Dana Claxton, Headdress – Connie, from the Headdress series, 2018, LED firebox with transmounted chromogenic transparency, 152.4 x 101.6 x 20.32 cm. Courtesy of the Artist and Art Gallery of Greater Victoria.

Maya Beaudry, Lattice, 2024, digital pigment print on cotton, acrylic ink, 100.33 x 130.81 x 5.715 cm. Courtesy of the Artist and Towards Gallery.

Michaëlle Sergile, Ombre Portrait (Zanni), from the Ombre Portrait series, 2024, cotton, two-shuttle jacquard loom, 264.16 x 121.92 cm. Courtesy of the Artist and Galerie Hugues Charbonneau.

Jayce Salloum, nest, 2016, torn photographs, 213.3 x 17.7 cm. Courtesy of the Artist, Mónica Reyes Gallery, and MKG127 Gallery. Fabricator: Corie Waugh.

Simranpreet Kaur Anand, A true story of direct action, 2024, woven photo-printed canvas, 104.77 x 95.88 cm. Courtesy of the Artist. Production assistance: Conner Singh VanderBeek.

This artwork is a combination of photographs from the following sources:
Photographer unknown
. Clearbrook, British Columbia, July 17, 1979. 
Courtesy of the Canadian Farmworkers Union Collection.
A digital initiative of Simon Fraser University, Library. Photograph by Sunny Arora Naujawan, Support Network protest at Brampton Gateway Terminal, Ontario, June 24, 2024.

Dana Claxton, Headdress – Connie, from the Headdress series, 2018, LED firebox with transmounted chromogenic transparency, 152.4 x 101.6 x 20.32 cm. Courtesy of the Artist and Art Gallery of Greater Victoria.

Maya Beaudry, Lattice, 2024, digital pigment print on cotton, acrylic ink, 100.33 x 130.81 x 5.715 cm. Courtesy of the Artist and Towards Gallery.

Michaëlle Sergile, Ombre Portrait (Zanni), from the Ombre Portrait series, 2024, cotton, two-shuttle jacquard loom, 264.16 x 121.92 cm. Courtesy of the Artist and Galerie Hugues Charbonneau.

Jayce Salloum, nest, 2016, torn photographs, 213.3 x 17.7 cm. Courtesy of the Artist, Mónica Reyes Gallery, and MKG127 Gallery. Fabricator: Corie Waugh.

Simranpreet Kaur Anand, A true story of direct action, 2024, woven photo-printed canvas, 104.77 x 95.88 cm. Courtesy of the Artist. Production assistance: Conner Singh VanderBeek.

This artwork is a combination of photographs from the following sources:
Photographer unknown
. Clearbrook, British Columbia, July 17, 1979. 
Courtesy of the Canadian Farmworkers Union Collection.
A digital initiative of Simon Fraser University, Library. Photograph by Sunny Arora Naujawan, Support Network protest at Brampton Gateway Terminal, Ontario, June 24, 2024.

/

Tour

VocalEye Almost Live Zoom | Highlights from the 2025 Capture Photography Festival Featured Exhibition, Stitched: Merging Photography and Textile Practices

ADMISSION
Free

Online, Zoom
Registration required, priority for blind and low-vision guests
Register here
Registration closes Wednesday, April 23, 2025, 12:00PM PST

Please note the event time is in Pacific Standard Time

This is a virtual event on Zoom.

Join Capture Photography Festival’s TD Assistant Curator of Engagement, Sarah Wang, on a described tour of the highlights from Stitched: Merging Photography and Textile Practices, a Featured Exhibition for the 2025 Capture Photography Festival. This exhibition includes works by 9 artists who explore how photography and textiles together weave dialogues on social change, labour division, personal and collective histories, colonial archives and aesthetic inheritances. By utilizing slow looking to appreciate selected works, this tour will illustrate how both the image and the fibre evoke deeper meanings and innovative opportunities for artistic creation.

Presented in partnership with VocalEye.

This exhibition is co-presented by the Gordon Smith Gallery of Canadian Art and Capture Photography Festival. It is sponsored by Parc Retirement Living and is generously supported by the Audain Foundation, the Timothy A. Young Family Foundation, the City of North Vancouver, the District of North Vancouver through the Arts & Culture Grants Program of the North Vancouver Recreation & Culture Commission, Artist for Kids, the Gordon and Marion Smith Foundation for Young Artists, and the North Vancouver School District.

We gratefully acknowledge the support of Artist for Kids, the Smith Foundation and the North Vancouver School District.

About Sarah Wang

Sarah Wang has a degree in art history and international relations from the University of Toronto where she studied visual culture and histories of socialist and post-socialist states. She works in the arts in Vancouver and is the TD Assistant Curator of Engagement at Capture Photography Festival.

Related Exhibition

My Itinerary

My Itinerary

Print
Type Image Title Date Location

You Have No Items in Your Itinerary

Add programming to your Capture Photography Festival Itinerary now: