Photography courtesy of MOCA
With MOCA, Toronto is Joining the Global Contemporary Art Conversation
By
Meghan McKenna
Date September 26, 2018
A major contemporary art museum is pretty much the mark of a cool, international cosmopolitan. Think about it: New York has one, Paris has one, London has one. Finally, Toronto has one too.
In the summer of 2015, Queen West’s Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art closed its doors. Soon after, it was announced that Toronto-based institution would be reborn as the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), housed in a 10-story, century-old factory in the Junction Triangle. After a couple of years—and some bureaucratic bugaboos—MOCA reopened its doors on September 22. It’s been a long time coming, but Toronto is ready to take its global city status: “There’s a conversation happening between Toronto and the rest of the world right now,” says Heidi Reitmaier, the museum’s Executive Director and CEO, “and MOCA is ripe to embrace it.”
The museum’s first major group exhibition, BELIEVE, reflects the city’s international attitude. Featuring 16 artists from Toronto and beyond, BELIEVE will explore how personal and collective beliefs define existence in a globalized world.
Here’s a taste of BELIEVE, on display at MOCA now until January 6, 2019.
MOCA
Their Eyes Were Watching God, 2017
By Awol Erizku
You may know Awol Erizku as the Ethiopian-American artist who famously shot Beyoncé’s iconic 2017 pregnancy portrait.
For BELIEVE, he tracks the evolution of his culture from ancient Egypt to the 1960s Civil Rights Movement.
MOCA
Fingers, 2018
Rajni Perera
In her art, Toronto-based, Sri Lankan-born artist Rajni Perera explores hybridity, sacrilege, irreverence, the indexical sciences,
ethnography, gender, sexuality, popular culture,
deities, monsters and dream worlds.
MOCA
BE:LIE:VE, 2002
by Kendell Geers
This neon piece by South African conceptual artist Kendell Geers is situated in the front entrance of the museum, and suggests that every belief potentially contains a lie.
MOCA
Reliquaire, 2012
Tim Whiten
Whiten, a Michigan-born, Toronto-based artist, has two pieces on display in the exhibit. Here, the human skull, brushed with gold leaf, can be understood to represent the locus of knowledge, imagination and identity.
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