BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//Museum of Contemporary Art Toronto Canada - ECPv6.0.8//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Museum of Contemporary Art Toronto Canada
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/Toronto
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20190310T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20191103T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20200308T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20201101T060000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20200329T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20200329T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191105T154605Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230620T205303Z
UID:15539-1585486800-1585501200@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Archiving Eden: Seed Exchange by Dornith Doherty
DESCRIPTION:Archiving Eden: Exchange presents x-ray images of 5\,000 seeds — the smallest number required to preserve a single plant species. Housed within a vault-like structure\, the installation by artist Dornith Doherty comes to life during seed exchange events\, where visitors are invited to take home an image from the vault’s walls and replace it with a transparent envelope containing a single Canadian seed. Over time\, the installation will change both physically and visually: from representational to actual\, dark to light.\n\nThe seeds available for exchange are representative of common agricultural crops grown in Canada\, including soy\, corn and beans\, as well as a variety of native wild plant species. The black-and-white x-rays lining the installation’s walls were captured by Doherty in collaboration with scientists at several international seed banks.\n\nMOCA presents Archiving Eden: Exchange as the fifth installment of Art in Use\, a series devoted to exploring the ways in which museums can be socially and politically useful. With Archiving Eden: Exchange\, viewers are encouraged to examine their collective responsibility to care for the environment while reflecting on the monumental effort required to safeguard biodiversity. At the close of the exhibition\, the 5\,000 seeds will be donated to the Toronto Botanical Garden Seed Library — a collection of vegetable\, herb and flower seeds that growers can borrow from and donate to.\n\nLearn more\n\nThe Power of a Single Seed\nFree\, drop-in\, all ages\, 1-4 pm\nWith Sayeh Dastgheib-Beheshti\n\n\nJoin us for a 15-minute drop-in workshop on how to grow a native Ontario plant from a single seed. Native plants have evolved over millennia to thrive in a specific climate and are an integral part of our environment. They offer food\, shelter and ecosystems for wildlife and humans alike. Each day of the workshop series will feature a different plant variety. You will learn about its characteristics\, its importance to wildlife\, as well as the basics of seed stratification and preparing a seed to grow in its preferred environment. At the end of the workshop\, you will leave with a seed that is already stratified\, or one that you can stratify to grow at home.\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDornith Doherty\, Archiving Eden: Exchange (detail)\, 2019\, Installation view at MOCA Toronto\, Canada.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/archiving-eden-seed-exchange-by-dornith-doherty-2020-02-14-2020-03-29/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Art in Use,Free,Programming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/Seed-exchange-web-banners-01.png
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20200328T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20200328T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191105T154605Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200302T205638Z
UID:15538-1585400400-1585414800@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Archiving Eden: Seed Exchange by Dornith Doherty
DESCRIPTION:Archiving Eden: Exchange presents x-ray images of 5\,000 seeds — the smallest number required to preserve a single plant species. Housed within a vault-like structure\, the installation by artist Dornith Doherty comes to life during seed exchange events\, where visitors are invited to take home an image from the vault’s walls and replace it with a transparent envelope containing a single Canadian seed. Over time\, the installation will change both physically and visually: from representational to actual\, dark to light. \nThe seeds available for exchange are representative of common agricultural crops grown in Canada\, including soy\, corn and beans\, as well as a variety of native wild plant species. The black-and-white x-rays lining the installation’s walls were captured by Doherty in collaboration with scientists at several international seed banks. \nMOCA presents Archiving Eden: Exchange as the fifth installment of Art in Use\, a series devoted to exploring the ways in which museums can be socially and politically useful. With Archiving Eden: Exchange\, viewers are encouraged to examine their collective responsibility to care for the environment while reflecting on the monumental effort required to safeguard biodiversity. At the close of the exhibition\, the 5\,000 seeds will be donated to the Toronto Botanical Garden Seed Library — a collection of vegetable\, herb and flower seeds that growers can borrow from and donate to. \nLearn more \nThe Power of a Single Seed\nFree\, drop-in\, all ages\, 1-4 pm\nWith Sayeh Dastgheib-Beheshti\n \nJoin us for a 15-minute drop-in workshop on how to grow a native Ontario plant from a single seed. Native plants have evolved over millennia to thrive in a specific climate and are an integral part of our environment. They offer food\, shelter and ecosystems for wildlife and humans alike. Each day of the workshop series will feature a different plant variety. You will learn about its characteristics\, its importance to wildlife\, as well as the basics of seed stratification and preparing a seed to grow in its preferred environment. At the end of the workshop\, you will leave with a seed that is already stratified\, or one that you can stratify to grow at home. \n\n\n\n\nDornith Doherty\, Archiving Eden: Exchange (detail)\, 2019\, Installation view at MOCA Toronto\, Canada.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/archiving-eden-seed-exchange-by-dornith-doherty-2020-02-14-2020-03-28/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Art in Use,Free,Programming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/Seed-exchange-web-banners-01.png
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20200327T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20200327T200000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20200127T182730Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200313T205003Z
UID:15943-1585335600-1585339200@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:EVERYWHERE BEEN THERE
DESCRIPTION:MOCA Toronto will be temporarily closed effective Saturday\, March 14\, to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on our communities. We are closely monitoring the situation with the Public Health Agency of Canada and Toronto Public Health.\nWe will be rescheduling this event. Please stay tuned on our website for new dates or changes. \n\nFriday\, March 27 at 7 pm (Chapter I) \nSaturday\, March 28 at 2 pm (Chapter II) \nSunday\, March 29 at 2 pm (Chapter III) \nPresented as part of the exhibition HUSH SKY MURMUR HOLE by Megan Rooney\, this three-chapter performance further animates notions of traditional femininity\, domesticity\, consumption-based societies and the mythological that occur throughout Rooney’s practice. Please join us for the Toronto premiere in the exhibition space on MOCA’s Floor 3. \nChoreography: Temitope Ajose-Cutting\nSound: Paolo Thorsen-Nagel\nPerformers: Temitope Ajose-Cutting\, Leah Marojevic\, Megan Rooney\, Moira Rooney\nDirection\, Text and Costumes: Megan Rooney \nIncluded with museum admission. \n\n \nMegan Rooney\, EVERYWHERE BEEN THERE\, Performance Kunsthalle Düsseldorf\, 2019. Photo: Katja Illner
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/everywhere-been-there/2020-03-27/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Free,Performance,Programming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/Megan-Rooney_Event-Calendar-Banner_1200x400.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20200314T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20200314T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191105T154605Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200313T204929Z
UID:15532-1584190800-1584205200@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Archiving Eden: Seed Exchange by Dornith Doherty
