TORONTO.- The Ryerson Image Centre is presenting a series of experimental shows confronting the traditional power dynamic between photographer and subject. Collaboration: A Potential History of Photography suggests that photographya medium traditionally understood as one dominated by singular creative adventurersis better defined by collaboration and interaction. Alongside this exhibition, Jim Goldbergs seminal series Rich and Poor (1977 to 1985) exemplifies this relationship by pairing his portraits with revealing self-observations from his subjects, inscribed directly on the photographs. These images exposed the rising social and economic divide in the United States that has only intensified today. Two additional exhibitions also explore the fluid dynamic between the makers of images, their subjects, and the audience that experiences photography.
Collaboration: A Potential History of Photography is an exhibition and collaborative laboratory created by Ariella Azoulay, Wendy Ewald, Susan Meiselas, Leigh Raiford and Laura Wexler. This team of artists, scholars, and curators have come together to create Collaboration by installing a gridded repertoire of approximately ninety photographic projects from different places and moments. These projects describe types of collaborationwhether friendly and cooperative, or antagonistic and coercivebetween photographers, photographed persons, and other participants. Designed to be open-ended, Collaboration invites visitors to participate in the reshaping of photographic meanings through an active program of conversations, encounters, and workshops.
Jim Goldberg: Rich and Poor further examines the challenges and revelations inherent in creative interaction between photographer and subject. Exhibited at New Yorks Museum of Modern Art in 1984, and published to acclaim the following year, Rich and Poor established Goldbergs reputation as a transformational figure in the history of documentary photography. The RICs presentation constitutes the most extensive exploration of this ground-breaking body of work ever put on view; in addition to the original photographs presented at MoMA, it includes rarely-seen prints, original interview recordings, and other archival materials.
Also on view on the RICs Salah J. Bachir New Media Wall, Ivan Sigals multi-channel installation KCR explores the Karachi Circular Railway, a now-defunct commuter train that once connected the disparate neighbourhoods of Pakistans largest metropolis. Sigal created KCR while a fellow at Harvard Universitys Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society and is best known for his documentary explorations of societies undergoing conflict or political transition.
The RICs winter 2018 season also includes: Soon we were en route again
: The Margaret Corry Albums (19471963), presented by second-year students from Ryerson Universitys Film and Photography Preservation and Collections Management program, in collaboration with the Royal Ontario Museum and The Family Camera Network. This exhibition explores a collection of photo albums compiled over seventeen years by a well-travelled Canadian expatriate.