The Post Image Cluster

The Post Image Cluster The Post Image Cluster is part of Milieux Institute for Arts, Culture and Technology, a research cent

The Post Image Cluster is part of Milieux Institute for Arts, Culture and Technology, a research centre at Concordia University in Montreal, Canada.

📢Post-Image Research Cluster is excited to announce a compelling 2-day symposium titled “Visioning New Horizons”. This e...
10/12/2023

📢Post-Image Research Cluster is excited to announce a compelling 2-day symposium titled “Visioning New Horizons”. This event extends the dialogue initiated in Post-Image’s 2022-2023 speaker series “Moving the Landscape to Find Ground,” aiming to explore strategies, projects, and policies to affect change and decenter colonialism within arts institutions founded upon White settler governance and colonial structures. “Visioning New Horizons” is presented in partnership with Indigenous Futures Research Centre, Faculty of Fine Arts, Milieux Institute for Arts and Culture and Onkwehonwené:ha Research Chair.

📚From interrogating images, to the critical role of curation in challenging narratives, the panels will engage with 2-Spirit/Queer practices and IBPOC expression of new materialities through lens-based practices, navigating through critical themes in arts and culture. Attendees can anticipate thought-provoking conversations that not only delve into past practices but also envision actionable change for the future.

🎟️Registration link in bio

☀️Day 1: Friday November 3rd, MB 10.201

📖11.00 - Keynote presentation
Jolene K. Rickard (Tuscarora, Turtle Clan), an Associate Professor at Cornell University, curator, and visual historian specializing in Indigenous art and material culture, will lend her expertise to initiate the discussions and frame the narrative for ensuing conversations.

📸01.30 - New materialities and lens-based practices
Catherine Blackburn, Hannah Claus, Juan Ortiz-Apuy
Moderator: Joana Joachim

🗺️03.00 - Reclaiming Place through Process
Dayna Danger, Peter Morin, Michaëlle Sergile
Moderator: Alice Ming Wai Jim

🌅Day 2: Saturday November 4th, MB 9th floor

📜11.00 - Archival Activism
eunice bélidor, Monika Kin Gagnon, Désirée Rochat
Moderator: Deanna Bowen

▼1.30 - 2-Spirit/Queer Artmaking and Curatorial Projects
asinnajaq, Léuli Eshrāghi, Kablusiak
Moderator: Michelle McGeough

🏛️3.00 - Critical Curation
Lori Beavis, Michelle Lavallee, Crystal Mowry
Moderator: Elwood Jimmy

Poster design by

Next week! ✨Post Image is announcing a book launch for “Driving in Palestine” by Rehab Nazzal. This in-person event will...
04/14/2023

Next week! ✨

Post Image is announcing a book launch for “Driving in Palestine” by Rehab Nazzal. This in-person event will be hosted on April 20th at 4PM at Concordia EV 11.725.

The event will include live Arabic music, refreshments & copies of the book for sale✨

Driving in Palestine is a research-creation project by acclaimed artist Rehab Nazzal, who explores the visible indices of the politics of mobility that she encountered firsthand while traversing the occupied West Bank between 2010 and 2020. This photography book consists of 160 black and white photographs, hand-drawn maps and critical essays in Arabic and English by Palestinian and Canadian scholars and artists.

The photographs were all captured from moving vehicles on the roads of the West Bank. They focus on Israel’s architecture of movement restrictions and surveillance structures that proliferate in the West Bank, including the Apartheid Wall, segregation walls surrounding illegal colonies, gates, fences, watchtowers, roadblocks and military checkpoints among other obstacles to freedom of movement.

Rehab Nazzal is a Palestinian-born multidisciplinary artist based in Toronto. Her work deals with the effects of settler-colonial violence on the bodies and minds of colonized peoples, on the land and on other non-human life. Nazzal’s video, photography and sound works have been exhibited in solo and group exhibitions across Canada and internationally. Dr. Nazzal was an assistant professor at Dar Al-Kalima University in Bethlehem and has taught at Simon Fraser University, Western University and Ottawa School of Art. She is the recipient of several awards, including the Social Justice Award from Toronto Metropolitan University and the Edmund and Isobel Ryan Visual Arts Award in Photography from the University of Ottawa.

