Special Tour of The Way She Looks: A History of Female Gazes in African Portraiture
The Way She Looks: A History of Female Gazes in African Portraiture (installation view), 2019 © Larissa Issler, Ryerson Image Centre |
Special Tour of The Way She Looks: A History of Female Gazes in African Portraiture
Ryerson Image Centre 33 Gould Street, Toronto
Join Gaëlle Morel, RIC Exhibitions Curator, and Kenneth Montague, Founding Director of Wedge Curatorial Projects and The Wedge Collection, for our final behind-the-scenes tour of The Way She Looks: A History of Female Gazes in African Portraiture. The exhibition closes on Sunday, December 8.
Drawn from the extraordinary holdings of The Walther Collection, The Way She Looks revisits the history of African photographic portraiture through the perspectives of women, both as sitters and photographers. Spanning the beginnings of colonial photography on the continent to the present day, the exhibition features contemporary works by female artists, including Yto Barrada, Jodi Bieber, Lebohang Kganye, Zanele Muholi, Grace Ndiritu, and Nontsikelelo “Lolo” Veleko alongside 1950s studio portraits by such important historical figures as Malick Sidibé and Seydou Keïta, and nineteenth-century prints, cartes de visite, postcards, and albums.
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