The scope of Toronto's annual celebration of photography is so large The Globe has enlisted the help of experts to point you in the right direction of the can't-miss exhibitions.
Open this photo in gallery: “Sun Eclipse” from Chris Marker’s Memory of a Certain Time, showing at the TIFF Bell Lightbox.
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Doina Popescu, director at Ryerson Image Centre, picked Marker’s show, calling it “a rare and exciting treat” to experience his photography.
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Open this photo in gallery: Charles Henry Turner’s “Sand dunes” is part of Collected Shadows: Archive of Modern Conflict, showing at the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art.
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The Archive of Modern Conflict has amassed such a photography collection, says photographer Robert Burley, that it “can mount exhibitions beyond the scope of most major museums.”
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Open this photo in gallery: From Light My Fire at the Art Gallery of Ontario, Henry Moore’s “Much Hadham.”
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Contact co-founder Stephen Bulger likes that the collection includes “work from the early days of photography, together with contemporary pictures.” Arnold Newman Properties/Getty Images
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Open this photo in gallery: “The Anonymous Chorus” from Sara Angelucci’s Provenance Unknown.
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Art Gallery of Ontario photography curator Maia-Mari Sutnik picks this collection that presents “wonderful narratives generated from anonymous photographs that have lost their original meaning and provenance.”
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Open this photo in gallery: The Royal Ontario Museum will host Sebastiao Salgado’s collection Genesis.
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Doina Popescu, Ryerson Image Centre director, says that viewers won’t be able to help but engage with Solgado’s work because of “his commitment to global environmental issues.” Sebastiao Salgado
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Open this photo in gallery: From Arthur S. Goss’s Work and Days at the Ryerson Image Centre.
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Contact co-founder Stephen Bulger says the collection “offers new insight into the underappreciated work of the former City of Toronto photographer.” City of Toronto Archives
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