Andrew Zimbel Photography

Andrew Zimbel Photography I capture light, shadow, and beauty in everyday moments. Selected for TOAF 2024, I invite you to see the extraordinary in the ordinary.

Trained by my father, humanist photographer George Zimbel, I blend traditional photography with digital techniques.

Come see me at the gallery this Saturday! 🎨I'll be at The Tasting Gallery at Daniel et Daniel, 250 Carlton Street, this ...
05/08/2026

Come see me at the gallery this Saturday! 🎨
I'll be at The Tasting Gallery at Daniel et Daniel, 250 Carlton Street, this Saturday, May 9th from 1:00 – 4:00 pm.
The gallery is only open when I'm there — so this is your chance to stop by. Come for the art, stay for the conversation. Whether you know me from photography, events, or somewhere in between — you're welcome.
Many paths, one practice. 🙏
My show runs until June 30th — just send me a message if Saturday doesn't work, and we'll find a time.

05/08/2026

Last night I almost didn’t show up.
photoED magazine was hosting a virtual talk on mindful photography by Canadian photographer Anna Wilson. I’ll be honest — it sounded a little airy-fairy to me. But I’ve been practising saying yes to things that make me uncomfortable, so I tuned in.
Somewhere in her talk, Anna described her practice — returning to the same places, looking down, noticing texture and light, the patterns water makes. And I recognized it. She was describing what I do every morning.
So this morning, in the rain, I went out anyway. And I wrote this to a friend:
“The rain falling gently on my hood reminds me of being in a tent after a storm. It is a beautiful sound. The path is deserted. The lawn mower army is on the golf course, swarming like ants to get the course ready for the white-haired men in funny-looking get-ups. The grass is so green, and the light green buds make the forest float like clouds.”
These photos — and a short video of raindrops — are what I came home with.
I’ve always called this “just taking pictures.” Anna gave it another name: a mindful practice. Intentional. Meditative.
If Anna’s work resonates with you, read her article at photoed.ca/post/mindful-photography, and consider supporting photoED magazine’s wonderful photography community at patreon.com/photoedmagazine.
Thank you Anna Wilson, and thank you photoED.
đź“· iPhone. Rain. Attention.

05/07/2026

One of the real joys of managing George’s archive is how it keeps pulling me deeper into the world of photography — and out into it, too.
Tonight I went to the Spring/Summer Opening Reception at The Image Centre (IMC) at Toronto Metropolitan University, and it was a wonderful evening. Three remarkable exhibitions opened, and each one stopped me in my tracks for different reasons.
The survey show for Dawit L. Petros — winner of the 2025 Scotiabank Photography Award — was extraordinary. His Chromatic Cartographies series, tightly cropped photographs of the painted sides of buses traveling across West Africa, looks at first like pure abstraction. Bold color fields, sweeping curves, geometric forms. Then you realize you’re looking at maps of movement, of migration, of lives in transit. It’s a beautiful and genuinely original body of work.
Larry Fink’s Social Graces and Runway filled two galleries, and if you don’t know Fink’s work, this is the place to start. He photographed both Manhattan high society and a farming family in rural Pennsylvania — and somehow made both worlds feel equally theatrical, equally human. The darkroom notes on one of his working prints on display were alone worth the visit.
And Kenna Robinson’s cyanotype work, With My Whole Body, was something I hadn’t seen before — fabric cyanotypes sculpted into three-dimensional forms, the artist both subject and maker. Quiet, powerful, and completely original.
I also ran into some wonderful people. I caught up with Cindee Karnick, whose father Ike Karnick’s show The Spirit, The People, The Land — sixty years of documentary work in Portugal and the Azores — is still up at The Peach Gallery. Well worth seeing if you haven’t.
And I met two new people who I suspect I’ll stay in touch with — James Fowler, artist and curator, and Peter Sramek, a photographer who also makes handbound books and runs workshops at Shibagau Creek Forest Farmstead, a nature retreat in Tamworth, Ontario. The kind of person who reminds you that photography and craft and community all belong together.
The IMC is free, it’s open to the public, and it runs through August 1. If you’re in Toronto this summer, go.
🖼️ Signed lifetime prints by George Zimbel are available through the George Zimbel Photography Archive, and through our partner galleries: Stephen Bulger Gallery (Toronto), Fahey/Klein Gallery (Los Angeles), Catherine Couturier Gallery (Houston), and A Gallery for Fine Photography (New Orleans).

New York has always had a pull on our family. George first arrived in the city as a young man from Boston, heading to Co...
05/03/2026

New York has always had a pull on our family. George first arrived in the city as a young man from Boston, heading to Columbia University — and he photographed New York Harbour, 1949, on his way in. That same energy, that sense of arrival and possibility, is what draws photographers to New York every year for AIPAD.
This week, APAG.us — the American Photography Archives Group — brought AIPAD right to us, taking their monthly Zoom meeting live from the floor of the show at the Park Avenue Armory. I couldn't be there in person this year, so it meant the world.
Mary Engel and Julie Grahame walked us through the booths — we saw Elliott Landy and his remarkable new books, and met Dorothy Davis, who is championing the extraordinary archive of her father Griffith J. Davis — a pioneering African American photographer, one of the first Black officers in the U.S. Foreign Service, and one of the best photojournalists of his generation. His work is currently being exhibited in Lagos, Nigeria, and Dorothy mentioned a show coming to Los Angeles soon. Follow their work at griffdavis.com and on Instagram.
We also visited the Catherine Couturier Gallery, the Munns Archive, and Duncan Miller Gallery. The Stephen Bulger Gallery booth looked stunning too, even if we didn't quite get there.
It's such a gift to have a community that brings the world to you. Hoping to be in that room in person next year. đź“·
P.S. — I recently acquired this framed 16" × 20" print of New York Harbour, 1949 from auction for my personal collection, and I'm making it available. DM if you're interested.

Andrew Zimbel: Collected Works 2022–2026 is now on view at The Tasting Gallery, Daniel et Daniel — 250 Carlton Street, T...
04/11/2026

Andrew Zimbel: Collected Works 2022–2026 is now on view at The Tasting Gallery, Daniel et Daniel — 250 Carlton Street, Toronto.

Andrew will be present this Saturday and Sunday, April 11–12, from 10am to 4pm. The exhibition continues weekends through May 3rd. Free admission.

This exhibition brings together four years of photographic work — images made with an iPhone and transformed in the digital darkroom, where the ordinary becomes something more. Original prints are available for purchase, and private viewings can be arranged by appointment.

📍 250 Carlton Street, Toronto ON M5A 2L1
🕙 Saturdays & Sundays, 10am–4pm through May 3rd
đź”— andrewzimbelphotography.ca

Address

270 Scarlett Road, Unit 312
Toronto, ON
M6N4X7

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