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christmas
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Glenn Gould Studio
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The Image Centre
september

Event Details
Banovan is a photo-based project produced in 2020 that examines the role of photography in how we understand and make personal, familial, and collective memories. Originating in the artist’s desire
Event Details
Banovan is a photo-based project produced in 2020 that examines the role of photography in how we understand and make personal, familial, and collective memories. Originating in the artist’s desire to connect with an inaccessible family history in Iran, the project employs found family snapshots and combines them with images from a popular Iranian women’s magazine published in the 1950s. Layering and juxtaposing the female subjects pictured in the family photographs and on the magazine’s pages, the interventions create a collision of meanings where personal and sociopolitical narratives intersect. The project also addresses the complicated relationships between familial, cultural, and historical contexts that have influenced women’s lives in Iran.
Related Public Program
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - October 21 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
Between 1991 and 2003, Canadian documentary photographer Louie Palu established himself in the mining communities of Northeastern Ontario and Northwestern Quebec. Over time he accumulated an extensive, in-depth body of
Event Details
Between 1991 and 2003, Canadian documentary photographer Louie Palu established himself in the mining communities of Northeastern Ontario and Northwestern Quebec. Over time he accumulated an extensive, in-depth body of work that revealed the living and working conditions of the miners, while also capturing the formidable industrial architecture of the pits. Cage Call gathers together more than fifty black-and-white photographs and ephemera from Palu’s visual archive of this central but often overlooked and misunderstood aspect of Canada’s industrial culture.
Related Public Programs
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Artist Talk — Louie Palu: Cage Call
Wednesday, October 4, 2023 | 7 pm
Online via Zoom
All events take place at The Image Centre (33 Gould St., Toronto) unless otherwise noted.
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - December 9 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
Artist Su Rynard’s correspondence with her uncle, Vernon Rowley, inspired As Soon As Weather Will Permit—the haunting and disquieting story of one soldier’s participation in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima,
Event Details
Artist Su Rynard’s correspondence with her uncle, Vernon Rowley, inspired As Soon As Weather Will Permit—the haunting and disquieting story of one soldier’s participation in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, on August 6, 1945. This two-channel video combines their verbal and written exchanges with family archives, historical footage evoking nuclear warfare, and stark landscapes of the Utah airfield and bombing range where Air Force radar operator Rowley trained for the atomic mission by the US government. Threading these disparate audiovisual elements together, Rynard reconciles one person’s conflicted recollection with the collective memory of a dramatic and violent historic event.
The artist gratefully acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts.
Related Public Program
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - December 9 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
September 13, 2023–April 6, 2024 (Holiday Closure: December 10, 2023–January 16, 2024) Featuring more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, this exhibition explores the important role of photo agencies
Event Details
September 13, 2023–April 6, 2024
(Holiday Closure: December 10, 2023–January 16, 2024)
Featuring more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, this exhibition explores the important role of photo agencies during the heyday of print photojournalism. Drawing from The Image Centre’s famous Black Star press photography collection as well as the archive of Canada’s national news agency, The Canadian Press, the selection spans the twentieth century—from the British movement for women’s right to vote, through the Watts riots in Los Angeles, to the Oka Crisis in Quebec. Each story illuminates a different aspect of how photojournalists have worked to document the news and distribute their photographs for publication.
Generously supported by media sponsors The Toronto Star and blogTO.
Related Public Programs
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Facing Black Star Book Launch
Tuesday, October 17, 2023 | 6–8 pm
Special Exhibition Tour: Stories from the Picture Press
Wednesday, November 15, 2023 | 6 pm
Rachel Verbin & Paul Roth
Special Exhibition Tour: Stories from the Picture Press
Wednesday, November 29, 2023 | 6 pm
Rachel Verbin & Gaëlle Morel
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - April 6 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer
october

Event Details
Banovan is a photo-based project produced in 2020 that examines the role of photography in how we understand and make personal, familial, and collective memories. Originating in the artist’s desire
Event Details
Banovan is a photo-based project produced in 2020 that examines the role of photography in how we understand and make personal, familial, and collective memories. Originating in the artist’s desire to connect with an inaccessible family history in Iran, the project employs found family snapshots and combines them with images from a popular Iranian women’s magazine published in the 1950s. Layering and juxtaposing the female subjects pictured in the family photographs and on the magazine’s pages, the interventions create a collision of meanings where personal and sociopolitical narratives intersect. The project also addresses the complicated relationships between familial, cultural, and historical contexts that have influenced women’s lives in Iran.
