Annie MacDonell: The Beyond Within
to
Audain Gallery 149 West Hastings Street, Vancouver, British Columbia V6B 1H4
Annie MacDonell, "Ego Deathtrip," 2021
courtesy the artist
Opening Reception, Wednesday, June 1, 7 – 9pm Audain Gallery
ASL interpretation will be provided for this event.
Join us to celebrate the opening of Annie MacDonell’s solo exhibition, The Beyond Within. The artist and co-curator Crystal Mowry will be in attendance and will offer an informal walk through the exhibition; remarks begin at 7:15pm. Refreshments will be available. In accordance with SFU’s Covid-19 protocols face masks are recommended.
Film Screening: Three Works by Annie MacDonell
Saturday, June 4, 2022, 2pm Djavad Mowafaghian Cinema, 149 West Hastings Street
ASL interpretation will be provided for this event.
As a surface with only one side, the Möbius strip resists orientation. To trace its path is to experience left becoming right, outside flipping in, and time assuming the shape of an infinite loop. The perimeter of a Möbius strip is defined, but the twist in the loop prevents predictability. Within static institutions and other familiar containers, is it possible to experience a similar twist – a radical detour – that encourages us to build our worlds anew?
Underpinned by feminist conceptions of the everyday as a basis for political engagement with the world, Annie MacDonell's predominantly lens-based practice questions how images are constituted and circulated. Beginning from the photographic impulse to capture and frame, MacDonell frequently uses found images to propose strategies for our personal and political reorientations. MacDonell’s recent work looks to under-recognized sites of experimentation as full of artistic and political possibility: psychedelic experience as a means to dissolve the ego and generate new models of collectivity is central to the works in The Beyond Within. This multi-part video installation is informed by historical and contemporary psychedelic trials performed within research settings.
Juxtaposing text, drawings and photographs sourced from early psychedelic trials, and architectural sets that recall the institutional examination rooms in which these trials took place, MacDonell's works propose a boundary between the subject and viewer that is not only marginal, but porous and continuously shifting. By making use of radical and lateral modes of thinking and storytelling, MacDonell affirms how art can be both a necessary clarifier and serve as an essential tool in world building.
Organized in collaboration with Crystal Mowry and Leila Timmins. Produced with support from the Kitchener-Waterloo Art Gallery and the Robert McLaughlin Gallery, Oshawa.
Annie MacDonell is a visual artist and filmmaker. Her early training was in photography, and the image continues to play a central role in her projects. Her work also includes installation, sculpture, writing, and performance. She received a BFA from Toronto Metropolitan University in 2000, followed by graduate studies at Le Fresnoy, Studio National des Arts Contemporains, in France. Her films Book of Hours(2019) and Communicating Vessels (with Maïder Fortuné, 2020) have screened extensively internationally. Recent solo shows have been held at the Kitchener Waterloo Art Gallery; Gallery 44, Toronto; Parisian Laundry, Montreal; the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto; and the Art Gallery of Mississauga. She has participated in group shows at The Art Museum of the University of Toronto; Contemporary Art Gallery, Vancouver; and the Mackenzie Art Gallery, Regina. Recent performances have been presented at Nuit Blanche Toronto, le Centre Pompidou and the Toronto International Film Festival. In 2012 she was short-listed for the AGO AIMIA prize for photography, and she was long listed for the Sobey Art Award in 2012, 2015 and 2016. MacDonell was short-listed for the 2021 Scotiabank Photography Award. In 2020, she and Maïder Fortuné won the Tiger Award for Best Short Film at the Rotterdam International Film Festival, for their film Communicating Vessels. Annie MacDonell lives in Toronto with her family and is an Assistant Professor at Toronto Metropolitan University’s School of Image Arts. She is a founding member of EMELIA AMALIA, a feminist research and writing group.
Crystal Mowry is a curator currently based in Treaty 4. She is the Director of Programs at the MacKenzie Art Gallery.
Leila Timmins is a Toronto-based curator and writer. She is currently the Senior Curator at The Robert McLaughlin Gallery and is a founding member of EMILIA-AMALIA.