Is Toronto Burning?: Three Years in the Making (and Unmaking) of the Toronto Art Scene (2016)
Is Toronto Burning?: Three Years in the Making (and Unmaking) of the Toronto Art Scene, London: Black Dog Publishing, 2016.
Back cover blurb:
Is Toronto Burning? is the story of the rise of the downtown Toronto art scene in the late 1970s.
If the mid-1970s was a formless period, and if there was no dominant art movement, out of what disintegrated elements did new formations arise? Liberated from the influence of New York, embedding themselves in the decaying and unregulated edges of downtowns, artists created new scenes for themselves. Such was the case in Toronto, one of the last—and lost—avant-gardes of the 1970s.
In the midst of the economic and social crises of the 1970s, Toronto was pretty vacant—but out of these conditions its artists crafted something unique, sometimes taking the fiction of a scene for the subject of their art. It was not all posturing. Performative frivolity and political earnestness were at odds with each other, but in the end their mutual conviviality and contestation fashioned an original art scene.
This was a moment when an underground art scene could emerge as its own subcultural form, with its own rites of belonging and forms of transgression. It was a moment of cross-cultural contamination as the alternative music scene found its locale in the art world. Mirroring the widespread destruction of buildings around them, punk’s demolition was instrumental in artists remaking themselves, transitioning from hippie sentimentality to new wave irony.
Then the police came.
For the article "Was Toronto Burning?" Canadian Art, Spring 2016, Spring 2016, click here. This article was written just as the book was published and summarizes what I thought, after the fact, it was about.
Toronto Life published on on-line portfolio of images from the exhibition with my commentary (June 17, 2016) entitled "Eleven bizarre vintage photos from Toronto's 1970s art scene." Click here to view.
Scroll below for AGYU installation shots of Is Toronto Burning?, 17 September - 7 December 2014. Unless otherwise specified, all images courtesy the artists; photo credit: Cheryl O'Brien.
Radical Cheek
I had planned to follow Is Toronto Burning? with a second exhibition (January 14 – March 22, 2015), with the working title Radical Cheek, on Toronto feminist performance from the 1970s to mid-1980s. The political conditions at York University were not ripe as the AGYU was threatened with a hostile takeover by someone who was also trying to get me fired. I postponed the exhibition to deal with the situation of protecting the AGYU. The exhibition never took place.
The exhibition was to look at Toronto women’s performance of the 1970s to mid-1980s, sometimes called feminist, considering “performance” in loose terms, with the intention of also looking at independent dance in Toronto in the early 1970s, out of which many performance artists developed. That is, the exhibition was not just about live bodies in space (the documentation thereof or video/film of performance events) but was to include video and photography (where “performances” were staged for the camera) or installation combined with video.
Though all were not then confirmed, artists were to include: Susan Britton, the Clichettes (and members Louise Garfield, Johanna Householder, and Janice Hladki individually), Elizabeth Chitty, Margaret Dragu, Dawn Eagle, Lily Eng and Missing Associates, Vera Frenkel, Isobel Harry, Tanya Mars, Lisa Steele, Video Cabaret and the Hummer Sisters, and others that I was still researching. I was also researching and trying to reconstitute information on some of the mid-1970s ironic, multi-media fashion and other theatrically-oriented performances of the period.
Independent dance was to be presented in archival form (some video, too) as well as the early independent work by the dancers who became performance artists. (Elizabeth Chitty and two members of the Clichettes—Louise Garfield and Johanna Householder came out of the York Dance Program.) There was also to be a display on 15 Dance Lab.