Collage Gallery visual sound poetry

Collage Gallery            visual sound poetry colour texture gesture
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The Foundation for the Study of Objective Art The completed image is witness to the process of your attention.

Collage Gallery is a project of
GALLERY ARCTURUS and
THE FOUNDATION OF OBJECTIVE ART. http://arcturus.ca/about.php

The Process of Collage by deborah harris:

Collage is a way of seeing. One of the great things in doing any visual art is to become familiar with the way in which you work, to be able to observe yourself working. Each medium has its own particular quality, a way in which

it can be used, however variable that may be. The material I have explored in what I refer to as collage are the mass produced images of magazines. They are both anonymous, unlike personal photographs, and recognizable in that they represent a time and place we call our reality. For the most part we are bombarded with those images, on billboards, TV, video, advertising, newspapers and magazines. I think we develop a kind of numbness, a blindness to them as a kind of survival technique. In looking at those same images as raw material and a resource for something other we voluntarize our involvement with them and make use of them as a medium to create with. Technique is simply how we use or manipulate any given material. Paint can be squeezed out of a tube, an opaque thick color. It can be pushed and pulled across a surface and moved and manipulated until it dries. A line drawn with graphite can continue indefinitely, the gesture need not run out. The medium of collage has different properties and therefore different possibilities. I think it begins with seeing ordinary things in an unordinary way. Looking at images which first appear recognizable as this or that, when dismantled become simply color, texture, a gesture of shadow or light. Those same images become a palette of unknown possibility when removed from their ‘known’ context. So the first part of this process is one of collecting. Flipping through a magazine your eyes scan those images. Rip out what your eye is drawn to. Initially we identify what we recognize the image to be, very quickly assessing what it means, what it could be a metaphor for, it is perhaps the greatest challenge and discipline to simply ‘see’ color, texture, shape, shadow, light and enjoy the beauty of those. Watch what you choose, how you rip, cut, take apart an image. Collecting can be very seductive. You may find you have what seems to be hundreds of images before you decide you have enough to work with. Whatever, few or many, at some point you will return to what you have collected. Can you get rid of what you don’t want? That could mean cutting away words or certain distractions to what you want to see more revealed. This is a distillation of sorts. Sometimes an image may appear very beautiful as a whole and it is difficult to imagine taking it apart. It is only an image on paper and chances are you will see something other in dismantling it. If you can suspend preconceived ideas about what you think you ‘should’ create then you can be present to watch what happens. You can be surprised by what appears. Imagine looking out onto a backyard, standing at the open door. You see sky, the trees, a path. Going into the garden to w**d you may see ants between the clods of earth, the space between the blades of grass, none of which was visible from the porch. It’s a change of focal length. To remove the familiar context of a magazine image you must make smaller your field of vision. The surprise is that in doing so you open up vast landscapes with depth and perspective. This is the palette you compose with. The board used to apply those fragments to is not merely a surface it is a space which is shaped by what is placed in or on it. You may cover the board or put one piece on it. The only rule I would make is that it is not done until you love it. What does that mean? It is easy to puddle along, make something, ‘It’s OK.’ you say and throw it in the garbage on your way out. But if your commitment is to stay with it until you love it, then it becomes real work. What would it be to create something that you are deeply satisfied with. I think that happens when we have somehow revealed something we are longing to see. Throughout our lives we are constantly adapting to our environment. You have the opportunity to be in front of something perfectly resonant with you in this moment, why settle for anything less.

-deborah harris is the curator of Gallery Arcturus, a public art museum in downtown Toronto

collage by curator d harris
03/27/2026

collage by curator d harris

We are fixing some glitches with our Daily Art News blog mailing service -- in the meantime here is a work by deborah harris that appeared recently.
To see the latest post please visit https://www.dailyartblog.ca/2026/03/27/for-the-pleasure-of-moving-big-heavy-things/

Continuing in the main floor Genesis Gallery: “shApiNg PeRCEpTiOn”
Hours: Tues – Sat 12 – 5:30pm.

Open now...

The Genesis Gallery

Up North Gallery

Ascending Gallery

The Library

Collage Gallery

The Dark Room:
‘sacrifice of war’/‘leaving’

The Drawing Room:

Photographic Gallery:
Simeon Posen et al

The Studio: books and more

The Foundation for the Study of Objective Art




Next Wednesday eve at Toronto's The Image Centre
10/22/2025

Next Wednesday eve at Toronto's The Image Centre

Celebrate the opening of Jessica Berger: Lost & Found at The Image Centre! ✨
Join us in the Student Gallery for an evening of art, conversation, and community as we debut Berger’s striking photographic and collage-based works exploring memory, identity, and the fluid experience of girlhood.

Opening Party:
📅 Wednesday, October 29, 2025 | 6–8 PM
📍 The Image Centre, 33 Gould St., Toronto
Free event | Light refreshments and cash bar



📷Jessica Berger, Waterside, inkjet print, 2024. Courtesy of the artist.

thursday's blog post:
07/11/2025

thursday's blog post:

by deborah harris
06/12/2025

by deborah harris

found via Facebook -- wish I could see these in person~ed d.
05/09/2025

found via Facebook -- wish I could see these in person
~ed d.

work by Clive Knights via Kolaj Magazine
04/30/2025

work by Clive Knights via Kolaj Magazine

Leap: There & Back by Clive Knightsdiptych: 30″x62″; acrylic, found and hand painted paper collage on canvas; 2025. Courtesy of the artist. COLLAGE ON VIEW Clive Knights: Incomplete…

please note the artist's comment below the images ...
04/25/2025

please note the artist's comment below the images ...

Harlequin by Pablo Picasso

weathering the changes
04/03/2025

weathering the changes

showed up in my personal feed -- very striking~ed d.
03/11/2025

showed up in my personal feed -- very striking
~ed d.

“Look Both Ways”. By

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80 Gerrard Street East
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M5B1G6

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Tuesday 12pm - 5:30pm
Wednesday 12pm - 5:30pm
Thursday 12pm - 5:30pm
Friday 12pm - 5:30pm
Saturday 12am - 5:30pm

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