"new work including bark/bark/bark"
21 Morrow Ave, Toronto ON, M6R 2H9
P:1(416)532-5566 F:1(416)532-7272 e-mail:This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
An Whitlock

Christopher Cutts Gallery
21 Morrow Ave, Toronto ON, M6R 2H9

P:1(416)532-5566 F:1(416)532-7272 e-mail:
Oct. 6 > Nov. 2, 2016
![]() Nith River Stories 2016 archival print 36" x 24" (91.5 x 61 cm) |
![]() bark/bark/bark 2016 archival print 12.5" x 12.5" (32 x 32 cm) |
The Christopher Cutts Gallery is proud to present new work by An Whitlock, her seventh solo exhibition with the Gallery.
The exhibition includes an installation of resin antlers cast from ones found by Whitlock and friends while walking through fields and bush-land in Brant County, ON. As well, photographs of the bark of trees some of which are no longer standing – and shots into the Nith River at autumn time.
Whitlock’s work has always been informed by her surroundings. Beginning in Toronto’s garment district near Queen and Spadina, to Brantford, a once architecturally distinguished mid-sized city now in a protracted decline… and now to Paris – a formerly sleepy town in southwestern Ontario now struggling to reconcile increasing pressure to expand it’s housing stock with the expense of farm land and small-town intimacy.
"I live, in this changing place, sharing the landscape with large, mostly hidden animals …deer, coyote, turkey vultures, turkeys, beavers - all pursue their lives despite our presence until their habitat is ruined completely and they are forced to move on…”
- Whitlock
The exhibition includes an installation of resin antlers cast from ones found by Whitlock and friends while walking through fields and bush-land in Brant County, ON. As well, photographs of the bark of trees some of which are no longer standing – and shots into the Nith River at autumn time.
Whitlock’s work has always been informed by her surroundings. Beginning in Toronto’s garment district near Queen and Spadina, to Brantford, a once architecturally distinguished mid-sized city now in a protracted decline… and now to Paris – a formerly sleepy town in southwestern Ontario now struggling to reconcile increasing pressure to expand it’s housing stock with the expense of farm land and small-town intimacy.
"I live, in this changing place, sharing the landscape with large, mostly hidden animals …deer, coyote, turkey vultures, turkeys, beavers - all pursue their lives despite our presence until their habitat is ruined completely and they are forced to move on…”
- Whitlock
opening reception :
Thurs, Oct. 6th 6-9pm