Lisa Klapstock is a photo-based artist living in Toronto.
In her work, she focusses on everyday places and the ways
they are occupied by people.
On a visual level, Klapstock investigates what she describes
as "mechanisms of seeing" and the role of the
camera in affecting and challenging the way we view and
experience our surroundings. Her photographs and videos
explore the boundaries between abstraction and realism,
and seek to reveal the complex relationship between photographic
depiction and visual perception.
Klapstock's early work examined the hidden environment of
Toronto’s back lanes and drew attention to the fragile
boundaries between public and private realms. Recent subject
matter includes views of private gardens, man-made and natural
landscapes, and populated tourist sites.
Klapstock has exhibited widely in North America and Europe
as well as participating in residencies in The Netherlands,
Finland, Denmark, and Banff, Alberta. Her work is in corporate
and public collections including the National Portrait Gallery
of Canada, the Musée de la Photographie, Chaleroi,
Belgium; the Kamloops Art Gallery; and the Art Gallery of
Hamilton. Between 2004 and 2006, Klapstock’s work
toured Canada in a solo show entitled “liminal”
that was accompanied by a hard cover monograph of her work.

