You road I enter upon and look around, I believe you are not all that is here, I believe that much unseen is also here. ... I believe you are latent with unseen existences, you are so dear to me.
— Walt Whitman, “Song of the Open Road” (1856)
Taking its title from a poem by Walt Whitman, the Contemporary Art Gallery presents a group exhibition as the central feature of the 2017 Capture Photography Festival. Work is presented both inside and outside and across all of the gallery’s spaces, embracing a diverse set of conditions and approaches centred in a conceptual understanding of an expanded field of photographic practice that examines notions of what you see is most definitely not what you get.
Bringing together artists from Canada, Eritrea, Ireland, Sweden, and the US, the exhibition includes works that combine thematically to interrogate ideas rooted in photographic histories, engaging ideas such as veracity, recollection, remembrance, belonging, staging, and how the image documents and records these or is evidence of differing realities.
Recent work by Canadian artist Kelly Lycan includes installations based on 291, the iconic New York photography gallery opened by Alfred Stieglitz in 1905. These recreations are developed through sourcing images, in an attempt to uncover an understanding or experience of the space while drawing on simulations of the photographic illusion of this. Song of the Open Road features a new version of Nearby Nearby: 291 Burlap Walls (2015), composed of a series of images of the walls of 291 culled from Internet searches, books, videos and museums. Five images were printed on standard letterhead paper, then photocopied on a variety of machines through different companies in the US, Mexico and Canada, resulting in a series of colour shifts and image quality away from the black and white originals. The resulting installation creates a pixelated arena of varicoloured white grounds, where it is as if each image is forensically being drawn from some depths to emerge on the paper’s surface, evoking an atmospheric quality not dissimilar to Stieglitz’s “Equivalent” series of cloud photographs.
Presented in partnership with Capture Photography Festival