Tomorrow! ✨Post Image presents lens-based artist and Concordia alumni Zinnia Naqvi, in the next installment of Moving th...
04/10/2023

Tomorrow! ✨Post Image presents lens-based artist and Concordia alumni Zinnia Naqvi, in the next installment of Moving the Landscape to Find Ground, a cycle of artist talks and artist residencies which takes place until May 2023. This series is built from a shared ambition to break open lens-based practices via the interrogation of the colonial prism through which photography exists. We are inviting conversation among all communities impacted by the colonial gaze.

The artist talk will take place on April 11th at 4PM: in-person at 4thSpace (1400 Maisonneuve Blvd W, Montreal, Quebec H3G 1M8) or via Zoom.

To attend onlive via Zoom please register on our website (link in bio). Registration for in-person attendance is not required.

Zinnia Naqvi (she/her) is a lens-based artist working in Tkaronto/Toronto. Her work examines issues of colonialism, cultural translation, language, and gender through the use of photography, video, the written word, and archival material. Recent projects have included archival and re-staged images, experimental documentary films, video installations, graphic design, and elaborate still-lives. Her artworks often invite the viewer to consider the position of the artist and the spectator, as well as analyze the complex social dynamics that unfold in front of the camera.
Naqvi’s work has been shown across Canada and internationally. She is a 2022 Fall Flaherty/Colgate Distinguished Global Filmmaker in Residence and recipient of the 2019 New Generation Photography Award organized by the National Gallery of Canada. Naqvi received a BFA in Photography Studies from Toronto Metropolitan University and an MFA in Studio Arts from Concordia University. She is currently a sessional lecturer at the University of Toronto and Toronto Metropolitan University.

Our programming is in collaboration with the Indigenous Futures Research Centre, the Feminist Media Studio and the Black Perspectives Office and daphne. This project is generously funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Milieux Institute for Arts and Culture and Concordia University’s OVPRGS.

Post Image presents lens-based artist and Concordia alumni Zinnia Naqvi, in the next installment of Moving the Landscape...
04/04/2023

Post Image presents lens-based artist and Concordia alumni Zinnia Naqvi, in the next installment of Moving the Landscape to Find Ground, a cycle of artist talks and artist residencies which takes place until May 2023. This series is built from a shared ambition to break open lens-based practices via the interrogation of the colonial prism through which photography exists. We are inviting conversation among all communities impacted by the colonial gaze.

The artist talk will take place on April 11th at 4PM: in-person at 4thSpace (1400 Maisonneuve Blvd W, Montreal, Quebec H3G 1M8) or via Zoom.

To attend onlive via Zoom please register on our website (link in bio). Registration for in-person attendance is not required.

Zinnia Naqvi (she/her) is a lens-based artist working in Tkaronto/Toronto. Her work examines issues of colonialism, cultural translation, language, and gender through the use of photography, video, the written word, and archival material. Recent projects have included archival and re-staged images, experimental documentary films, video installations, graphic design, and elaborate still-lives. Her artworks often invite the viewer to consider the position of the artist and the spectator, as well as analyze the complex social dynamics that unfold in front of the camera.
Naqvi’s work has been shown across Canada and internationally. She is a 2022 Fall Flaherty/Colgate Distinguished Global Filmmaker in Residence and recipient of the 2019 New Generation Photography Award organized by the National Gallery of Canada. Naqvi received a BFA in Photography Studies from Toronto Metropolitan University and an MFA in Studio Arts from Concordia University. She is currently a sessional lecturer at the University of Toronto and Toronto Metropolitan University.

Our programming is in collaboration with the Indigenous Futures Research Centre, the Feminist Media Studio and the Black Perspectives Office. This project is generously funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Milieux Institute for Arts and Culture and Concordia University’s OVPRGS.

GRAND OPENING + VERNISSAGE: 💚 Adult Sweetness 💗 by 🔮 Snack Witch Joni Cheung 🍡 MFA Thesis Exhibitionwww.snackwitch.ca🎉 V...
03/31/2023

GRAND OPENING + VERNISSAGE: 💚 Adult Sweetness 💗 by 🔮 Snack Witch Joni Cheung 🍡 MFA Thesis Exhibition


www.snackwitch.ca

🎉 Vernissage 🎉 Wed, April 5th, 2023: 6 - 9 pm
Thurs, April 6th: 3 - 8 pm
Sat, Apr 8th: 1 - 7 pm
Sun, Apr 9th: 1- 7 pm

Unfortunately, the VA building is closed Good Friday and Easter Monday :c

1395 Boulevard René-Lévesque O, Montréal, QC H3G 2M5
Concordia University VA Building
VA-102
MFA Gallery

DON’T MISS OUT ON A SNACKTASTIC NIGHT!