Related Public Program
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - October 21 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
Between 1991 and 2003, Canadian documentary photographer Louie Palu established himself in the mining communities of Northeastern Ontario and Northwestern Quebec. Over time he accumulated an extensive, in-depth body of
Event Details
Between 1991 and 2003, Canadian documentary photographer Louie Palu established himself in the mining communities of Northeastern Ontario and Northwestern Quebec. Over time he accumulated an extensive, in-depth body of work that revealed the living and working conditions of the miners, while also capturing the formidable industrial architecture of the pits. Cage Call gathers together more than fifty black-and-white photographs and ephemera from Palu’s visual archive of this central but often overlooked and misunderstood aspect of Canada’s industrial culture.
Related Public Programs
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Artist Talk — Louie Palu: Cage Call
Wednesday, October 4, 2023 | 7 pm
Online via Zoom
All events take place at The Image Centre (33 Gould St., Toronto) unless otherwise noted.
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - December 9 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
Artist Su Rynard’s correspondence with her uncle, Vernon Rowley, inspired As Soon As Weather Will Permit—the haunting and disquieting story of one soldier’s participation in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima,
Event Details
Artist Su Rynard’s correspondence with her uncle, Vernon Rowley, inspired As Soon As Weather Will Permit—the haunting and disquieting story of one soldier’s participation in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, on August 6, 1945. This two-channel video combines their verbal and written exchanges with family archives, historical footage evoking nuclear warfare, and stark landscapes of the Utah airfield and bombing range where Air Force radar operator Rowley trained for the atomic mission by the US government. Threading these disparate audiovisual elements together, Rynard reconciles one person’s conflicted recollection with the collective memory of a dramatic and violent historic event.
The artist gratefully acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts.
Related Public Program
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - December 9 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
September 13, 2023–April 6, 2024 (Holiday Closure: December 10, 2023–January 16, 2024) Featuring more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, this exhibition explores the important role of photo agencies
Event Details
September 13, 2023–April 6, 2024
(Holiday Closure: December 10, 2023–January 16, 2024)
Featuring more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, this exhibition explores the important role of photo agencies during the heyday of print photojournalism. Drawing from The Image Centre’s famous Black Star press photography collection as well as the archive of Canada’s national news agency, The Canadian Press, the selection spans the twentieth century—from the British movement for women’s right to vote, through the Watts riots in Los Angeles, to the Oka Crisis in Quebec. Each story illuminates a different aspect of how photojournalists have worked to document the news and distribute their photographs for publication.
Generously supported by media sponsors The Toronto Star and blogTO.
Related Public Programs
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Facing Black Star Book Launch
Tuesday, October 17, 2023 | 6–8 pm
Special Exhibition Tour: Stories from the Picture Press
Wednesday, November 15, 2023 | 6 pm
Rachel Verbin & Paul Roth
Special Exhibition Tour: Stories from the Picture Press
Wednesday, November 29, 2023 | 6 pm
Rachel Verbin & Gaëlle Morel
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - April 6 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer
november

Event Details
Between 1991 and 2003, Canadian documentary photographer Louie Palu established himself in the mining communities of Northeastern Ontario and Northwestern Quebec. Over time he accumulated an extensive, in-depth body of
Event Details
Between 1991 and 2003, Canadian documentary photographer Louie Palu established himself in the mining communities of Northeastern Ontario and Northwestern Quebec. Over time he accumulated an extensive, in-depth body of work that revealed the living and working conditions of the miners, while also capturing the formidable industrial architecture of the pits. Cage Call gathers together more than fifty black-and-white photographs and ephemera from Palu’s visual archive of this central but often overlooked and misunderstood aspect of Canada’s industrial culture.
Related Public Programs
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Artist Talk — Louie Palu: Cage Call
Wednesday, October 4, 2023 | 7 pm
Online via Zoom
All events take place at The Image Centre (33 Gould St., Toronto) unless otherwise noted.