DESCRIPTION:MOCA Toronto will be temporarily closed effective Saturday\, March 14\, to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on our communities. We are closely monitoring the situation with the Public Health Agency of Canada and Toronto Public Health.\nWe will be rescheduling this event. Please stay tuned on our website for new dates or changes. \n\nArchiving Eden: Exchange presents x-ray images of 5\,000 seeds — the smallest number required to preserve a single plant species. Housed within a vault-like structure\, the installation by artist Dornith Doherty comes to life during seed exchange events\, where visitors are invited to take home an image from the vault’s walls and replace it with a transparent envelope containing a single Canadian seed. Over time\, the installation will change both physically and visually: from representational to actual\, dark to light. \nThe seeds available for exchange are representative of common agricultural crops grown in Canada\, including soy\, corn and beans\, as well as a variety of native wild plant species. The black-and-white x-rays lining the installation’s walls were captured by Doherty in collaboration with scientists at several international seed banks. \nMOCA presents Archiving Eden: Exchange as the fifth installment of Art in Use\, a series devoted to exploring the ways in which museums can be socially and politically useful. With Archiving Eden: Exchange\, viewers are encouraged to examine their collective responsibility to care for the environment while reflecting on the monumental effort required to safeguard biodiversity. At the close of the exhibition\, the 5\,000 seeds will be donated to the Toronto Botanical Garden Seed Library — a collection of vegetable\, herb and flower seeds that growers can borrow from and donate to. \nLearn more \n  \n\n\n\n\nDornith Doherty\, Archiving Eden: Exchange (detail)\, 2019\, Installation view at MOCA Toronto\, Canada.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/archiving-eden-seed-exchange-by-dornith-doherty-2020-02-14-2020-03-14/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Art in Use,Free,Programming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/Seed-exchange-web-banners-01.png
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20200229T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20200229T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191105T154605Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200214T190916Z
UID:15531-1582981200-1582995600@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Archiving Eden: Seed Exchange by Dornith Doherty
DESCRIPTION:Archiving Eden: Exchange presents x-ray images of 5\,000 seeds — the smallest number required to preserve a single plant species. Housed within a vault-like structure\, the installation by artist Dornith Doherty comes to life during seed exchange events\, where visitors are invited to take home an image from the vault’s walls and replace it with a transparent envelope containing a single Canadian seed. Over time\, the installation will change both physically and visually: from representational to actual\, dark to light. \nThe seeds available for exchange are representative of common agricultural crops grown in Canada\, including soy\, corn and beans\, as well as a variety of native wild plant species. The black-and-white x-rays lining the installation’s walls were captured by Doherty in collaboration with scientists at several international seed banks. \nMOCA presents Archiving Eden: Exchange as the fifth installment of Art in Use\, a series devoted to exploring the ways in which museums can be socially and politically useful. With Archiving Eden: Exchange\, viewers are encouraged to examine their collective responsibility to care for the environment while reflecting on the monumental effort required to safeguard biodiversity. At the close of the exhibition\, the 5\,000 seeds will be donated to the Toronto Botanical Garden Seed Library — a collection of vegetable\, herb and flower seeds that growers can borrow from and donate to. \nLearn more \nThe Power of a Single Seed\nWith Sayeh Dastgheib-Beheshti\n \nJoin us for a 15-minute drop-in workshop on how to grow a native Ontario plant from a single seed. Native plants have evolved over millennia to thrive in a specific climate and are an integral part of our environment. They offer food\, shelter and ecosystems for wildlife and humans alike. Each day of the workshop series will feature a different plant variety. You will learn about its characteristics\, its importance to wildlife\, as well as the basics of seed stratification and preparing a seed to grow in its preferred environment. At the end of the workshop\, you will leave with a seed that is already stratified\, or one that you can stratify to grow at home. \nFree\, drop-in\, all ages\, 1-4 pm \n\n\n\n\nDornith Doherty\, Archiving Eden: Exchange (detail)\, 2019\, Installation view at MOCA Toronto\, Canada.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/archiving-eden-seed-exchange-by-dornith-doherty-2020-02-14-2020-02-29/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Art in Use,Free,Programming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/Seed-exchange-web-banners-01.png
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20200223T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20200223T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191105T154605Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200214T190856Z
UID:15530-1582462800-1582477200@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Archiving Eden: Seed Exchange by Dornith Doherty
DESCRIPTION:Archiving Eden: Exchange presents x-ray images of 5\,000 seeds — the smallest number required to preserve a single plant species. Housed within a vault-like structure\, the installation by artist Dornith Doherty comes to life during seed exchange events\, where visitors are invited to take home an image from the vault’s walls and replace it with a transparent envelope containing a single Canadian seed. Over time\, the installation will change both physically and visually: from representational to actual\, dark to light. \nThe seeds available for exchange are representative of common agricultural crops grown in Canada\, including soy\, corn and beans\, as well as a variety of native wild plant species. The black-and-white x-rays lining the installation’s walls were captured by Doherty in collaboration with scientists at several international seed banks. \nMOCA presents Archiving Eden: Exchange as the fifth installment of Art in Use\, a series devoted to exploring the ways in which museums can be socially and politically useful. With Archiving Eden: Exchange\, viewers are encouraged to examine their collective responsibility to care for the environment while reflecting on the monumental effort required to safeguard biodiversity. At the close of the exhibition\, the 5\,000 seeds will be donated to the Toronto Botanical Garden Seed Library — a collection of vegetable\, herb and flower seeds that growers can borrow from and donate to. \nLearn more \nThe Power of a Single Seed\nWith Sayeh Dastgheib-Beheshti\n \nJoin us for a 15-minute drop-in workshop on how to grow a native Ontario plant from a single seed. Native plants have evolved over millennia to thrive in a specific climate and are an integral part of our environment. They offer food\, shelter and ecosystems for wildlife and humans alike. Each day of the workshop series will feature a different plant variety. You will learn about its characteristics\, its importance to wildlife\, as well as the basics of seed stratification and preparing a seed to grow in its preferred environment. At the end of the workshop\, you will leave with a seed that is already stratified\, or one that you can stratify to grow at home. \nFree\, drop-in\, all ages\, 1-4 pm \n\n\n\n\nDornith Doherty\, Archiving Eden: Exchange (detail)\, 2019\, Installation view at MOCA Toronto\, Canada.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/archiving-eden-seed-exchange-by-dornith-doherty-2020-02-14-2020-02-23/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Art in Use,Free,Programming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/Seed-exchange-web-banners-01.png
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20200215T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20200215T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191105T154605Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200214T190832Z
UID:15528-1581771600-1581786000@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Archiving Eden: Seed Exchange by Dornith Doherty