GRAND OPENING on the eve of 清明節 Qingming Festival,

Adult Sweetness is a love letter, invitation, gesture of remembrance, and an offering to Cheung’s ancestors—past and future...

💌💜💙💗💛💚🧡

Munch, crunch, and chewewew on a body of work that’s

SWEET, TART, SALTY, BITTER, UMAMI

Freshly squeezed from experiences of a Hong Kong-Chinese diasporic child growing up tirelessly grasping at their language ∴ culture.

Nothing quite tastes like slowly distilled homesickness. ⚗️

😿 Be there or be sNaCkLeSs!!!!! 😿

🍵🌶️🥭🍲🥟🥘🍦🍰🍍

🔮 Snack Witch Joni Cheung 🍡 is a grateful, uninvited guest born—and knows she wants to die—on the unceded territories of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm, Skwxwú7mesh, Stó:lō, and Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh peoples. They are hopefully going to be finished toiling over their MFA on the stolen lands of the Kanien’kehá:ka peoples to become a Certified Sculpture Witch at Concordia University. She holds a BFA with Distinction in Visual Art (2018) from the School for the Contemporary Arts at Simon Fraser University. A wicked ✨ eating art + making snacks⁠, their interdisciplinary practice investigates the relationship between objects↔place↔identity, navigating discourses of transnationalism, migration, and diasporas, always with humour, and sometimes with food. 😉

Aside from researching/art-making/imagining/writing/teaching/dreaming, Joni likes doing snack and beverage reviews, medium length walks at the beach, being wrapped into a blanket burrito 🌯 & cinnamon bun 🥐, and her perfect first date involves a thorough walkthrough at multiple grocery stores + Costco, bubble tea, and breads + pastries 🌈.

The Immersive Storytelling Studio is looking forward to hosting a hands-on AR storytelling workshop, and they are lookin...
03/26/2023

The Immersive Storytelling Studio is looking forward to hosting a hands-on AR storytelling workshop, and they are looking for up to three Concordia students who have an interest in immersive storytelling and/or the concept of embodiment in digital space.

You can find more information on the website under Events.

Workshop title: How do we tell AR stories related to place, space, and embodiment?

Workshop aims: learn how to create audio-visual content for an existing AR app from A to Z

Date: April 13th, 2023 between 1:30pm and 4:00pm

Location: Milieux Institute Room: EV 11-705, Concordia University, 1515 Ste-Catherine St. W, Montréal H3G 2W1

Number of available spaces for Concordia students: 3

Workshop delivered by: Reisa Levine (Media Producer and Lecturer, Cinema and Communications at Dawson) with students from Dawson, all co-creators of AR Cité: https://arcite.ca/ an AR App which aims to highlight hidden stories from Montréal.

The App is available now: AR Cité on the App Store and on Google Play.

AR Cité screen captures on Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/showcase/10118938

One of these stories is the legacy of former Dawson student and AIDS activist Joe Rose, which is already present on the App, created through a series of workshops at Dawson: https://www.dawsoncollege.qc.ca/news/dnews/honour-the-life-of-joe-rose-with-augmented-reality/

Post Image and  are pleased to welcome Shelley Niro for a Screening & Q+A on March 28th and an artist talk on March 29th...
03/15/2023

Post Image and are pleased to welcome Shelley Niro for a Screening & Q+A on March 28th and an artist talk on March 29th as part of the Moving the Landscape to Find Ground series.

The Screening will be held on March 28th from 6pm-8pm at DeSeve Cinema. Link in bio to register.

The Artist Talk will be held on March 29th at 6PM at Concordia, EV 11.705 IN-PERSON ONLY.

Moving the Landscape to Find Ground, a cycle of artist talks and artist residencies which takes place from until May 2023. This series is built from a shared ambition to break open lens-based practices via the interrogation of the colonial prism through which photography exists.

