Jacket Image: k.g. Guttman, I asked the audience to close one eye (performance rehearsal documentation), 2016. Courtesy the artist.

Work is a primary scene of the crisis of care. Take Care’s second circuit, Care Work, confronts the systemic undervaluing of caring labour by a capitalist political economy whose living foundation is nonetheless maintained by this labour. The work of care is unbound, yet it tends to be associated with private spaces and enclosed institutions. Making care public, Care Work renders the performance of care visible, audible, and haptic. Continuing Take Care’s effort to name care gaps within art institutions, Care Work centres the position of cultural workers with caring responsibilities for children, elders, communities, languages, land, and water. Traversing this circuit are multiple formations of care work: cultural formations—circulating visual communication strategies to counter gendered and racialized stereotypes of the figure of the caregiver; political formations—tracking transnational movements of care work and profiling practices of solidarity within local communities; technological formations—probing the power relations that course through care’s machinization; and corporeal formations—choreographing the affective rhythms and recompositional possibilities of care work. Expanding what counts as the work of care, Care Work responds to the extractivist attitude that care is perpetually available for the taking, a point on which the crises of care and ecology converge, with the proposition that attending to the work of care is integral to a transformational project to reframe “care as infrastructure.”1

—Letters & Handshakes

How To Order

To order any of our publications, please send an email including title(s), number of copies, and your mailing address to: blackwood.gallery[at]utoronto.ca.

1
Design
Matthew Hoffman

Printing
Thistle Printing
The Blackwood Gallery gratefully acknowledges the operating support of the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, and the University of Toronto Mississauga.

The Blackwood Gallery is grateful for additional support for Circuit 2: Care Work from the Department of Visual Studies (UTM); McLuhan Centre for Culture and Technology, Faculty of Information (UTSG); Parkland on the Glen Retirement Living; The Revue Cinema; Streetsville Public Library; Student Housing and Residence Life (UTM); Women and Gender Studies (UTM); Visual Arts Mississauga; University of Toronto Affinity Partners Manulife, TD Insurance, and MBNA.

Funding for additional staff support was made possible through the Young Canada Works in Heritage Organizations program, Department of Canadian Heritage. The Canadian Museums Association administers the program on behalf of the Department of Canadian Heritage.

Care Work

Lise Haller Baggesen & Deirdre M. Donoghue, Cevan Castle, Dillon de Give, Home Affairs with Ozlem Ozkal, k.g. Guttman, Marisa Morán Jahn, Kwentong Bayan Collective, Leisure, LoVid, Jacqueline Hoàng Nguyễn, Onaman Collective, Kerri-Lynn Reeves, Shane Aslan Selzer

Micropublication produced on the occasion of Care Work, Circuit 2 of Take Care, October 16 – November 4, 2017.

Featuring project descriptions, a curatorial essay for The Let Down Reflex by Amber Berson and Juliana Driever, artist biographies, and full colour illustrations throughout. Edited by Letters & Handshakes.

Free
Download micropublication
pdf

The Blackwood
University of Toronto Mississauga
3359 Mississauga Road
Mississauga, ON L5L 1C6

[email protected]
(905) 828-3789
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The Blackwood is situated on the Territory of the Mississaugas of the Credit, Seneca, and Huron-Wendat.
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