DESCRIPTION:Archiving Eden: Exchange presents x-ray images of 5\,000 seeds — the smallest number required to preserve a single plant species. Housed within a vault-like structure\, the installation by artist Dornith Doherty comes to life during seed exchange events\, where visitors are invited to take home an image from the vault’s walls and replace it with a transparent envelope containing a single Canadian seed. Over time\, the installation will change both physically and visually: from representational to actual\, dark to light. \nThe seeds available for exchange are representative of common agricultural crops grown in Canada\, including soy\, corn and beans\, as well as a variety of native wild plant species. The black-and-white x-rays lining the installation’s walls were captured by Doherty in collaboration with scientists at several international seed banks. \nMOCA presents Archiving Eden: Exchange as the fifth installment of Art in Use\, a series devoted to exploring the ways in which museums can be socially and politically useful. With Archiving Eden: Exchange\, viewers are encouraged to examine their collective responsibility to care for the environment while reflecting on the monumental effort required to safeguard biodiversity. At the close of the exhibition\, the 5\,000 seeds will be donated to the Toronto Botanical Garden Seed Library — a collection of vegetable\, herb and flower seeds that growers can borrow from and donate to. \nLearn more \nThe Power of a Single Seed\nWith Sayeh Dastgheib-Beheshti\n \nJoin us for a 15-minute drop-in workshop on how to grow a native Ontario plant from a single seed. Native plants have evolved over millennia to thrive in a specific climate and are an integral part of our environment. They offer food\, shelter and ecosystems for wildlife and humans alike. Each day of the workshop series will feature a different plant variety. You will learn about its characteristics\, its importance to wildlife\, as well as the basics of seed stratification and preparing a seed to grow in its preferred environment. At the end of the workshop\, you will leave with a seed that is already stratified\, or one that you can stratify to grow at home. \nFree\, drop-in\, all ages\, 1-4 pm \n\n\n\n\nDornith Doherty\, Archiving Eden: Exchange (detail)\, 2019\, Installation view at MOCA Toronto\, Canada.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/archiving-eden-seed-exchange-by-dornith-doherty-2020-02-14-2020-02-15/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Art in Use,Free,Programming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/Seed-exchange-web-banners-01.png
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191229T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191229T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191105T154605Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191209T215107Z
UID:15526-1577624400-1577638800@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Archiving Eden: Seed Exchange by Dornith Doherty
DESCRIPTION:Archiving Eden: Exchange presents x-ray images of 5\,000 seeds — the smallest number required to preserve a single plant species. Housed within a vault-like structure\, the installation by artist Dornith Doherty comes to life during seed exchange events\, where visitors are invited to take home an image from the vault’s walls and replace it with a transparent envelope containing a single Canadian seed. Over time\, the installation will change both physically and visually: from representational to actual\, dark to light. \nThe seeds available for exchange are representative of common agricultural crops grown in Canada\, including soy\, corn and beans\, as well as a variety of native wild plant species. The black-and-white x-rays lining the installation’s walls were captured by Doherty in collaboration with scientists at several international seed banks. \nMOCA presents Archiving Eden: Exchange as the fifth installment of Art in Use\, a series devoted to exploring the ways in which museums can be socially and politically useful. With Archiving Eden: Exchange\, viewers are encouraged to examine their collective responsibility to care for the environment while reflecting on the monumental effort required to safeguard biodiversity. At the close of the exhibition\, the 5\,000 seeds will be donated to the Toronto Botanical Garden Seed Library — a collection of vegetable\, herb and flower seeds that growers can borrow from and donate to. \nLearn more \nThe Power of a Single Seed\nWith Sayeh Dastgheib-Beheshti\n \nJoin us for a 15-minute drop-in workshop on how to grow a native Ontario plant from a single seed. Native plants have evolved over millennia to thrive in a specific climate and are an integral part of our environment. They offer food\, shelter and ecosystems for wildlife and humans alike. Each day of the workshop series will feature a different plant variety. You will learn about its characteristics\, its importance to wildlife\, as well as the basics of seed stratification and preparing a seed to grow in its preferred environment. At the end of the workshop\, you will leave with a seed that is already stratified\, or one that you can stratify to grow at home. \nFree\, drop-in\, all ages\, 1-4 pm \n\n\n\n\nDornith Doherty\, Vault: Exchange (detail)\, Installation view at the Ontario Science Centre Toronto\, Canada. April – August 2019.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/archiving-eden-seed-exchange-by-dornith-doherty-2019-12-29/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Art in Use,Free,Programming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_Dornith_Banner_NOV5-1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191229T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191229T160000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191007T203038Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191009T170407Z
UID:15070-1577617200-1577635200@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:"Age of You" Drop-In Activity: Defying Facial Recognition
DESCRIPTION:Think you can outsmart facial recognition? In this workshop\, participants get to design and construct masks and headpieces inspired by CV Dazzle\, a project by artist Adam Harvey that provides information and tips for creating “looks” that can camouflage the face from face detection technology. Using elements such as asymmetry\, tonal inverse and the concealment of certain facial features\, you will be able to learn and test which design combinations are most effective in hiding from facial recognition technology. \nLearn more about Age of You \n  \n\n 
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/age-of-you-drop-in-activity-defying-facial-recognition/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Free,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_DefyingFacial_AUG29.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191221T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191221T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191105T154605Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191209T215100Z
UID:15525-1576933200-1576947600@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Archiving Eden: Seed Exchange by Dornith Doherty
DESCRIPTION:Archiving Eden: Exchange presents x-ray images of 5\,000 seeds — the smallest number required to preserve a single plant species. Housed within a vault-like structure\, the installation by artist Dornith Doherty comes to life during seed exchange events\, where visitors are invited to take home an image from the vault’s walls and replace it with a transparent envelope containing a single Canadian seed. Over time\, the installation will change both physically and visually: from representational to actual\, dark to light. \nThe seeds available for exchange are representative of common agricultural crops grown in Canada\, including soy\, corn and beans\, as well as a variety of native wild plant species. The black-and-white x-rays lining the installation’s walls were captured by Doherty in collaboration with scientists at several international seed banks. \nMOCA presents Archiving Eden: Exchange as the fifth installment of Art in Use\, a series devoted to exploring the ways in which museums can be socially and politically useful. With Archiving Eden: Exchange\, viewers are encouraged to examine their collective responsibility to care for the environment while reflecting on the monumental effort required to safeguard biodiversity. At the close of the exhibition\, the 5\,000 seeds will be donated to the Toronto Botanical Garden Seed Library — a collection of vegetable\, herb and flower seeds that growers can borrow from and donate to. \nLearn more \n  \nThe Power of a Single Seed\nWith Sayeh Dastgheib-Beheshti\n \nJoin us for a 15-minute drop-in workshop on how to grow a native Ontario plant from a single seed. Native plants have evolved over millennia to thrive in a specific climate and are an integral part of our environment. They offer food\, shelter and ecosystems for wildlife and humans alike. Each day of the workshop series will feature a different plant variety. You will learn about its characteristics\, its importance to wildlife\, as well as the basics of seed stratification and preparing a seed to grow in its preferred environment. At the end of the workshop\, you will leave with a seed that is already stratified\, or one that you can stratify to grow at home. \nFree\, drop-in\, all ages\, 1-4 pm \n\n\n\n\nDornith Doherty\, Vault: Exchange (detail)\, Installation view at the Ontario Science Centre Toronto\, Canada. April – August 2019.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/archiving-eden-seed-exchange-by-dornith-doherty-2019-12-21/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Art in Use,Free,Programming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_Dornith_Banner_NOV5-1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191213T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191213T210000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191008T151843Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191111T153207Z
