, co-curated by Amanda Low and Tommy Truong. Photo by Connie Tsang.

Call for Works: IA Current Exhibition

August 27, 2019 by Akin Collective in Call for Submissions

CALL FOR WORKS
2019 IA Current Exhibition
Curated by Sophia Oppel & Philip Leonard Ocampo

Deadline: September 14, 2019 (11:59PM)

Responding to a technological moment in which social media algorithms privilege politically divisive content, the 2019 IA Current exhibition will address the “invisible” algorithms that govern digital infrastructures.

This exhibition, co-curated by emerging curators Sophia Oppel & Philip Leonard Ocampo, will highlight the political underpinnings of these communicative apparatuses and consider how power can materialize tangibly. It will examine the seamless aesthetics of consumer technologies and online interfaces that typically go unnoticed, and will question their supposed neutrality.

The exhibition aims to promote discussion about algorithmic governance and the ease with which global citizens engage with platforms that treat behavioural data as a commodity. By selecting works that manipulate the tools used by surveillance capitalists for insurgent purposes, we hope this exhibition can return some agency back to the user.

The curators welcome submissions from all new media arts disciplines, with an emphasis on digital media relating to surveillance capitalism and the intake of online information (or misinformation).

The InterAccess Current (IA Current) program supports the professional development of emerging curators and artists interested in new media and electronic practices. Each year, InterAccess selects an emerging curator, who works closely with InterAccess staff to conceptualize and execute an exhibition of works by emerging artists. “Current” refers to the now, of course, but it is also an energetic charge that causes light, heat and all manner of electronic life; an apt metaphor for emergent creative practices within the ever-expanding field of new media.

Founded in 1983, InterAccess is a non-profit gallery, educational facility, production studio, and festival dedicated to emerging practices in art and technology. Our programs support art forms that integrate technology, fostering and supporting the full cycle of art and artistic practice through education, production, and exhibition. InterAccess is regarded as a preeminent Canadian arts and technology centre.

Learn more here
August 27, 2019 /Akin Collective
call for submissions
Call for Submissions

Image source: Gardiner Museum

From the Gardiner Museum Blog: masa is clay

August 27, 2019 by Akin Collective in Event

From the Gardiner Museum Blog:

We invited local artists and writers to interact with and reflect on our Community Arts Space projects. Here, artist and writer janet romero-leiva reflects on the Artists-In-Residence Project: The Sin Fronteras Monarch Butterfly Project – A Flight Path Without Borders, presented in partnership with Akin and Canada Nos Une Multicultural Organization.

as the days get shorter and cooler            the darkness longer
they prepare for their departure south
back to the place their ancestors have been returning to for generations
knowing they cannot withstand the winter ahead
they have rested and reproduced
soaked in the varieties of milkweed especially planted for them around this city
this summer
a supportive and loving gesture to help them thrive and guarantee their return next spring
a gesture for survival
a gesture for migration

yet
an absent gesture when the butterfly is of the human kind
conveniently forgetting that human is you                        and the monarch is them
you speak of them as those people who come to take your jobs
plug up your city with crime
tainting proper english with dirty tongues
you
so perfectly living a colonized life you forget
english is not native to turtle island to this land
nor are you
forget where you came from
how dare they try to make a better life for themselves on this land?
unlike the monarchs
you have no recollection of how you got here
unlike the monarchs
you did not fly from mexico to canada taking four generations to return (back)
unlike the monarchs
you do not know the road back to your people
their genetic memory so accurate that is the only map they rely on
you
oblivious to the reality of your arrival
forget the migrant is you and you are the immigrant

the 18. 39. 72. year old immigrant
taken from her land generations past
transplanted to another continent to be uprooted again and again because
citizenship is not free and she needs to eat
forced to do work she never agreed to but too scared to retaliate because
her children need an education and she does not speak the language
making home where her feet touch land because
memory is in the body and her grand kids were seeds in her uterus before they were called into life
…those grand kids
learning through kokum. abuelita. lola. how to connect to the world
flooded with curiosity about her life back home
a home so far back the only memory she recalls is the masa in her hands
4 years old standing at the kitchen table with her tia
soft and squishy grainy and cool in her tiny hands
pat patting back and forth back and forth
until a perfectly round tortilla appeared
lumpy uneven and filled with tender 4 year old pride
the smile on her tia’s face the highlight of that afternoon
she ensures to assure her grand kids ancestral knowledge is within
even when broken and torn the knowledge cannot be stolen
it resides in the crevices of our bones
the scent of our skin
the longing of our hearts
the looking…

at these glorious monarch butterflies shaped by 1000 pairs of hands
know that boxes of clay were carried and carted across this city from community to community in the hopes of having elders and children share in the pat patting of clay to create each piece
back            and forth    back and             forth
carving the shapes and lines of the wings
mixing exact shades of yellows and oranges delicately brushed on
thumbprints and lumps creases and scratches
the perfection in their imperfections
broken and healing
the perfection in our imperfections
each (of us) an imprint of the masa that is the clay that is the land that is the truth
of the monarchs return south towards the sun in time to harvest the corn
of the monarchs return north to their breeding locations
of our return to ourselves                                                     and what we long for

–

janet romero-leiva is a queer feminist latinx visual artist and writer whose work explores immigrant bodies, denied aboriginality, queer and of colour existence, and the experience of living in between north and south, between spanish and english.

About The Sin Fronteras Monarch Butterfly Project – A Flight Path Without Borders

Every summer and winter, monarch butterflies migrate across the North American continent. Coinciding with the arrival of monarch butterflies in Canada and their departure to Mexico, the Davenport Perth Community Ministry, alongside Canada Nos Une Multicultural Organization, held a series workshops and events within the Davenport Perth community. These workshops led to the creation of a multitude of ceramic butterflies that highlight Turtle Island’s connection with ancient Indigenous cultures and the monarch, on view at the Gardiner Museum from August 22 – September 4.

Learn more here
August 27, 2019 /Akin Collective
gardiner museum, Gardiner Museum, clay, CAS, community arts space
Event
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