KAMIPHONY
FALL 2026 | Koffler Arts | Toronto
We are at a moment when the notion of usefulness is being turned on its head.
Clack. Whirr. Chug. Rustle.
These clumsy machines - ourselves, our structures, our certainties.
Can they become something else entirely?
A chorus. An ephemeral pantheon. Delicate and intentionally useless.
on becoming kamiphony
For more than three decades, Cybèle Young has created worlds from paper - sculptures, films, books, machines, and performances shaped by transformation, movement, and play. As a child, she collected insects, drawn to the uncanny way their delicate exoskeletons remained intact - suspended somewhere between object and living thing. That early fascination evolved into a lifelong attraction to the latent animacy of handmade forms, and toward cultural imaginations that exist beyond the strictly rational: worlds where forms carry spirit, ritual lives beside daily life, and the seen and unseen remain in constant dialogue.
Though her intricate paper works were often experienced behind glass, narrative and vitality continued to unfold through film, storytelling, puppetry, and play.
Kamiphony grew from a return to the kinetic works Young first explored over thirty years ago - a reunion with animation, rhythm, and the strange aliveness of handmade things - deepened by a pilgrimage to Japan tracing the origins of the washi paper at the centre of her practice.
As the work evolved, hand-turned mechanisms gave way to museum-scale cams, gears, hinges, and programmed motors, while sound entered the practice as both structure and atmosphere. Emerging alongside her first major public gallery exhibition in nearly two decades, the project allows these fragile forms to finally leave the frame - to move, gather, and interact within a shared space of rhythm, memory, fragility, and wonder.
Like imaginal cells within a chrysalis, the threads of Young’s practice - animacy, ritual, sound, performance, and shifting scale - reorganize here into a newly living form: one that moves between the intimate and monumental, the personal and collective, the microscopic and cosmic.
ON THE WORK
Kamiphony is a multimedia world in a room of small paper machines. Each performs a simple, repetitive action: sound, shadow, and rhythm.
Two structures on stilts, with openings - something to peer through. Inside, echoing forms that taunt: black tongues that emerge and disappear, flowers, scrunched tissue, gossamer-winged things at the ends of stalks and stems. Wrangly wires jolt toward each one in turn, and blush with light at the moment they kiss.
Kamiphony forms a living environment of unhurried absurdity.
Opening at Koffler Arts in Toronto in September 2026, the work brings together sculpture, movement, and rhythm into a continuously unfolding environment.
Realized through a collaboration of artists, engineers, filmmakers, fabricators, and cultural partners, Kamiphony extends beyond a traditional exhibition to encompass performance, film, public programming, and future touring opportunities.
To learn more about the exhibition, upcoming events, future touring plans, or related opportunities, please get in touch.
~ Cybèle Young
FROM THE CURATOR
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“Cybèle Young’s latest exhibition offers a glimpse into another world. Young draws the audience into her work, asking us to suspend time. The sculptures are randomly activated, creating a multifaceted installation that combines sound and movement.
Through shadows, small gestures become large movements and the room takes on a force of its own. The seemingly delicate sculptural constructions come to life, offering us a glimpse into a different dimension. These small gestures become reminiscent of the language of haiku, with each one prompting a magnitude of associations.
There is a dance between negative space and positive space. Mechanical sounds become a celebration of the activation. We are prompted to consider the mechanical figures of Leger, Surrealists sculptures, or fantastical machines of Michelangelo’s imagination.
All objects rendered useless, echoing the feel of our contemporary life.”
PATHWAYS OF SUPPORT
Institutional Acquisition
‘The Shape of Wind’
2025 - 4’x8’x6”, Japanese paper sculpture, gypsum crystal, video, shadow play.
Opportunity to support both the exhibition and the permanent collection of a major work by considering purchasing or co-purchasing this work for donation to a Canadian institution.
PRIVATE COLLECTION
For those drawn to supporting the project through collecting, this offers a direct and meaningful way to participate in the life of the work.
If you - or someone in your circle - is interested, a selection of available works can be shared.
CONNECT
If you would like to explore how to be part of this,
please reach out directly at cybeleyoung@gmail.com