UID:15075-1576263600-1576270800@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Sarah Sharma: "From Mommy’s Basement to Outer Space"
DESCRIPTION:This talk will draw a line between Mommy’s Basement to Outer Space and offer a feminist alternative to the technological escapism that pervades our present moment\, justly termed the Age of You. The lone male in Mommy’s Basement\, equipped with technological portals to more habitable worlds\, is by now a common cultural trope. But the cliché goes beyond the wounded masculinity that festers in the extreme right wings of the political spectrum. Mommy’s Basement contains a motley crew of men who temporarily descend and retreat from social life\, including the hikikomori (Japan)\, alt-right hate mongers\, internet trolls\, the new precariat\, internet addicts\, gamers\, enterprising tech-bros\, and (maybe) a few geniuses hard at work. But as this talk will argue\, Mommy’s Basement isn’t a futile space: it is a powerful media lab\, where unjust ideas about gender and social difference become part of the logic of new technological designs. \nSarah Sharma is Associate Professor of Media Theory at the ICCIT/Faculty of Information and Director of the McLuhan Centre for Culture and Technology at the University of Toronto. Her research and teaching focuses on the relationship between technology\, time and labour and in particular on issues related to gender\, race and class. She is the author of In the Meantime: Temporality and Cultural Politics (Duke UP\, 2014) and is currently working on a new book\, The sExit\, which explores the relationship between technology\, gender and cultural fantasies of exit. At the McLuhan Centre\, Sarah directs interdisciplinary research and public programming concerned with navigating and understanding the complexities of contemporary digital life. \nRegister here \n  \n\n 
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/sarah-sharma-from-mommys-basement-to-outer-space/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Talks
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_SarahSharma_Banner_OCT8.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191207T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191207T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191105T154605Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191203T150939Z
UID:15317-1575723600-1575738000@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Archiving Eden: Seed Exchange by Dornith Doherty
DESCRIPTION:Archiving Eden: Exchange presents x-ray images of 5\,000 seeds — the smallest number required to preserve a single plant species. Housed within a vault-like structure\, the installation by artist Dornith Doherty comes to life during seed exchange events\, where visitors are invited to take home an image from the vault’s walls and replace it with a transparent envelope containing a single Canadian seed. Over time\, the installation will change both physically and visually: from representational to actual\, dark to light. \nThe seeds available for exchange are representative of common agricultural crops grown in Canada\, including soy\, corn and beans\, as well as a variety of native wild plant species. The black-and-white x-rays lining the installation’s walls were captured by Doherty in collaboration with scientists at several international seed banks. \nMOCA presents Archiving Eden: Exchange as the fifth installment of Art in Use\, a series devoted to exploring the ways in which museums can be socially and politically useful. With Archiving Eden: Exchange\, viewers are encouraged to examine their collective responsibility to care for the environment while reflecting on the monumental effort required to safeguard biodiversity. At the close of the exhibition\, the 5\,000 seeds will be donated to the Toronto Botanical Garden Seed Library — a collection of vegetable\, herb and flower seeds that growers can borrow from and donate to. \nLearn more \nThe Power of a Single Seed\nWith Sayeh Dastgheib-Beheshti\n \nJoin us for a 15-minute drop-in workshop on how to grow a native Ontario plant from a single seed. Native plants have evolved over millennia to thrive in a specific climate and are an integral part of our environment. They offer food\, shelter and ecosystems for wildlife and humans alike. Each of these workshops will feature a different plant variety. You will learn about its characteristics\, its importance to wildlife\, as well as the basics of seed stratification as well as the basics of stratification and preparing a seed to grow in certain conditions.  At the end of the workshop you will leave with a seed that is already stratified\, or one that you can stratify to grow at home. \nFree\, drop-in\, all ages\, 1-4 pm \n\n\n\n\nDornith Doherty\, Vault: Exchange (detail)\, Installation view at the Ontario Science Centre Toronto\, Canada. April – August 2019.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/archiving-eden-seed-exchange-by-dornith-doherty/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Art in Use,Free,Programming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_Dornith_Banner_NOV5-1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191205T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191205T200000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191007T202655Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191122T184449Z
UID:15060-1575568800-1575576000@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Digital Justice Lab Workshop: Mapping Data Bodies
DESCRIPTION:From the apps we use on our devices to the surveillance systems on city streets\, we live in a datafied world\, in which information about us is being collected on a daily basis. In this workshop\, we will navigate the impact of datafication to form a better understanding of our “data bodies” and how they are used\, stored and shared by governments and corporations. \nThe Digital Justice Lab’s (DJL) mission is to focus on building a more just and equitable digital future. Working alongside technologists\, community activists and policymakers\, DJL helps shape a better public understanding of technology and its impact on communities across the country. Through capacity building\, public engagement and continuous collaboration\, DJL supports diverse communities in making informed decisions around digital issues. Digital Justice Lab is a project of Tides Canada\, a registered Canadian charity dedicated to providing uncommon solutions for the common good. \nThis workshop is part of a series of workshops presented in partnership with Digital Justice Lab for Age of You. \nRegister here \n  \n\n  \n \nIllustration by Annalise Hyunh
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/digital-justice-lab-workshop-mapping-data-bodies/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Free,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_DJL_Banner_OCT8.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191202T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191202T200000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191016T153153Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191119T155849Z
UID:15184-1575309600-1575316800@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Monday Night Seminars: "HotMessAge" with Skawennati