The speakers invited to the series will provide visits to Concordia graduate students studios. If you wish to have Shelley Niro visit your studio (at Concordia) visit the link in our bio.

Shelley Niro is a Bay of Quinte Mohawk, member of the Six Nations of the Grand River, Turtle clan.

Niro attended a graphic arts course for a while at Durham College in Oshawa, concentrating on photography, drawing and art history. Years later Niro went to Ontario College of Art in Toronto. She graduated with Honours. In 2019 she was honoured with an honorary doctorate from the Ontario College of Arts and Design University.

Shelley was the inaugural recipient of the Aboriginal Arts Award presented through the Ontario Arts Council in 2012. In 2017 Niro received the Governor General’s Award For The Arts from Canada Council, the Scotiabank Photography Award and the Hnatsyshyn Foundation Reveal Award. She became an honorary elder in the Indigenous Curatorial Collective. In 2019 Niro was the Laureate of the Paul de Hueck and Norman Walford Career Achievement Award for Photography.

This event is in collaboration with . The series is in collaboration with the Indigenous Futures Research Centre, the Feminist Media Studio and the Black Perspectives Office. This project is generously funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Milieux Institute for Arts and Culture and Concordia University’s OVPRGS (Office of the Vice-President, Research and Graduate Studies).

Coming up! ✨Post Image is pleased to welcome artist Michèle Pearson Clarke for an artist talk on March 14th at 4PM: in-p...
03/10/2023

Coming up! ✨
Post Image is pleased to welcome artist Michèle Pearson Clarke for an artist talk on March 14th at 4PM: in-person at 4thSpace (1400 Maisonneuve Blvd W, Montreal, Quebec H3G 1M8) or via Zoom.

To attend onlive via Zoom please register on our website (link in bio). Registration for in-person attendance is not required.

Moving the Landscape to Find Ground, a cycle of artist talks and artist residencies which takes place until May 2023. This series is built from a shared ambition to break open lens-based practices via the interrogation of the colonial prism through which photography exists. We are inviting conversation among all communities impacted by the colonial gaze.

Michèle Pearson Clarke is an artist, writer, and educator who works in photography, film, video, and installation. Using archival, performance and process-oriented strategies, her work situates grief as a site of possibility for social engagement and political connection. Born in Trinidad and based in Toronto, her work has been included in exhibitions and screenings at the Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal, Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Royal Ontario Museum, Lagos Photo Festival, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Maryland Institute College of Art, ltd los angeles, Ryerson Image Centre, and Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography. Most recently, Clarke was awarded the Toronto Friends of the Visual Arts 2019 Finalist Artist Prize, and she served as the second Photo Laureate for the City of Toronto (2019-2022). Clarke holds a Master of Social Work from the University of Toronto, and in 2015 she received her Master of Fine Arts in Documentary Media from Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly Ryerson), where she is an Assistant Professor in Photography in the School of Image Arts.

Our programming is in collaboration with the Indigenous Futures Research Centre, the Feminist Media Studio and the Black Perspectives Office. This project is generously funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Milieux Institute for Arts and Culture and Concordia University’s OVPRGS.

📷
1) Glitter Stache, 2021
2) Yaniya, August 3, 2018, 2018

Post Image is pleased to welcome artist Michèle Pearson Clarke for an artist talk on March 14th at 4PM: in-person at 4th...
03/01/2023

Post Image is pleased to welcome artist Michèle Pearson Clarke for an artist talk on March 14th at 4PM: in-person at 4thSpace (1400 Maisonneuve Blvd W, Montreal, Quebec H3G 1M8) or via Zoom.

To attend onlive via Zoom please register on our website (link in bio). Registration for in-person attendance is not required.

Moving the Landscape to Find Ground, a cycle of artist talks and artist residencies which takes place until May 2023. This series is built from a shared ambition to break open lens-based practices via the interrogation of the colonial prism through which photography exists. We are inviting conversation among all communities impacted by the colonial gaze.