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - December 9 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
Artist Su Rynard’s correspondence with her uncle, Vernon Rowley, inspired As Soon As Weather Will Permit—the haunting and disquieting story of one soldier’s participation in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima,
Event Details
Artist Su Rynard’s correspondence with her uncle, Vernon Rowley, inspired As Soon As Weather Will Permit—the haunting and disquieting story of one soldier’s participation in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, on August 6, 1945. This two-channel video combines their verbal and written exchanges with family archives, historical footage evoking nuclear warfare, and stark landscapes of the Utah airfield and bombing range where Air Force radar operator Rowley trained for the atomic mission by the US government. Threading these disparate audiovisual elements together, Rynard reconciles one person’s conflicted recollection with the collective memory of a dramatic and violent historic event.
The artist gratefully acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts.
Related Public Program
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - December 9 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
September 13, 2023–April 6, 2024 (Holiday Closure: December 10, 2023–January 16, 2024) Featuring more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, this exhibition explores the important role of photo agencies
Event Details
September 13, 2023–April 6, 2024
(Holiday Closure: December 10, 2023–January 16, 2024)
Featuring more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, this exhibition explores the important role of photo agencies during the heyday of print photojournalism. Drawing from The Image Centre’s famous Black Star press photography collection as well as the archive of Canada’s national news agency, The Canadian Press, the selection spans the twentieth century—from the British movement for women’s right to vote, through the Watts riots in Los Angeles, to the Oka Crisis in Quebec. Each story illuminates a different aspect of how photojournalists have worked to document the news and distribute their photographs for publication.
Generously supported by media sponsors The Toronto Star and blogTO.
Related Public Programs
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Facing Black Star Book Launch
Tuesday, October 17, 2023 | 6–8 pm
Special Exhibition Tour: Stories from the Picture Press
Wednesday, November 15, 2023 | 6 pm
Rachel Verbin & Paul Roth
Special Exhibition Tour: Stories from the Picture Press
Wednesday, November 29, 2023 | 6 pm
Rachel Verbin & Gaëlle Morel
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - April 6 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
In her exhibition The Music Sang ‘Lean on Me’ Hannah Somers investigates her own identity by returning to her roots, creating visual conversations between her mother and aunt, biracial twin
Event Details
In her exhibition The Music Sang ‘Lean on Me’ Hannah Somers investigates her own identity by returning to her roots, creating visual conversations between her mother and aunt, biracial twin sisters adopted into a white family in the 1960s. The photographs and video featured in the exhibition recount the circumstances of the sisters’ upbringing and its effect on their racial and social identities. The imagery probes their role models, and depicts their relationship with one another through discussion and gesture. Raised within a predominantly white community, the sisters’ were aware of everyone’s eyes upon them and the stereotypes that clung to their Black individuality. Through lighthearted conversation they recount growing up with no familial connection to their heritage or the Black community. In response, they idolized and felt connected with figures in popular culture and the media.
Related Public Program
Student Gallery Opening Reception—Hannah Somers: The Music Sang ‘Lean on Me’
Wednesday, November 1, 2023 | 6–8 pm
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
November 1 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - December 9 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
Join us to celebrate the opening of Hannah Somers’ new exhibition, The Music Sang ‘Lean on Me’ in the IMC Student Gallery. About the Exhibition In The Music Sang ‘Lean on
Event Details
Join us to celebrate the opening of Hannah Somers’ new exhibition, The Music Sang ‘Lean on Me’ in the IMC Student Gallery.
About the Exhibition
In The Music Sang ‘Lean on Me’ Hannah Somers investigates her own identity by returning to her roots, creating visual conversations between her mother and aunt, biracial twin sisters adopted into a white family in the 1960s. The photographs and video featured in the exhibition recount the circumstances of the sisters’ upbringing and its effect on their racial and social identities. The imagery probes their role models, and depicts their relationship with one another through discussion and gesture. Raised within a predominantly white community, the sisters’ were aware of everyone’s eyes upon them and the stereotypes that clung to their Black individuality. Through lighthearted conversation they recount growing up with no familial connection to their heritage or the Black community. In response, they idolized and felt connected with figures in popular culture and the media.