DESCRIPTION:Registration is now open \nJoin us for Call Forward\, where our guest Skawennati will present her current project\, Calico & Camouflage\, currently in production. The project is a fashion collection of ResistanceWear that blends traditional regalia with military clothing. \nThe McLuhan Centre for Culture and Technology’s annual theme\, HotMessAge\, explores how media and technology underlie today’s social\, economic and environmental crises while at the same time offering us tools to address these challenges. \nThis year the McLuhan Centre for Culture and Technology amplifies some of the voices in Media Studies — voices that offer hot takes with cool possibilities of radical social change. \nThis programme is presented in partnership with the McLuhan Centre for Culture and Technology\, University of Toronto. \nSkawennati makes art that addresses history\, the future\, and change from her perspective as an urban Kanien’kehá:ka woman and as a cyberpunk avatar. Her work has been widely presented in both group exhibitions and solo shows and is included in public and private collections\, such as the National Gallery of Canada and the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal. \nBorn in Kahnawà:ke Mohawk Territory\, Skawennati graduated with a BFA from Concordia University in Montreal\, where she is based. She is Co-Director of Aboriginal Territories in Cyberspace (AbTeC)\, a research-creation network of artists and academics who investigate and create Indigenous virtual environments. Their Skins workshops in Aboriginal Storytelling and Experimental Digital Media are aimed at empowering youth. In 2015 they launched IIF\, the Initiative for Indigenous Futures. \nPortrait by Zoe Tennant\, 2018.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/monday-night-seminars-hotmessage/
LOCATION:McLuhan Centre for Culture and Technology\, 39A Queens Park Crescent East\, Toronto\, Ontario\, M5S 2C3\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Free,Talks
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_Skawennati_Banner_OCT16.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191128T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191128T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191007T201613Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191126T204235Z
UID:15072-1574967600-1574967600@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Victoria Sin: "If I had the words to tell you we wouldn’t be here now"
DESCRIPTION:If I had the words to tell you we wouldn’t be here now uses storytelling\, drag and theatrical devices to explore how language not only gives shape to thought\, but shapes thought. The performance stages a dialogue with a desiring queer body and a percussionist to illuminate how identity and experience are not only represented but also created and reinforced through language and naming. \nFor the North American premiere of If I had the words to tell you we wouldn’t be here now\, Sin performs alongside percussionist Nikki Joshi and wears a specially commissioned oceanic costume by Athens-based designer Dimitra Petsa. The work is site-responsive\, changing in composition each time it’s performed. If I had the words to tell you we wouldn’t be here now was first performed at Chi Wen gallery in Taipei and later travelled to the 2019 Venice Biennale. \nVictoria Sin is an artist whose work uses speculative fiction within performance\, moving image\, writing and print to interrupt normative processes of desire\, identification and objectification. Drawing upon personal encounters of looking and wanting\, their work presents heavily constructed fantasy narratives about the often unsettling experience of the physical within the social body. \nRecent presentations include Age of You\, MOCA\, Toronto (2019); Kiss My Genders\, Hayward Gallery\, London (2019); Meetings on Art\, Venice Biennale\, Venice (2019); BCE\, Whitechapel Gallery\, London (2019); Art Basel\, Hong Kong (2019); Park Nights\, Serpentine Galleries\, London (2018); and Indifferent Idols\, Taipei Contemporary Art Center\, Taipei (2018). \nNikki Joshi is a percussionist based in Toronto\, where she recently completed the 2018/19 Rebanks Family Fellowship at the Glenn Gould School. She holds a Master’s Degree from McGill University\, where she studied with Aiyun Huang. During her time at McGill\, she received the 2017 Mobility Award\, and travelled to Bern University of the Arts in Switzerland to conduct research at the school’s renowned Department of Music Theatre. Joshi holds a Bachelor’s Degree\, Performer’s Certificate\, Arts Leadership Certificate and 2015 John Beck Percussion Scholarship from the Eastman School of Music\, where she studied with Michael Burritt. \nSupport from Beverly and Jack Creed. \n  \nSOLD OUT \nPerformance starts at 7 pm. \n\n  \n \nVictoria Sin ft. Matteo Gemolo (traverso)\, If I had the words to tell you we wouldn’t be here now\, 2019. Performance part of Meetings on Art\, 58th Venice Biennale\, 2019. Credit Riccardo Banfi. Courtesy Delfina Foundation and Arts Council England.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/victoria-sin-if-i-had-the-words-to-tell-you-we-wouldnt-be-here-now/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Performance
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/EventBanner_VictoriaSin_OCT4.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191124T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191124T160000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191007T201049Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191111T153008Z
UID:15068-1574593200-1574611200@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:"Age of You" Drop-In Activity: Draw the Internet
DESCRIPTION:What does the internet look like — to you? MOCA invites you to consider this question while exploring Age of You\, an exhibition highlighting such themes as data\, artificial intelligence\, surveillance and the limitless capabilities of the internet. After exploring the exhibition\, head to Floor 1 to draw how you picture the internet in your mind’s eye. You can add your drawing to a cumulative piece that will reveal\, over the course of the day\, how our visitors see the internet — as an infinite\, sprawling collective of images and ideas. \n  \n\n 
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/age-of-you-drop-in-activity-draw-the-internet/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Free,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/EventBanner_DrawInternet_OCT4.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191119T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191119T210000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191008T135716Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191118T160431Z
UID:15078-1574191800-1574197200@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Canadian Art Encounters: Trevor Paglen
DESCRIPTION:Join internationally renowned\, Berlin-based artist Trevor Paglen on November 19th for a lecture at Ryerson University.  \nPaglen is an artist whose work spans disciplines including image-making\, sculpture\, investigative journalism\, writing and engineering. Among his chief concerns are learning how to see the historical moment we live in and developing the means to imagine alternative futures. Paglen will discuss his ongoing research into artificial intelligence and the relationships between technology and power. \nTrevor Paglen’s work is included in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; the Smithsonian American Art Museum; and the Victoria and Albert Museum\, London\, among others. He has launched an artwork into distant orbit around Earth in collaboration with Creative Time and MIT\, contributed research and cinematography to the Academy Award-winning film Citizenfour and created a radioactive public sculpture for the exclusion zone in Fukushima\, Japan. Paglen is the author of several books and numerous articles on subjects including experimental geography\, state secrecy\, military symbology\, photography and visuality.  \n  \nThis event is a co-presentation between MOCA Toronto\, Canadian Art and Ryerson University’s School of Image Arts. This event coincides with MOCA’s concurrent exhibition Age of You (September 5\, 2019 to January 5\, 2020) which features Paglen’s installation Behold These Glorious Times! \n  \nAll advance tickets have been sold. A limited number of standby tickets will be available at the venue. A standby line will form as of 6:30 pm\, and any remaining seats will be sold to the standby line beginning 10 minutes before the start of the talk. Pay-what you-can\, cash only.\n\nThe George Vari Engineering and Computing Centre is an accessible venue. \n  \n\n\nTrevor Paglen\, CLOUD #735\, Scale Invariant Feature Transform; Region Adjacency Graph; Watershed\, 2019. Dye sublimation print\, 48 × 66 in. Courtesy of the Artist and Altman Siegel\, San Francisco.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/canadian-art-encounters-trevor-paglen/
LOCATION:Ryerson University (George Vari Engineering and Computing Centre)\, 245 Church Street\, Toronto\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Talks
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_TrevorPaglen_OCT8_2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191117T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191117T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191111T143032Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191111T205232Z