Michèle Pearson Clarke is an artist, writer, and educator who works in photography, film, video, and installation. Using archival, performance and process-oriented strategies, her work situates grief as a site of possibility for social engagement and political connection. Born in Trinidad and based in Toronto, her work has been included in exhibitions and screenings at the Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal, Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Royal Ontario Museum, Lagos Photo Festival, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Maryland Institute College of Art, ltd los angeles, Ryerson Image Centre, and Gallery 44 Centre for Contemporary Photography. Most recently, Clarke was awarded the Toronto Friends of the Visual Arts 2019 Finalist Artist Prize, and she served as the second Photo Laureate for the City of Toronto (2019-2022). Clarke holds a Master of Social Work from the University of Toronto, and in 2015 she received her Master of Fine Arts in Documentary Media from Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly Ryerson), where she is an Assistant Professor in Photography in the School of Image Arts.

If you wish to see the rest of the talks, please visit our programming section & sign up to our newsletter.

Our programming is in collaboration with the Indigenous Futures Research Centre, the Feminist Media Studio and the Black Perspectives Office. This project is generously funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Milieux Institute for Arts and Culture and Concordia University’s OVPRGS.

Tomorrow! 🎞️ Post Image member Jinyoung Kim will be screening her new short film, “Recitation” as part of the event Seei...
02/20/2023

Tomorrow! 🎞️ Post Image member Jinyoung Kim will be screening her new short film, “Recitation” as part of the event Seeing and Not Knowing. This is a one-day event of two short film screenings at

Join Jinyoung Kim and Myriam Yates for the premier of two new films followed by a discussion with architecture theorist Alan Dunyo Avorgbedor. Kim and Yates are recipients of the one-time program supporting the realization of a short film. Seeing and Not Knowing sought films that, by brushing against the politics of place, were attentive to its history and context. Kim and Yates’ projects respectively explore the histories, politics, and forms of representation space gives rise to. Connecting the modernist housing she grew up in outside Seoul with their models in East Berlin, Kim reflects on where and how to locate her sense of place and home. Embedding herself in the summer music residency at the Orford Music Academy in the Mont-Orford National Park, Yates shadows a group of young musicians in their rigorous study and shared living amidst the school’s built and natural surroundings. In conversation with Avorgbedor, Kim and Yates will discuss their working processes and the dialogues they find between architecture, environment, and moving images.

Jinyoung Kim is a visual artist and an educator whose work explores a sense of place and material culture as a core condition where personal and collective memories coalesce expanding on an imaginary for the past and the present. She uses photography, video, and object-based installations to weave together an inventory of lived experiences that build on the positionality of an Asian diaspora. Her works have been exhibited and screened across Canada and internationally. She is the 2019 winner of the Prix Lynne Cohen from Estate of Lynne Cohen and Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec and was shortlisted for Prix Pierre-Ayot in 2018. Her projects have been supported by Canada Council for the Arts and Conseil des arts des lettres du Québec. She has obtained her BFA from OCAD University and MFA from Concordia University. Kim lives and works in Tiohtià:ke/Mooniyang/Montreal.

Get to know Post Image member Jessica Auer 💫Part 2:Jessica Auer is a Canadian photographer, filmmaker and educator, who ...
02/20/2023

Get to know Post Image member Jessica Auer 💫
Part 2:

Jessica Auer is a Canadian photographer, filmmaker and educator, who works from a decommissioned fish factory in Seydisfjördur, Iceland. Her work is broadly concerned with the study of landscapes as cultural sites. Through a research-based practice, she examines our social, political and aesthetic attitudes towards place, including but not limited to – historical sites, tourist destinations, and small communities.

Working mainly with large format photography, Jessica is best known for her tableau-style photographs that examine the ways in which landscapes have been preserved, altered or commodified for sightseeing. Through these photographs, she expresses a deep concern for nature and the vulnerability of remote sites and communities when confronted with mass tourism. Her images aim to reveal the geo-political realities surrounding travel and the paradox of attempting to preserve the same landscapes that the industry often seeks to exploit.

Recent projects include the documentary film Shore Power (2020) and the exhibition Landvörður (2021) which is now touring Iceland, currently showing at Slaturhúsid Cultural Center in Egilsstaðir. Jessica also recently edited and published the book Skriðusögur, a photography book about the Seyðisfjörður landslides of December 2020.
auer
www.jessicaauer.com

📷:
1. Gullfoss
2.Hotelbus
3. Landscape, Holer
4. Arthur and Aurelia, Leirhnjukar
5. Birdwatchers

Address

1515 Saint-Catherine Street W
Montreal, QC
H3G2W1

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