About the Artist
Hannah Somers is a Tkaronto/Toronto-based artist and curator. She has a completed BFA at Toronto Metropolitan University in Image Arts Photography Studies. Being a biracial woman of colour with a Caribbean heritage has influenced many of her investigations. Her work centralizes around the expression and discovery of identity, ethnicity and race. Understanding different relationships and histories of these themes are important in her process. Utilizing photography, video and audio, she creates narratives within her fine art practice. She recently exhibited her work at Stephen Bulger Gallery and the Alliance Française Gallery and curated a group exhibition at the Artspace Gallery in Tkaronto/Toronto. Her work has been included in publications such as Filling Station Magazine and Public Parking Journal.
Admission is always free.
Gallery Hours
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Tuesday: Closed
Free Exhibition Tours
Tuesdays: Tours by appointment
Wednesday–Friday: 1:30pm, drop-in
more
Time
(Wednesday) 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
Explore more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, while learning how photojournalists and press agencies worked together to document the news and distribute images for publication. Led by
Event Details
Explore more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, while learning how photojournalists and press agencies worked together to document the news and distribute images for publication. Led by co-curators Rachel Verbin and Paul Roth.
About the Exhibition
Featuring more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, this exhibition explores the important role of photo agencies during the heyday of print photojournalism. Drawing from The Image Centre’s famous Black Star press photography collection as well as the archive of Canada’s national news agency, The Canadian Press, the selection spans the twentieth century—from the British movement for women’s right to vote, through the Watts riots in Los Angeles, to the Oka Crisis in Quebec. Each story illuminates a different aspect of how photojournalists have worked to document the news and distribute their photographs for publication.
Admission is always free.
Gallery Hours
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Tuesday: Closed
Free Exhibition Tours
Tuesdays: Tours by appointment
Wednesday–Friday: 1:30pm, drop-in
more
Time
(Wednesday) 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
Explore more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, while learning how photojournalists and press agencies worked together to document the news and distribute images for publication. Led by
Event Details
Explore more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, while learning how photojournalists and press agencies worked together to document the news and distribute images for publication. Led by co-curators Rachel Verbin and Gaëlle Morel .
About the Exhibition
Featuring more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, this exhibition explores the important role of photo agencies during the heyday of print photojournalism. Drawing from The Image Centre’s famous Black Star press photography collection as well as the archive of Canada’s national news agency, The Canadian Press, the selection spans the twentieth century—from the British movement for women’s right to vote, through the Watts riots in Los Angeles, to the Oka Crisis in Quebec. Each story illuminates a different aspect of how photojournalists have worked to document the news and distribute their photographs for publication.
Admission is always free.
Gallery Hours
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Tuesday: Closed
Free Exhibition Tours
Tuesdays: Tours by appointment
Wednesday–Friday: 1:30pm, drop-in
more
Time
(Wednesday) 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Organizer
december

Event Details
Between 1991 and 2003, Canadian documentary photographer Louie Palu established himself in the mining communities of Northeastern Ontario and Northwestern Quebec. Over time he accumulated an extensive, in-depth body of
Event Details
Between 1991 and 2003, Canadian documentary photographer Louie Palu established himself in the mining communities of Northeastern Ontario and Northwestern Quebec. Over time he accumulated an extensive, in-depth body of work that revealed the living and working conditions of the miners, while also capturing the formidable industrial architecture of the pits. Cage Call gathers together more than fifty black-and-white photographs and ephemera from Palu’s visual archive of this central but often overlooked and misunderstood aspect of Canada’s industrial culture.
Related Public Programs
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Artist Talk — Louie Palu: Cage Call
Wednesday, October 4, 2023 | 7 pm
Online via Zoom
All events take place at The Image Centre (33 Gould St., Toronto) unless otherwise noted.
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - December 9 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
Artist Su Rynard’s correspondence with her uncle, Vernon Rowley, inspired As Soon As Weather Will Permit—the haunting and disquieting story of one soldier’s participation in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima,
Event Details
Artist Su Rynard’s correspondence with her uncle, Vernon Rowley, inspired As Soon As Weather Will Permit—the haunting and disquieting story of one soldier’s participation in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, on August 6, 1945. This two-channel video combines their verbal and written exchanges with family archives, historical footage evoking nuclear warfare, and stark landscapes of the Utah airfield and bombing range where Air Force radar operator Rowley trained for the atomic mission by the US government. Threading these disparate audiovisual elements together, Rynard reconciles one person’s conflicted recollection with the collective memory of a dramatic and violent historic event.
