Exhibitions

Events

Exhibitions

Workshops
Current exhibition
Sep 11 - Oct 12, 2024

the medium is the environment ―Kevin Day

A solo exhibition exploring how the digital environment subjugates both human and natural environments through a data-driven video installation.

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Past exhibition
Apr 6 - May 6, 2000

The Appearance Machine ―Willy LeMaitre and Eric Rosenzveig

The Appearance Machine is a perpetual animation device. It slowly grinds away, manufacturing scatological dramas from wrappers, packing material and other debris salvaged from its immediate surroundings. These objects form the set and become characters of a self-evolving, televisual world that is delivered to select locations via live feed from a broadband Internet link.

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Past exhibition
Mar 4 - 18, 2000

Pandora's Box―Christian Bock, Joe Davis, Francis LeBouthillier, Dinka Pignon, Victoria Scott and Kent Tankred

Curated by Graham Smith

The story of Pandora is one of curiosity and risk, of choice and unforeseen consequences. The Pandora’s Box exhibition uses this familiar tale to explore some of its obvious parallels to our contemporary encounter with technology.

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Past exhibition
Jan 28 - Feb 19, 2000

Intercourse―Istvan Kantor

Machinery and raw emotion collide in this drama of direct encounter between the human body and its technological extensions. In the most recent manifestation of The File Cabinet Project, installation and performance artist Istvan Kantor links his ongoing exploration of the sculptural system and kinesonic potential of the file cabinet to the abused and eroticized human body.

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Past exhibition
Nov 26 - Dec 18, 1999

Gisèle Trudel―Gisèle Trudel. Curated by Nina Czegledy

Featuring the video sculptures:

Timepiece: Kiss the Future – a video sculpture that utilizes a newly adapted version of the original 1838 Wheatstone stereoscope in combination with 3D computer animation to extend the potential of 2D video images in order to examine the ways in which representations of space and the body are moulded by the belief systems and technologies of various time periods.

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Past exhibition
Sep 10 - Oct 9, 1999

Game Girls ―Judy Cheung, Paula Gignac, Nancy Paterson, Cheryl Sourkes and Carla J. Wolf. Curated by Kathleen Pirrie Adams

Game Girls is an exhibition of interactive installations, CD-ROMs and video projections that play fast and loose with the usual rules of the game. Using shooting gallery, arcade kiosk and computer game structures as a basis for their work, each artist offers a highly individual answer to the games industry's "holy grail" question: What games do girls want to play?

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Past exhibition
May 14 - Jun 12, 1999

SenseBus―An Art and Robotics Group project

Remembering in states of you,
the feeling of your bright light sound wave,
like a shaking timber.
Together we make a song to filter light and bathe.
Changing, resting, disappearing.

SenseBus is a collaboratively built, interactive sensory environment. There is no central "brain." There are no screens, mice or keyboards. Using the type of microprocessors found in washers and dryers, the SenseBus system circulates sense information within a distributed network of sensory modules.

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Past exhibition
Apr 21 - May 1, 1999

Tactile Video―An exhibition of interactive video installation art conceived and coordinated by Jeff Mann

Ephemeral visions – thirty apparitions per second – trying to get in touch... can interactive video cross over from cyberspace into material reality? Spectres of light with animalistic awareness, ubiquitous presence, sensation, impression, embraceable tactility. Would you rather point and click, or dance and kiss?

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Past exhibition
Apr 14 - May 6, 1999

Relay Room―Laura Kikauka

Relay Room is an experiential sound sculpture installed in the freight elevator at the east end of the 401 Richmond Street West building.

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Past exhibition
Jan 22 - Feb 26, 1999

Touch:Touche―Daniel Jolliffe and Thecla Schiphorst. Curated by Nina Czegledy

Interactivity and electronic art are phrases that the public generally associates with intimidating high-tech gear, but there's nothing inaccessible or unnecessarily complicated about Touch:Touché. Sensual, visual and directly involving, each piece allows the viewer to engage, and enjoy, on a number of levels from the immediate and tactile to the more intellectual. This exhibition of works by Thecla Schiphorst and Daniel Jolliffe embodies the essence of interactive art as it explores issues of presence, perception, movement and control.

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