I went to Las Vegas and hit the jackpot with some great street art and murals!
I’ve started a new page for Las Vegas street art and as usual, over the next few days I’ll be adding to it!
I went to Las Vegas and hit the jackpot with some great street art and murals!
I’ve started a new page for Las Vegas street art and as usual, over the next few days I’ll be adding to it!
This post is the result of a search for street art while walking south of OCADU on McCaul Street past Grange Road and Stephanie Street on the way to Queen St West.
below: Part of a painting by Uber5000 on the ramp to Above Ground Art Supplies, OCADU on McCaul at Grange.
below: On the SW corner of Grange and McCaul is this woman. The building is 60 McCaul St., the Brinks Express Company of Canada building.
below: On the south wall of the Brinks building is a mural. It was painted in 2014 by Julia Dickens, Tara Dorey, Alexandra Mackenzie, Lido Pimienta, Peter Rahul and Diana Vander Meulen.
UPDATE: As of 4th Nov 2015 the lower right part of this mural has been tagged over unfortunately.
below: This building has a City of Toronto Development Proposal sign on it. This sign says: “40-60 McCaul Street and 10 Stephanie Street. An application has been filed to amend the Zoning By-law to permit a 14 storey residential building with 184 units and a below grade parking garage as well as a 3 storey building proposed to a private art gallery. Statutory Public Meeting: Information will be posted once meeting is scheduled.”
below: The next building south on McCaul Street is 52 McCaul. Dasic Fernandez and Uber5000 contributed this street art to the northwest corner of the building. It is across the parking lot from the mural pictured above.
below: On the back of 52 McCaul (west side) is:
below: There is a large mural on the south side of 52 McCaul. It was painted by Francisco Rodrigues da Silva, a Brazilian street artist who goes by the name Nunca, in 2009 as part of that year’s Manifesto Festival.
below: A few little things spotted along the way.
More info on the two large murals pictured above.
Election day – Monday 19th October
I was going to post the election results in Toronto ridings but this picture (screenshot from the Toronto Star website) says it all much more concisely. Red = Liberal and blue = Conservative. The blue riding top center is Thornhill. The other two that are only partly in the picture are Milton in the west and Markham-Stouffville in the east.
I’ve taken a screenshot of the map showing the voter turnout in the Toronto and area ridings, again from the Toronto Star. The darker the purple, the higher the turnout. The colours in the screenshot didn’t always match the colours on the website, so I added the numbers (the percent turnout for each riding). As you can see, turnout varied between 59% and 76%; as a percentage, more people voted in city center ridings than in suburban ridings.
The title of the exhibit is ‘Surrender’ and the words on the wall say this:
“Liz Magor’s art invites us to reconsider our relationships with the things we encounter every day. Through subtle shifts in materiality and context, her works reveal the important role that objects play in our lives: they can allow us to conceal ourselves or to express our identities. In her sculptures and photographs, Magor explores how we depend on domestic materials to develop a sense of self.”
Nothing is mentioned about surrendering, or why the exhibit has the title that it does.
In the first room there are boxes on the wall. Each box looks like a carefully wrapped sweater or jacket that has just been purchased. I can envision a middle aged saleslady taking her time to package your purchase, like in an Eatons store thirty or forty years ago.
On closer look, most boxes also have a hand print, or shape of a hand with index finger pointing at something and little details are amiss… a ketchup package for example.
The second room has a number of smaller installations.
A garment bag left over a chair.
Neatly folded blankets hanging on a wall.
A platter of chocolates and left overs.
A tweed jacket on top of a liquor bottle.
A husky under a blanket (of snow? on a bed?)
A coat and purse hanging on a hook.
The contents of a room boxed and ready to move.
On closer look, some of the details on the blankets are wrong
including the labels that are sewn on back to front.
I was interested in what people’s reactions were to this exhibit so I had a chat with a couple of the employees about it. According to them, there was no reaction. Most people showed interest in the boxes but when they walked into the second room they rarely stopped to take a closer look.
As for surrender, I did find reference to it in the description of the exhibit on the AGO website, ” In this exhibition, everyday objects and forms, as well as the natural world, function allegorically by evoking the human need to surrender to desires, compulsions, fantasies.” Once again, I will leave it to you to decide if this description fits.
Exhibit continues until 29th November.
Another month, another walk through Graffiti Alley.
As usual, there were some new things that I noticed and here is a sample.
below: This big guy sits where Batman was just a few weeks ago.
below: Little town scene by Peru with a poser bunny beside.
below: The flu hating rapper
below: Shanghai Toronto 2015
below: Lovebot is on the move
below: Stikman in green and grey
below: Any idea what she might be holding in her hands?
Inside Out, a global art project
with more than 250,000 portraits in 124 countries
This project came Toronto as an extended Nuit Blanche installation.
Starting a few days before Nuit Blanche the Inside Out mobile Photobooth was parked at Nathan Phillips Square. Anyone who was interested could have their picture taken – a digital copy was emailed to each participant and a large black and white copy was printed within minutes. The photos were collected and then used to make one large image, a series of concentric circles in the center of the square.

below: Getting ready for Nuit Blanche at Nathan Phillips Square
below: Nathan Phillips Square at Nuit Blanche
below: The side of the ramp to the upper level was also covered with photos.
below: … as was the south side of the 3D Toronto sign.
below: The Inside Out Project remained after Nuit Blanche.
below: There were a number of other sites around the city that participated in this project including a wall at Mel Lastman Square in North York.
below: There was also a wall on the southwest side of Coxwell subway station that was covered.
#IOPToronto | #snb2015 | #snbTO | #share3DTO
‘Solid State’ an exhibit of sculptures made from found material that are then cast in bronze, by An Te Liu at the Toronto Sculpture Garden on King Street East. This is one of the Nuit Blanche installations that is still on view. It is co-produced by MOCCA (Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art) and the City of Toronto.
below: Three sculptures. From left to right are: 1. Meta-matic, 2. Tourist, and 3. Ascension
below: Vegetable, Mineral
below: Remains of the Day