UID:15422-1574006400-1574010000@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:In the Age of You with Hans Ulrich Obrist
DESCRIPTION:We are excited to have Hans Ulrich Obrist in town on Sunday November 17. As co-curator of MOCA’s current exhibition Age of You he will talk about the central themes of the show\, the coming publication and the future life of the project\, in the gallery space at 4 pm. \nObrist is Artistic Director of the Serpentine Galleries in London. He has curated more than 300 exhibitions. His books include Ways of Curating\, Mondialité\, Somewhere Totally Else and Lives of the Artists\, Lives of the Architects. \n  \nInstallation view\, Age of You\, MOCA Toronto. Photo by Tom Arban Photography Inc.\n 
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/in-the-age-of-you-with-hans-ulrich-obrist/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Talks,Tours
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_IntheAgeofYou_Banner_NOV11.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191115T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191115T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191007T200437Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191109T190208Z
UID:15066-1573840800-1573844400@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Artists on Artists: Sophia Oppel on "Age of You"
DESCRIPTION:Sophia Oppel is an artist and researcher whose work addresses the insidious positions of embedded power in networked infrastructures. Oppel will lead a tour and discussion of Age of You that focuses primarily on the theme of “Post-Work\,” drawing connections to her own research on immaterial labour and outsourced or automated work. \nSophia Oppel received her BFA from OCAD University and is currently a co-director of Bunker 2 Contemporary Art Container\, a curatorial project assistant at Gallery 44\, and a Masters of Visual Studies candidate at the University of Toronto. Oppel has exhibited locally and internationally\, including shows at InterAccess\, Queen Specific\, Gallery TPW\, Forest City Gallery and Xpace Cultural Center. \nMOCA’s Artists on Artists series is a programme where local artists are invited to discuss MOCA’s current exhibitions\, or a single artwork\, in any format or direction of their choosing. \n  \n\n  \n \nImage: Sophia Oppel (in collaboration with Blair Swann)\, how does a .jpg feel against your skin? Detail\, Heat-bent acrylic\, gel wax\, gel medium transfers\, 2018.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/artists-on-artists-sophia-oppel-on-age-of-you/
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Free,Tours
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/EventBanner_SophiaOppel_OCT4.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191114T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191114T200000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191007T195409Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191109T190157Z
UID:15058-1573754400-1573761600@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Digital Justice Lab Workshop: Imagining Feminist Interfaces
DESCRIPTION:What does it mean to imagine a feminist digital voice interface? Through a series of speculative design exercises\, we will prototype and discuss what voice technologies might look like if we designed them in line with the central commitments of feminism: participation\, agency\, embodiment\, equity\, empowerment\, plurality and justice. Participants will learn the basics of designing a conversational UI but no prior coding skills are needed. \nImagining Feminist Interfaces is presented in partnership with Digital Justice Lab and Trinity Square Video. \ntendernet is a collective of female-identifying technologists\, writers\, educators\, designers and activists whose work explores speculative design\, networked devices and privacy through an intersectional feminist framework. Most recently\, the collective has led workshops aimed at developing radical feminist interventions to emerging technologies\, with a focus on voice interfaces. Becca Ricks and Zoe Bachman are co-founders of tendernet. tendernet.us \nThe Digital Justice Lab’s (DJL) mission is to focus on building a more just and equitable digital future. Working alongside technologists\, community activists and policymakers\, DJL helps shape a better public understanding of technology and its impact on communities across the country. Through capacity building\, public engagement and continuous collaboration\, DJL supports diverse communities in making informed decisions around digital issues. Digital Justice Lab is a project of Tides Canada\, a registered Canadian charity dedicated to providing uncommon solutions for the common good. \nWe recommend that workshop participants bring a laptop. \nThis workshop is part of a series of workshops presented in partnership with Digital Justice Lab for Age of You. \nRegister here \n  \n\n  \n \n\n\n\nImage courtesy Digital Justice Lab
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/digital-justice-lab-workshop-imagining-feminist-interfaces/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Free,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/EventBanner_ImagineFeministInterface_OCT4.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191027T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191027T160000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20190826T175641Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191009T170018Z
UID:14500-1572174000-1572192000@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:"Age of You" Drop-in Activity: Defying Facial Recognition
DESCRIPTION:Think you can outsmart facial recognition? In this workshop\, participants will design and construct masks and headpieces inspired by CV Dazzle\, a project by artist Adam Harvey that provides information and tips for creating “looks” that can camouflage the face from face detection technology. Using elements such as asymmetry\, tonal inverse and the concealment of certain facial features\, you will be able to learn and test which design combinations are most effective in hiding from facial recognition technology. \nFree. No tickets or registration required. Drop-in and stay as long as you would like. \n  \n\n 
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/age-of-you-workshop-defying-facial-recognition/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Community Event,Family,Free,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_DefyingFacial_AUG29.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191025T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191025T153000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20191009T130040Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191111T182353Z
UID:15135-1572013800-1572017400@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Art Toronto: Carlos Bunga
DESCRIPTION:Carlos Bunga’s talk takes place during a research trip to MOCA Toronto where he will create a\nsite-responsive installation on two floors of the museum\, opening February 2020. \nBunga uses mass-produced materials such as cardboard\, adhesive tape and household paint to produce site-specific\, process-focused installations. Emerging from a dialogue with an existing architectural space\, these ephemeral structures remind us of life-size architectural models as well as temporary street shelters. Through his work\, Bunga not only encourages viewers to rethink their experience of space and architecture\, but also evokes the transient and fragile nature of urban structures. \nBunga (b. 1976\, Porto) currently lives and works near Barcelona. His work has recently featured in group exhibitions at the Guggenheim Bilbao (2016); Artes Mundi 6 in Cardiff\, UK (2013); and the Chicago Architecture Biennial (2015). He has had solo exhibitions at numerous museums\, including Hammer Museum\, Los Angeles (2011)\, Museu Serralves\, Porto (2012)\, Museo Universitario de Arte Contemporáneo\, Mexico City (2013)\, Museo Amparo\, Puebla (2014)\, Haus Konstruktiv Museum\, Zurich (2015) and the Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona (2015) or the MAAT\, Lisbon (2019). Bunga’s upcoming exhibitions in 2020 will take place at the Whitechapel Gallery in London\, MOCA Toronto and Secession in Wien. \n\n\n\n\nPresented by MOCA Toronto\, Supported by Partners in Art\n\nCarlos Bunga\, Deterritorialización\, Site specific installation at Casas Rigner Gallery\, Bogotá\, 2013. Cardboard\, tape\, latex paint and glue\, photographed by Oscar Monsalve.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/art-toronto-carlos-bunga/
LOCATION:Art Toronto\, 255 Front Street West\, Toronto\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Programming,Talks