The artist gratefully acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts.
Related Public Program
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - December 9 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
September 13, 2023–April 6, 2024 (Holiday Closure: December 10, 2023–January 16, 2024) Featuring more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, this exhibition explores the important role of photo agencies
Event Details
September 13, 2023–April 6, 2024
(Holiday Closure: December 10, 2023–January 16, 2024)
Featuring more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, this exhibition explores the important role of photo agencies during the heyday of print photojournalism. Drawing from The Image Centre’s famous Black Star press photography collection as well as the archive of Canada’s national news agency, The Canadian Press, the selection spans the twentieth century—from the British movement for women’s right to vote, through the Watts riots in Los Angeles, to the Oka Crisis in Quebec. Each story illuminates a different aspect of how photojournalists have worked to document the news and distribute their photographs for publication.
Generously supported by media sponsors The Toronto Star and blogTO.
Related Public Programs
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Facing Black Star Book Launch
Tuesday, October 17, 2023 | 6–8 pm
Special Exhibition Tour: Stories from the Picture Press
Wednesday, November 15, 2023 | 6 pm
Rachel Verbin & Paul Roth
Special Exhibition Tour: Stories from the Picture Press
Wednesday, November 29, 2023 | 6 pm
Rachel Verbin & Gaëlle Morel
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - April 6 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer

Event Details
In her exhibition The Music Sang ‘Lean on Me’ Hannah Somers investigates her own identity by returning to her roots, creating visual conversations between her mother and aunt, biracial twin
Event Details
In her exhibition The Music Sang ‘Lean on Me’ Hannah Somers investigates her own identity by returning to her roots, creating visual conversations between her mother and aunt, biracial twin sisters adopted into a white family in the 1960s. The photographs and video featured in the exhibition recount the circumstances of the sisters’ upbringing and its effect on their racial and social identities. The imagery probes their role models, and depicts their relationship with one another through discussion and gesture. Raised within a predominantly white community, the sisters’ were aware of everyone’s eyes upon them and the stereotypes that clung to their Black individuality. Through lighthearted conversation they recount growing up with no familial connection to their heritage or the Black community. In response, they idolized and felt connected with figures in popular culture and the media.
Related Public Program
Student Gallery Opening Reception—Hannah Somers: The Music Sang ‘Lean on Me’
Wednesday, November 1, 2023 | 6–8 pm
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
more
Time
November 1 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - December 9 (Saturday) 6:00 pm
Organizer
january

Event Details
September 13, 2023–April 6, 2024 (Holiday Closure: December 10, 2023–January 16, 2024) Featuring more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, this exhibition explores the important role of photo agencies
Event Details
September 13, 2023–April 6, 2024
(Holiday Closure: December 10, 2023–January 16, 2024)
Featuring more than thirty-five stories about historic events and personalities, this exhibition explores the important role of photo agencies during the heyday of print photojournalism. Drawing from The Image Centre’s famous Black Star press photography collection as well as the archive of Canada’s national news agency, The Canadian Press, the selection spans the twentieth century—from the British movement for women’s right to vote, through the Watts riots in Los Angeles, to the Oka Crisis in Quebec. Each story illuminates a different aspect of how photojournalists have worked to document the news and distribute their photographs for publication.
Generously supported by media sponsors The Toronto Star and blogTO.
Related Public Programs
Fall Exhibitions Opening Party
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 | 7:30-9:30 pm
Facing Black Star Book Launch
Tuesday, October 17, 2023 | 6–8 pm
Special Exhibition Tour: Stories from the Picture Press
Wednesday, November 15, 2023 | 6 pm
Rachel Verbin & Paul Roth
Special Exhibition Tour: Stories from the Picture Press
Wednesday, November 29, 2023 | 6 pm
Rachel Verbin & Gaëlle Morel
Admission is always free
Gallery Hours (Fall Season)
Wednesday: 12–8 pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–6 pm
Sunday–Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed (Tours by appt.)
Daily Drop-in Tours (Fall Season)
Wednesday–Friday, 1:30pm
Free, no reservation required
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Time
September 13 (Wednesday) 12:00 pm - April 6 (Saturday) 6:00 pm