Lindsay McIntyre Solo Show Featured as Part of Capture Photo Fest

Posted on | Updated
The exhibition features outtakes from Lindsay鈥檚 films, mounted into lightboxes.
New work by Lindsay McIntyre, film artist and Assistant Professor of Film + Screen Arts at Emily Carr University, is currently collected in , in partnership with Capture Photography Festival.
The show, entitled Lindsay McIntyre: the tool of the tools, features outtakes from Lindsay鈥檚 films, mounted into lightboxes.
鈥淗ands are the tool of tools,鈥 Lindsay says in her exhibition statement.
鈥淭hey represent work and time. They tell stories. They are the record of our lives. They represent guilt and things unsaid. They dismiss, threaten, summon, feed, and signal friendship and love. They are how a mother shows love to her child.鈥
Lindsay, who is of Inuk/settler Scottish descent, draws a line between her ongoing formal inquiries, and the particular resonance her subject holds for Inuit communities and individuals.
鈥淔or Inuit, hands and the tools they make have always been a concrete part of life,鈥 she continues, noting how her formal concerns as a filmmaker work in concert with that textual focus.
鈥淭hese film frames and extracts from a decade of film work bring to light the interplay between surface and subject, frame and content and shed light on the recurrent depiction of hands in my body of film works. Working primarily with high-contrast black and white 16mm film, these images stem from a series of motion picture works produced between 2005-2013. The bounding box of the 16mm film frame enters the picture, normally withheld from view; it sees light at last.鈥

In its own exhibition statement, the Marion Scott Gallery鈥檚 spotlights this ongoing, twofold inquiry 鈥 into both subject and form 鈥 in Lindsay鈥檚 work:
鈥淢uch of McIntyre鈥檚 extensive catalogue represents a parallel investigation into her personal identity and family history as well as celluloid itself, its processes and associated mechanisms鈥攎anipulating the various steps in the hand-developing process of 16mm film and being the 鈥渙ne-woman machine鈥 responsible for every role behind the camera. McIntyre鈥檚 richly textured, grainy, or diaphanous imagery is more visual art than cinema, with marks and signature characteristics showing the hand of the artist as much one would expect to see in a carving or painting.鈥
Because of COVID-19, Marion Scott Gallery held a virtual opening for the show in early April. Lindsay notes that video tours of the exhibition are still accessible via . A selection of works from the show are also available for viewing on .
Support for the project was partially made possible by the Marion Scott Gallery and Shumka Centre's RBC Emerging Artists Project-funded Art Apprenticeship Network, which employed undergraduate photography student Svava Tergesen.