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_Bunga_Banner_OCT9.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191023T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191023T200000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20190826T150621Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191017T180057Z
UID:14498-1571853600-1571860800@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Digital Justice Lab Workshop: Mapping Digital Futures
DESCRIPTION:In this workshop\, we will reimagine the digital future of Toronto and what it could look like in 2040. Together we will build narratives about the future and map out local policy recommendations in relation to the city’s Smart City plans. \nMapping Digital Futures is part of a series of workshops presented in partnership with Digital Justice Lab for Age of You. \nThe Digital Justice Lab’s (DJL) mission is to focus on building a more just and equitable future. DJL engages with diverse communities to build alternative digital futures. Working alongside technologists\, community activists and policymakers\, DJL helps to shape a better understanding of technology and its impact on communities across the country. Through capacity building\, public engagement and continuous collaboration\, DJL supports communities in making informed decisions around digital issues. Digital Justice Lab is a project of Tides Canada\, a registered Canadian charity dedicated to providing uncommon solutions for the common good. \nRegister here \n  \n\n \nIllustration by Annalise Hyunh
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/digital-justice-lab-mapping-digital-futures/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_DJL_Banner2_AUG29.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191011T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191011T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20190823T182914Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190905T200316Z
UID:14496-1570816800-1570820400@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Artists on Artists: Hannah Epstein on "Age of You"
DESCRIPTION:Hannah Epstein works at the cross-section of textiles\, experimental games and video art to reimagine the iconography of popular culture\, highlighting the cultural negotiation between bottom-up (folk) and top-down (institutional) storytelling. By blurring the lines between traditional craft\, popular culture and contemporary art\, she aims to isolate and eliminate notions of hierarchy as archaic relics. Epstein will lead a tour and discussion of Age of You\, with refreshments to follow. \nMOCA’s Artists on Artists series is a programme where local artists are invited to discuss MOCA’s current exhibitions\, or a single artwork\, in any format or direction of their choosing. \n\n  \n\n \nHannah Epstein\, You’re Tearing Me Apart\, 2019.\n 
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/artists-on-artists-hannah-epstein-on-age-of-you/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Free,Tours
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_AgeofYOU_Epstein_AUG16-1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20190923T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20190923T210000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20190823T133853Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190912T155400Z
UID:14642-1569265200-1569272400@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:From the Bay Area to the Arctic:  Shezad Dawood and Alice Xia Zhu
DESCRIPTION:Artist Shezad Dawood is joined by researcher Alice Xia Zhu for a conversation that addresses the fate of microplastics in marine and freshwater contexts\, from the San Francisco Bay to the Arctic. This programme is organised in dialogue with Shezad Dawood’s exhibition Leviathan\, presented on MOCA’s Floor 4. Leviathan is an ambitious “episodic monster” consisting of ten filmic episodes that envisage a future\, uncannily much like our present\, to consider possible links between borders\, mental health\, and marine welfare. \nShezad Dawood is an interdisciplinary artist\, who uses research and collaboration as a way of informing his work in film\, installation\, writing\, publishing\, VR and sculpture. His key concerns are marine ecology\, non-aligned movement and the ethics of place. Dawood’s work has been exhibited and won awards at multiple biennales and film festivals\, and features in the permanent collections of LACMA\, TATE\, and the British Museum\, among others. \nAlice Xia Zhu is a Master’s student working under Chelsea Rochman in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Toronto. She studies the sources and fate of microplastics in San Francisco Bay. Alice hopes her research can inform policy to mitigate plastic pollution entering The Bay. Alice is also a part of the U of T Trash Team\, a team of graduate and undergraduate students who strive to connect people and increase literacy concerning material consumption and waste with creative and practical actions. \nPublic programmes for Leviathan are supported by Brenda Simpson.  \nRegister Here \nImage Credit: Location in the Arctic\, Clara Thaysen\, 2017.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/from-the-bay-area-to-the-arctic-shezad-dawood-and-alice-xia-zhu/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Programming,Talks
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_ShezadTalk_1200x400_SEP12-1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20190920T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20190920T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20190823T182659Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190917T175246Z
UID:14490-1569002400-1569006000@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Artists on Artists: Shirin Fathi on "Age of You"
DESCRIPTION:Shirin Fathi is an Iranian-Canadian artist whose work focuses on cultural changes in relation to gender identity. Through role-play and the use of cosmetics\, masks and prosthetics\, Fathi uses her own body as a subject to stage ambiguous and often marginalized identities. Fathi will lead a tour and discussion of Age of You. \nMOCA’s Artists on Artists series is a programme where local artists are invited to discuss MOCA’s current exhibitions\, or a single artwork\, in any format or direction of their choosing. \n  \n\n\nShirin Fathi\, Blonde Colonel\, from the series Heart Throbs\, 2015.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/artists-on-artists-shirin-fathi-on-age-of-you/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Free,Tours
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_AgeofYOU_Fathi_AUG16-1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20190912T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20190912T193000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20190826T150657Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190829T140819Z
UID:14484-1568311200-1568316600@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Digital Justice Lab Workshop: Digital Security 101
DESCRIPTION:This workshop takes a holistic approach to digital security\, investigating what it means to find practices to protect yourself in a digital environment. This workshop\, led by Digital Justice Lab’s Director\, Nasma Ahmed\, will explore how we relate to our virtual bodies\, and what we can do to navigate and counteract components of hyper-surveillance through digital practices. \nWe recommend that workshop participants bring a laptop\, but it’s possible to partake without one. \nDigital Security 101 is part of a series of workshops presented in partnership with Digital Justice Lab for Age of You. \nThe Digital Justice Lab’s (DJL) mission is to focus on building a more just and equitable future. DJL engages with diverse communities to build alternative digital futures. Working alongside technologists\, community activists and policymakers\, DJL helps to shape a better understanding of technology and its impact on communities across the country. Through capacity building\, public engagement and continuous collaboration\, DJL supports communities in making informed decisions around digital issues. Digital Justice Lab is a project of Tides Canada\, a registered Canadian charity dedicated to providing uncommon solutions for the common good. \nRegister here \n\n \nIllustration by Annalise Hyunh
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/digital-justice-lab-digital-security-101/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_DJL_Banner1_AUG29.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20190905T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20190905T210000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20190815T150217Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190904T160142Z
UID:14467-1567710000-1567717200@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:What is The Extreme Self?
