Archive for the ‘news’ Category

A little love from In Toronto Magazine

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2012

My solo exhibition Modern Canadian Interiors  has received some promotional love from In Toronto Magazine!

intoronto magazine promo modern Canadian interiors

Story by Gordon Bowness. See the full-spread below. Or click here to read In Toronto’s current issue online now.

intoronto-plug-2

Modern Canadian Interiors
Photography by Richelle Forsey
May 1 – June 30, 2012
The Cabinet Salon, 577 Queen Street West
Hours: Tues- Fri:10am – 8pm & Sat: 10am – 5pm
Opening Reception: Thursday May 3, from 6 – 9pm

Scotiabank Contact Photography Festival

Sunday, April 8th, 2012

Contact, the annual festival of photography in Toronto, during the month of May, with over 1000 local, national and international artists exhibiting at almost 200 venues is almost here and I am having a solo exhibition at The Cabinet Salon.

It’s been ages since I’ve shown work on my own and I’m excited to exhibit a modest collection of new works during the Contact Photography Festival.

Modern Canadian Interiors
Photography by Richelle Forsey
May 1 – June 30, 2012
The Cabinet Salon, 577 Queen Street West
Hours: Tues- Fri:10am – 8pm & Sat: 10am – 5pm
Opening Reception: Thursday May 3, from 6 – 9pm

 

Richelle Forsey promo postcard

The Merlin Years : The Art of Team Macho II @ The shopAGO

Tuesday, March 20th, 2012

Today I had a sneak peek at The Merlin Years : The Art of Team Macho II while I was visiting my friend Melinda Josie (also a wonderful illustrator and artist!) and it is beautiful!

Not only am I excited about the book because it’s Team Macho and their work is genius/amazing/hilarious/edgy/awesome (if you’re not familiar with the collective mind power that is the work of Nicholas Aoki, Stephen Appleby-Barr, Christopher Buchan, and Lauchie Reid you need to get googling…) I’m psyched because it includes the photos I shot of their studio that I blogged about last year. The book also features the latest Team Macho family portrait we shot last month (see below)!

You too, can get your copy of The Merlin Years: the Art of Team Macho II this Thursday (March 22, 2012) at the book launch and signing at the shopAGO!

 

Team Macho family portrait

 UPDATE (March 23): The smell of a freshly pressed book is intoxicating and at 7am this morning I got high on the fumes of a new book and looked at pictures by and read about Team Macho.  The Merlin Years is absolutely gorgeous and a solid read. The Deep in the Shirt Yurt interview with Maggie MaDonald is wonderfully candid, the essay, Being Macho by A. James Bradley does a justice to their practice that is so often missed when their work is reviewed or discussed and the Axis Mundy DIY Guide by Ann Marie Peña strings the book, their practice, ideas and methods together. Oh, and the pictures are pretty sweet!

 

FR-CP and the Contact Photography Fesitval

Monday, March 19th, 2012

It’s official. I have just signed on to be represented by Flying Rooster Contemporary Projects (FR-CP.com)! FR-CP goes live in May 2012, just in time for the Scotiabank Contact Photography Festival during which I have a solo exhibition at Cabinet Salon!

I have a lot of work to do!

silence on the kill floor

Modern Canadian Interiors has been submitted to the ABotM

Tuesday, March 13th, 2012

The TLR Club’s Modern Canadian Interiors has been submitted to the Artist Book of the Moment. The “A” is silent.

Publishing is not a neutral act. It is implicitly political and aesthetic. The publishing is part of the aesthetic of the work, in terms of its look, its distribution, and how the audience interacts with the work, both in termsthe Good Book of reading it, engaging with its writers and publishers, and in how it finds its audience.” - Gary Barwin

In April, the ABotM jury will choose books they deem worthy of an ABotM designation and then in May one book will be revealed as the finalist, the Book of the Moment. Books deigned as ABotM in April will be available in the AGYU for public browsing.

Wish us luck!

 

 

 

 

 

Darkness and Light at the John B. Aird Gallery

Sunday, February 26th, 2012

One of my photographs, Kodak Building 9, from the Toronto Kodak Factory site was chosen for the Ontario Society of Artists 139th Annual Open Juried Exhibition: Darkness and Light!

The exhibition runs March 6 – 30 at the John B. Aird Gallery (900 Bay Street, Macdonald Block, Toronto, ON, M7A 1C), and the Opening Reception /Awards Presentation is Thursday March 8, 6-8pm.

