Gareth Long at Susan Hobbs Gallery
Schedule
Thu, 26 Feb, 2026 at 11:00 am to Sat, 11 Apr, 2026 at 06:00 pm
UTC-05:00Location
Susan Hobbs Gallery | Toronto, ON
Divided into three seemingly disparate but thematically related vignettes, the works in this exhibition veer through these three research paths of interest: an aphorism by Franz Kafka, a 1930s medical journal, and King Camp Gillette of disposable razor fame.
Kafka’s aphorism about leopards breaking into a temple articulates how culture is produced and reproduced through repetition, and the potential for change to occur when rituals are repeated. The French medical journal, Ridendo, which was published between 1933 and 1977, took its name from the Latin phrase “castigat ridendo mores”, meaning "one corrects customs by laughing at them", or "he corrects customs by ridicule”, pointing to the possibility that humour and satire might have the potential to change societal mores. The American businessman King Camp Gillette, credited with inventing the disposable razor blade in the early twentieth century and along with it the highly capitalist profit-oriented “razor and blade” business model, also designed – prior to his business ventures – a never-realized moneyless, car-less socialist utopia, which was to be located near and powered by Niagara Falls. The works in the exhibition reflect on these contradictions, and the failed calls for social change in Gillette’s utopian writings.
Where is it happening?
Susan Hobbs Gallery, 137 Tecumseth St., Toronto, ON M6J 2H2, CanadaEvent Location & Nearby Stays:



















