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Home > Events > Arts

Carla Zaccagnini: no. it is opposition
Presented by: Art Gallery of York University

The palindromic title of the exhibition, no. it is opposition., hints at its central focus: what Argentinean-born, Brazilian artist Carla Zaccagnini describes as “forking paths and crossroads.”

The exhibited works are premised on replication but ultimately prove to be somewhat different (forking paths), or appear completely disparate but ultimately end in the same place (crossroads). The exhibition’s metaphoric content can also be understood in terms of a mirror image reflected in the exhibition plan. The exhibition includes a full-scale replica of the AGYU’s lobby inside the first gallery so that the viewer enters the exhibition space twice and sees the “same” work again since the works are divided into pairs and split between the two galleries. For example, in the first gallery, the double-channel video installation, Duas Margens, simultaneously shows each coast of the Atlantic Ocean, while, in the second gallery, Duas Margens: Pacífico, two sides of the Pacific coasts are presented. Similarly, the work Sobre la igualdaqd y las diferencias I: Casa Gemelas (On equality and difference I: Twin Houses), a photographic series of pairs of at one time identical house façades in Havana shows the forking paths of time in the changes, additions, or deletions that have been made to the structures.

Other works that appear the same reveal their differences. In Sobre la igualdaqd y las diferencias II: a casa ao lado (On equality and differences II: the house next door) Zaccagnini hired two archaeologists, Liesbet Sablon and Sofie Geelen, to excavate two houses destined for destruction on one street in Belgium. The archaeologists created a classification system (hygiene, kitchenware, décor/art, lighting/heating, waste, etc.) to draw out the similarities of the rescued objects from both houses, but their reappearance in the second gallery reveals their differences. The objects’ museological display system, one for each excavated house, has been newly commissioned in Toronto and designed by the twins, the Brothers Dressler, who—in a parallel process (meeting Zaccagnini’s work at a crossroad)–create a display structure from discarded materials found in Toronto’s condominium redevelopment sites, recording the history (date, material) of each component of their integrated display system.

Artist and curator in the exhibition occasionally mirrored each other’s roles. On the one hand, curator Emelie Chhangur has organized a new work for the artist, a choreographed performance of Canadian flight attendants responding in their native language to a series of in-flight safety procedures, two versions shown respectively in the two galleries as video installations. On the other hand, Zaccagnini has taken on Chhangur’s curatorial role of commissioning the vitrines (Rodrigo Matheus), producing multiples for sale (Jogo Memória/Memory Game), and programming the lobbies with video in one by Brazilian artist Almicar Packer and in the other by British artist Simon Faithfull. (The two videos have unintentional affinities.) Creating artworks using curatorial strategies and using artists’ strategies to inform curatorial practice are two other paths of work by Zaccagnini, who is also Director of the Curatorial Department of the Cultural Centre of São Paulo.

The AGYU has also produced Catalogue Traduit, the French version of an ongoing series of artist books by Zaccagnini comprised of commissioned texts by writers in their native tongue responding book by book to particular themes in the artist’s work, each book (Catálogo, Catálogo Traducido, Translated Catalogue) the same but completely different, and each with the addition of a new work. Ten new texts have been commissioned from French writers for Catalogue Traduit, which has been designed by Marilyn Fernandes. It will be available during the exhibition as an autonomous artwork in the two AGYU Bookstores.

Carla Zaccagnini (b. Buenos Aires, 1973) is a visual artist, writer, and curator based in São Paulo. She received her Masters in Poéticas Visuais from the Universidade de São Paulo. Zaccagnini’s work is represented by Galeria Vermelho, São Paulo and has been featured in Cream 3 (Phaidon Press, London, 2003) and in the special edition “50 international emerging artists” by Contemporary magazine (London, 2006). Recent solo shows include Wish (Blow de la Barra Gallery, London, 2007) ogolaid O (MAMAM no Pátio, Recife, 2008) and Bifurcações e encruzilhadas (Galeria Vermelho, São Paulo, 2008). This year she will take part in the XXVIII Bienal de São Paulo.

curated by Emelie Chhangur

Carla Zaccagnini’s AGYU commissioned work for no. it is opposition. was choreographed by Sky Fairchild-Waller with support from Alumni Affairs, York University. Sky Fairchild-Waller is a performance artist originally from Victoria, British Columbia. A former student of the National Ballet School of Canada, Sky has choreographed and performed in Canada, the United States, and Mexico for the past fourteen years.

Emelie Chhangur thanks OCAD student Sophia Lin for her assistance in organizing this project and Terrill Maguire from the Department of Dance (YorkU) for helping to facilitate the link between contemporary art and dance.
A special thank you, as well, to Catalogue Traduit writers: Martin Breaugh, Vicky Chainey Gagnon, Larissa Joachim, Isabel Koellreuter, Mark Lanctôt, Cécile Martin, Catherine Sicot, Carl Trahan, Julie Tremble, and Thiffany Wilmouth. And, of course, Marilyn Fernandes for her design services.
AGYU also thanks the Argentinean Consulate in Toronto for in-kind services related to Carla Zaccagnini’s residency.

In the AGYU Vitrines: Rodrigo Matheus
After a month-long summer residency, Brazilian artist Rodrigo Matheus presents a newly commissioned, site-specific work in the exterior vitrines along the north side of the Accolade East Building. Giving the colonnade a street-like character, the project seamlessly but ambiguously turns the vitrines into shop or office windows, bringing recognizable elements of off-campus commercial culture to the Accolade East Building.

Ride out there on the Performance Bus!
Get on the AGYU Performance Bus to the opening reception of no. it is opposition. with hosts Ina unt Ina. It’s double the fun and double the pleasure with this spectacle based electronic diva duo! Part tongue-in-cheek, part aesthetic exploration, the twin personas of Ina unt Ina (Celina Carroll and Christina Zeidler) animate original computer generated music for guests through visuals, movement, and live vocals. The free performance bus departs OCAD (100 McCaul St.) at 6 pm sharp and returns downtown at 9 pm.


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Starts: Sep 17, 2008 Ends: Dec 7, 2008
At: Art Gallery of York University, Accolade East Building, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto
Playing: Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Sunday

Times: 10 am - 4 pm, Wed 10 am - 8 pm, Sun 12 pm - 5 pm
Cost: Free

Getting there:

For more information contact: Emelie Chhangur
Phone: 416-736-5169
Email: emelie@yorku.ca

Web site: www.yorku.ca/agyu/

 
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