Skip to main content
Opening times this week:
Monday
Closed today
Except holiday Mondays
Tuesday
10 am - 5:30 pm
Wednesday
10 am - 8 pm
BMO Free Wednesdays 4 – 8 pm
Thursday
10 am - 5:30 pm
Friday
10 am - 5:30 pm
Saturday
10 am - 5:30 pm
Sunday
10 am - 5:30 pm

Site Navigation

Chair-like structures of different heights topped with wicker birdcage baskets and a woman and man are inside two of the tall structures in the Museum Collections Gallery

A Romance of Many Dimensions

An installation inspired by the ancient game of cockfighting

April 15 - June 5, 2022

Museum Collections Gallery

This event has passed

Page Navigation

This event has passed

Cocks do not fight for their household gods, for the monuments of their ancestors, for glory, for liberty or for the safety of their children, but only because one will not give way to the other. 
– Themistocles

A Romance of Many Dimensions, by renowned Canadian Iranian artist Ghazaleh Avarzamani, is an installation inspired by the ancient game of cockfighting, a blood sport deeply embedded within various religious belief systems and cultures.

Chair-like structures are topped with traditional baskets used to contain the birds, bred specifically for their innate aggression and — through human training and conditioning — their ability to sustain an attack, despite severe injury, broken bones and exhaustion, and ultimately, kill.

Take a minute to step inside the baskets. What do you see? How does your confinement within the baskets make you feel? Next, watch others interacting with the baskets. How has your perspective changed?

A young woman stands underneath a chair with a wicker cage over it, used to contain the birds.
Cockfighting ring where two chickens are fighting

By inviting us to take the place of the fighting birds, Avarzamani wants us to reflect on the individual’s perspective and role in the face of division, conflict and control systems, and how, ultimately, everyone is complicit and invested in “the game,” be it as a passive spectator or an active participant.

This metaphor illustrates how human beings aren’t born to kill but are conditioned to observe each other with suspicion and hatred, sometimes leading to deadly combat.

The timely project explores the complex causes of global conflicts and how everyone is complicit – either directly or indirectly.

Be sure to explore the additional work of Ghazaleh Avarzamani, on view at 72 Perth Ave, as part of a co-presentation with the Toronto Biennial of Art.


Ghazaleh Avarzamani is a Toronto-based multidisciplinary artist who studied painting at Azad Art University, Tehran, and holds a Master of Fine Arts from Central Saint Martins University of the Arts, London, UK. In 2021, she was the Museum’s Artist in Residence, which culminated in her ground-breaking exhibition titled: *Terms and Conditions Apply.

 

Curator: Marianne Fenton

 

Biographies

Presented in partnership with: