Exposing Toronto’s Underground Waterways

Gail Chiasson, North American Editor

When we heard about ‘Contacting Toronto: Under this Ground’ transforming Toronto’s subway system during Scotiabank CONTACT, and offering a glimpse of the city’s underground waterways to more than one million Toronto Transit Commission’s commuters daily throughout May, it sounded a little bizarre.

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But that was before we discovered that Scotiabank CONTACT is an annual Photography Festival in May with well over 1,500 Canadian and international artists and photographers exhibiting at more than 175 venues throughout the Greater Toronto Area.

CONTACT is believed to be the largest photography event in the world. The public installations of photography are presented in high profile public sites across the city that are accessible to a wide and diverse audience from all walks of life.

Contacting Toronto: Under this Ground is an official public installation of the photography festival. It highlights the exploration of Toronto’s buried waterways and sewers by artists Michael Cook and Andrew Emond, exposing these concealed spaces to the public for the first time at this scale.

Michael Cook’s compelling photographs of Toronto’s sewer system represent both a metaphoric and physical shining of light on this unseen layer of the city. 45 posters take over St. Patrick subway station, turning the entire space into a site-specific installation.

Andrew Emond leads the viewer through three Toronto tunnels with his stop-motion animations, playing every 10 minutes on all Pattison Onestop subway platform screens. Further, dedicated ‘Art Zone’ screens offer uninterrupted play of Emond’s videos in Bloor, St. Andrew and Dundas stations for the first week of the exhibition.

“Toronto’s subway platform screens and posters are the perfect location for this project, allowing viewers to reflect on a layer of the city to which we are all connected, yet rarely have the opportunity to see,” says Sharon Switzer, director, Art for Commuters and arts programmer and curator, Pattison Onestop.


One Response to “Exposing Toronto’s Underground Waterways”

  1. Exciting Press for Contacting Toronto 2013 | Art for Commuters Says:

    […] DOOH: “Exposing Toronto’s Underground Waterways” – 25 April, 2013 PDF […]

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