DESCRIPTION:Shumon Basar\, Douglas Coupland and Agnieszka Kurant in conversation.\nModerated by Joachim Johnson \nDuring the opening week of Age of You\, we present a conversation that delves into the exhibition’s key concern: data. How have we become our data\, and how is our data becoming us? Artist Agnieszka Kurant and two of the exhibition’s curators\, Shumon Basar and Douglas Coupland\, are joined by moderator Joachim Johnson of HXOUSE to discuss our current and ever-accelerating technological moment. \nThis panel discussion is presented in partnership with HXOUSE. \nBiographies \nInterdisciplinary artist Agnieszka Kurant explores how complex social\, economic and cultural systems can operate in ways that confuse distinctions between fiction and reality or nature and culture. She investigates “the economy of the invisible\,” in which immaterial and imaginary entities\, fictions\, phantoms and emergent processes influence political and economic systems. \nSince 1991 Douglas Coupland has written thirteen novels. He is a columnist for the Financial Times\, and since 2000\, amplified his visual art production with a number of museum retrospectives\, in Canada\, The Netherlands and Germany. \nJoachim Johnson is a Toronto-based artist\, creative consultant and the Creative Director of HXOUSE; a non-profit\, next-generation incubator and accelerator at the forefront of fostering innovation and opportunity for creative entrepreneurs. For over ten years\, Johnson has worked internationally as a photographer and filmmaker with brands including Oscar de la Renta and Tom Ford\, and with artists including Nelly Furtado and The Weeknd. \nShumon Basar is a Berlin/Dubai based Commissioner of the Global Art Forum. He is Editor-at-Large at Tank magazine\, Contributing Editor at Bidoun\, Curator-at-Large at Art Jameel and a member of the Fondazione Prada’s Thought Council. \nReserve your tickets \nThis event is sold out. Please see all our Age of You public programmes here. \nAge of You will be open until 7pm on September 5. Please arrive early to view the exhibition. \n\n \nAgnieszka Kurant\, A.A.I. 2017.\nSculptures built by colonies of living termites from colored sand\, gold and broken crystals.\nCourtesy the artist and Tanya Bonakdar Gallery\, New York / Los Angeles.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/the-extreme-self-panel-discussion-with-shumon-basar-douglas-coupland-and-agnieszka-kurant-moderated-by-joachim-johnson/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Age of You
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/WebsiteEvent_ExtremeSelfPanel_1200x400_AUG20-copy.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20190714T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20190714T160000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20190614T191357Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190614T191357Z
UID:13924-1563109200-1563120000@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Vector Festival | Bio-Sonification: Non-Human Collaboration
DESCRIPTION:Collaborate bio-sonically with non-human organisms around you! As part of Vector Festival\, InterAccess is pleased to partner with MOCA Toronto to host a free workshop with Tosca Hidalgo y Terán. Drop by on Sunday\, July 14 between 1-4pm on Floor 1 to listen to bio-data through various analogue synthesizers\, plants\, moss and mushrooms and experience a non-human bio-sonification symphony! \nBio-sonification is a process to translate complex real-time sensor data into musical notes and controls\, exploring the auditory sensory modality to provide insights into invisible phenomenon. Participants will get a chance to place electrodes onto plants\, fungi\, themselves or each other to have their bio-data turned into music. \nAbout the Artists: Tosca Teran\, aka Nanotopia\, is an interdisciplinary artist. Her work has been featured at SOFA New York\, Culture Canada\, and The Toronto Design Exchange. Tosca has been awarded artist residencies with Nes\, Skagaströnd\, The Ayatana Research Program in Ottawa and The Icelandic Visual Artists Association through Sím\, Reykjavik Iceland. Tosca is currently an invited Bio-Artist in residence at the Museum of Contemporary Art Toronto in partnership with the Ontario Science Centre. This summer Tosca will further her research in bio-sonification and bio-remediation with local mycologists at Bilpin Australia where she is the recipient of the 2019 BigCi Environmental Award at Wollemi National Park within the UNESCO World Heritage site in the Greater Blue Mountains. \n“I view my research as a collaborative effort with the non-Human entities I touch\, caress\, grow. Having ‘minds’ of their own\, my work explores sculpting forms with living mycelium\, and bio-sonification. My fascination with mycelium (the root structure of mushrooms) is compounded by a number of factors: fungi are neither plant nor animal and fungi can clean up ecological disasters.” \nCheck out more of Tosca’s work here:\nNanotopia.net\nwww.toscateran.com\n@MothAntler \nAbout Vector Festival: Vector Festival is a participatory and community-oriented initiative dedicated to showcasing digital games and creative media practices. Presenting works across a dynamic range of exhibitions\, screenings\, performances\, lectures\, and workshops\, Vector acts as a critical bridge between emergent digital platforms and new media art practice. The festival was founded in 2013 as the “Vector Game Art & New Media Festival” by an independent group of artists and curators: Skot Deeming\, Clint Enns\, Christine Kim\, and Katie Micak\, who were later joined by Diana Poulsen and Martin Zeilinger. \nQuestions? If you have any questions about the workshop or special requirements\, please contact us at education@interaccess.org.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/vector-festival-bio-sonification-non-human-collaboration/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Community Event,Programming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/BioSonification_Community-Event-@-MOCA.png
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20190126T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20190126T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T223735
CREATED:20190109T185529Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190114T162847Z
UID:12632-1548516600-1548522000@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
SUMMARY:Workshop | Create clay sculptures with OSC resident artists\, PA System
DESCRIPTION:“Imagine a dream\, desire\, goal\, aspiration\, need\, resolution or hope that you have for yourself and mould it as a miniature.” \n\nPA System art collective invites everyone to help create part of the ongoing work Resolution (Mass of Clarity).\n\n\nWithin the Art in Use space at MOCA you are invited to sculpt a clay representation of a dream and make your imagination tangible.\n\n\n\n  \nThis event does not require additional tickets or registration and is open to all. Stop by and participate in the creation of this exhibition.\n\n\n\n\n\nPhoto courtesy of PA System.
URL:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/calendar/workshop-create-clay-sculptures-with-osc-resident-artists-alexa-hatanaka-and-patrick-thompson/
LOCATION:MOCA Toronto\, 158 Sterling Rd.\, Toronto\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Community Event,Programming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mocalegacy.webpreview.site/wp-content/uploads/CalendarEvent_PA_JAN9.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MOCA%20Toronto":MAILTO:info@mocalegacy.webpreview.site
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR