Monday, October 26, 2015

Call for Submissions: Exhibit in The Junction for CONTACT Photography Festival 2016

Call for Submissions: Photography in The Junction for CONTACT Festival 2016
Capture: Call for Submissions: Photography in The Junction 
for Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival 2016

Submission Deadline: November 6th, 2015

Artists will be notified by November 19th, 2015


Exhibitions will take place from May 1 – 31, 2016
The Festival is celebrating its 20th anniversary in 2016.
There are opportunities for artists seeking venues to exhibit with one of the neighbourhood Business Improvement Area (BIA) groups that partner with the festival each year. The BIAs send out calls for submissions in autumn, and match up artists with venues. The 2016 Call for Submissions from the Junction BIA can be found here.
~ www.scotiabankcontactphoto.com/participate

Are you a seasoned photographer? Or just starting out?

The Junction Business Improvement Area will be hosting Open Exhibitions as part of CONTACT 2016. Submit your photographs for an opportunity to exhibit in one of several venues throughout the neighbourhood!

The Open Exhibitions provide a platform for artists from emerging to established, to exhibit their work. These exhibitions include a wide range of projects, promote independent artists and collectives, and facilitate community collaboration. Register your exhibition to be part of this citywide celebration of photography!

Submission Deadline: November 6th, 2015

More details on the submission process how to apply and arrange exhibition details
thejunctionbia.ca: Call for Submissions: Exhibit in The Junction for CONTACT 2016

The Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival is a month-long celebration of the art and profession of photography in Toronto.

CONTACT 2015 Photography in the Junction

Friday, October 16, 2015

Toronto Russian Film Festival TRFF: October 16-18

Toronto Russian Film Festival Presents Alexey Serebryakov
Poster:Toronto Russian Film Festival TRFF-2015 Presents
Alexey Serebryakov - movie star through Cannes, Golden Globe, Oscar;Now he is in Toronto!

Toronto Russian Film Festival
Фестиваль российского кино в Торонто
Alexey Serebryakov - movie star through Cannes, Golden Globe, Oscar
Now he is in Toronto!

The program of the 6th Toronto Russian Film Festival includes nine films, five feature and 4 short films, starring Alexey Serebryakov. The world premiere of the film “Klinch” (director Sergey Puskepalis, Russia 2015) will be presented at the festival, and the program of short films consists of the movies screened at numerous international festivals. All films are with the English subtitles and there is a Q&As session with Alexey Serebryakov after every screening.

When: October 16-18 2015
Where: Innis Town Hall Theatre, University of Toronto
Address: 2 Sussex Ave. Toronto, ON, M5S 1J5
(south of Bloor via St. George)

Toronto Russian Film Festival (TRFF)

October 16-18, 2015

The Festival of the Russian Cinema in Canada was founded by the TRFF Company (Toronto Russian Film Festival) in 2009 to promote Russian cinema. Since then, more than two hundred films of different genres were presented to the audience in the annual programs.

This year TRFF holds a festival with the assistance of Show One Productions. The program of the festival includes films from different years, in which the male lead is played by famous Russian actor, People’s Artist of Russia, Alexey Serebryakov.

Alexey Serebryakov has more than 120 roles in films of different genres. The principal part in the film “Leviathan” (directed by Andrey Zvyagintsev) made Alexey famous worldwide. The film won the Palme D’or in Cannes for the best screenplay, Golden Globe Award for the Best Foreign Language Film and was nominated for Oscar. Mr. Serebryakov makes his Canadian theatre debut in TiFT (Talk is Free Theatre) in the city of Barrie, which will be held 18-28 November, 2015. Show One Productions co-produces the stage version of the play “Gotcha”.

The program of the 6th Toronto Russian Film Festival includes nine films, five feature and 4 short films, starring Alexey Serebryakov. The world premiere of the film “Klinch” (director Sergey Puskepalis, Russia 2015) will be presented at the festival, and the program of short films consists of the movies screened at numerous international festivals. All films are with the English subtitles and there is a Q&As session with Alexey Serebryakov after every screening. The Festival venue is Innis Town Hall – 2 Sussex Ave. Toronto.

The festival opens with “Leviathan” in which Alexey Serebryakov played Nikolay, who is forced to fight the corrupt mayor when he is told that his house will be demolished. He recruits a lawyer friend to help, but the man’s arrival brings further misfortune for Nikolay and his family.

A special highlight of the festival will be the world premiere of the film “Klinch” (director Sergey Puskepalis, Russia 2015). It is a tragicomedy about a simple school literature teacher, Fedorov, who thought his life couldn’t become more boring and pointless until he met a strange girl, who stormed into his very ordinary day, accused him of bringing her girl-friend to suicide and turned his life completely.

One of the most interesting films of the perestroika period “Hammer and Sickle” (Russia, 1994, director Sergey Livnev) will be presented during the festival. This is an interesting tale of an experiment performed during the Stalin-controlled years in the USSR. The main character is changed from a woman into a man. It’s a very in-depth character study of the main character, who tries to fit into a world that she (now ‘he’) doesn’t really understand, especially since she’s now a man.

“PiraMMMida” (Russia, 2011, film director Eldar Salavatov) portrays Russia, early 90s. It is a fictional story inspired by financier Sergey Mavrodi, his securities company “MMM”, and the pyramid scheme he ran that left upwards of fifteen million investors with nothing when it crashed.

The film “Cargo 200″ (Russia, 2007, director Aleksey Balabanov) is still considered the most rigorous and honest film about the end of the Soviet era. The film, a gritty thriller based on actual events is set in 1984, provincial Russia, where the gloom of Soviet life has reached extreme depths. The title refers to the Soviet term for military corpses returning from Afghanistan. Guaranteed to shock even the most strong-stomached of moviegoers, Cargo 200 is one of the most controversial movies ever to emerge from Russia.

TRFF presents a program of short films and Alexey Serebryakov will be discovered as a Canadian actor. “Liompa” (Canada, 2014, directed by Elizabeth Lazebnyk) was filmed in Toronto, although it is based on the short story by Yury Olesha. It’s quite an interesting experiment. Liompa was screened as part of Short Cuts Canada Programme 2 at TIFF 2014. The film “Letter” (Russia, Canada, 2006, directed by Matvei Zhivov) is a deep and sad story about war and love; how war makes the souls of people suffer, depriving them of their hopes for the simple human happiness. The audience will be touched by other short films of the program: “My Name is Happiness” (Armenia, 2006, directed by Vardan Hakobyan) is about a random chance to encounter true love; and the film “The Dive” by Olga Gorodetsky, which was screened at the Cannes Film Festival 2015. The plot revolves around a TV host, trapped by the internet rating.

The festival will be held from October 16 to October 18, 2015 at Innis Town Hall University of Toronto (2 Sussex Ave. Toronto, ON, M5S 1J5) http://townhall.innis.utoronto.ca
Order tickets at RussianTix.com or call 647-466-3555

Toronto Russian Film Festival