Kodak Number 9

Modern Canadian Interiors UPDATE!

Friday, February 10th, 2012

Modern Canadian Interiors, the first book by the TLR Club (Richelle Forsey, Martin Helmut Reis, Alejandro Valencia, Kevin McBride and Colin Savage), is a photographic journey of abandoned spaces in Ontario including the Gravenhurst TB Sanatorium, the Old Don Jail, New York Pork, Firestone Tire, St. Clements Church and more…

Is now available in four bookstores and galleries!

the Art Gallery of Ontario shop
EYELEVEL Gallery in Halifax during ERI: THE RESISTANCE TO CHANGE reshelving initiative 5
the Stephen Bulger Gallery bookstore
and
Swipe Design | Books + Objects

 

MCI book cover

As always, Modern Canadian Interiors is available directly from Richelle Forsey

A ceasefire with the KNU, the release of political prisoners…. change in Burma!

Sunday, January 15th, 2012

In 1997 I lived in the border area between Thailand and Burma for almost a year with members of the All Burma Students Democratic Front (ABSDF ), teaching English and volunteering in exchange for room & board so I could help/participate in their fight for democracy.

15 years on and change may be afoot in Burma and my friends may eventually be able to go home.

I am so elated to hear about the ceasefire between the Karen National Union (KNU) and the junta, the release of hundreds of political prisoners and the NLD participating in the April 2012 elections.

Below are a few of the photos I took during my stay.

“Inside Greenwich-Mohawk Brownfield”: an exhibit

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

I have been invited to show some of my photographs at the 4TH ANNUAL Brownfield Forum: Brownfield Redevelopment & the Community. If you are in Brantford on Nov. 9, drop by the Brantford Polish Hall, 154 Pearl Street to see my work and photos by The Brantford Camera Club.

Although I didn’t “get inside”, I did tour the property of the Greenwich-Mohawk Brownfield/formerly the Massey-Ferguson, Massey-Harris and Cockshutt Plow industrial campus – in the pouring rain during the sites “doors open” last May.brantford_greenwich_mohawk

 

For more information:
519-759-4150 ext. 2334
www.brantford.ca/brownfields

Modern Canadian Interiors Reviewed!

Tuesday, October 25th, 2011

Today I discovered a glowing  review of the book Modern Canadian Interiors that the TLR Club (of which i am a member) published this May on the Hotshot* blog.

MCI book coverAnd without further ado here is the review!

Modern Canadian Interiors by Jacqueline Bennett

Modern Canadian Interiors (2010) is the first publication by the TLR Club to highlight a rich collection of photography and carefully executed research. The TLR Club (Twin Lens Reflex) consists of five photographers; Alejandro Valencia, Colin Savage, Kevin McBride, Martin Helmut Reis and Richelle Forsey.

An interesting and somewhat ironic name choice- Modern Canadian Interiors suggests an entirely different context than the works reveal. Readers may be surprised to learn the TLR Club’s collection of photography explores technically “vacant structures” and in some cases condemned buildings to expose a whole new world of still-life occurring behind the seemingly abandoned walls. There is a surprising wealth of interesting artifacts, graffiti, and spaces still obviously used by squatters, thrill seekers and the like, revealing that these buildings are anything but vacant.

What is not surprising is that the TLR Club members are much more than photographers; they are part of a larger community known as Urban Explorers, which by definition are, “ [people] who explore restricted urban areas such as abandonments, tunnels, roofs, construction sites, etc.” (www.urbanexplorers.net). In MCI viewers get a behind the scenes look into the many places in our communities that have been left to crumble in order to make room for “new” infrastructures and gentrification to take place. Andrew Shaver notes in his foreword that, “while there is a degree of activism that is evident in the choices of [the TLR Club's] photographic subjects, theirs is an implicit, not explicit argument” (p. 7, A. Shaver) of social and economic urban decay.

Beyond the context of the MCI collection is the remarkable composition which beautifully highlights the thick textures of peeling paint, the varying degree of lighting that creeps in, and an assortment of items left behind that reference past occupants. Each page leads to a story greater than the last. An added feature for true art historians is found on the last pages which detail the histories and fate of each structure.

In conclusion, whether you are looking for beautiful conversation pieces, interested in the histories of abandoned buildings or a true thrill seeker at heart, this publication is sure to satisfy an array of audiences interested in Canadian photography at its best.

By: Jacqueline Bennett