Along a short stretch of Coxwell Avenue
Upgrades to Coxwell subway station include work on the north side of Strathmore Blvd. Two murals were created to brighten the hoardings around the construction site. Both murals are the work of a program called ‘City on the Move – Young Artists in Transit’. If you use Coxwell subway station you can’t help but see these murals as they are right across the street from the entrance.
below: ‘Today Reassembling Yesterday’ shows people standing within a miniature old East York. On both sides of the mural is a replica of a Hollinger Bus line ticket. This bus company was founded in 1921 by John Hollinger and it serviced the growing neighbourhood of East York. By the time the TTC took it over in 1954, Hollinger had 96 employees and a fleet of 56 buses that traveled twelve routes on such streets as Woodbine, O’Connor and Coxwell.
below: In this mural, five panels are covered with wallpaper of pictures of the past. Residents, the present day, peel back the layers of the past to reveal their visions and hopes for the future. On the left, red barns and hay stacks make way for solar panels over fields with bird filled skies. The next panel is also inspired by agriculture – healthy corn fields and other crops under a layer with horses and stables. The middle panel puzzles me. I’m note sure what the pictures on the brown paper represent but birds in a tree are under it. The fourth panel suggests accessible public transit. Lastly, cars and trucks make way for rivers to fish in.
‘New Revelation, at Coxwell’
a poem by George Elliott Clarke, Poet Laureate of Toronto 2012-15
to accompany the mural at Coxwell stationAs wallpaper peels to windowpanes, spy
Grass, insurgent, urging all our future
Is Spring: Sunlight sparks sweat and dream; wind drives
Machines. Thrilled, birds wing and sing so sprightly,
Everyone delights. Blossoms float perfumes.
Branches brandish emerald bouquets. Our lungs
Flood with surging airs, clean as chlorophyll,
Mint-new, mint-tangy, so song is born,
Just by breathing. Wheels become our earthly
Wings, so infant and elder, builder and
Dreamer, can flit – transit – through the city
As public millions that public millions
Uphold, so that the lame, too, can take
The air and wheel down to creek, stream, and lake.
Suddenly glittering, afresh with fish.
The TTC also owns property on the southeast corner of Coxwell and Danforth. Back in 1915 this facility was built as the Danforth carhouse for the streetcars that ran along the Danforth. When the Bloor Danforth subway line opened in 1966, these streetcars were retired and the carhouse was converted to handle TTC buses instead. In 2002 the Danforth carhouse (or Coxwell Barns) was shut down. Some of the property has been sold off but the TTC still has a presence there.
below: Along Coxwell Avenue, south of the Danforth, there is a fence that separates TTC property from the street. It was a typically drab TTC concrete barrier. Recently it was painted by a group of volunteers. The word ‘transition’ now pops out at passersby from a colourful mural designed by Sean Martindale.
If you walk a few more blocks south on Coxwell, you will come to a fence where many butterflies have stopped to rest.
They share a fence with a few creative owls wisely made out of recycled materials. Tin cans, CDs, buttons, bottle tops, corks, paper clips, sunglass lenses, clothes pegs, foil plates, and bits of plastic repurposed.
below: A little red fairy door, home of the Earl Haig gardener. This past summer there was a project called Danny’s Urban Fairies. Fairy doors that were hand crafted by local artists started appearing in stores and parks along Danforth East (from Jones to Westlake). Some of the fairy doors remain but many were auctioned off in November to raise money to support the non-profit East End Music Project.
below: No bows and arrows allowed!
Love all this, I’d been tracking the Transitions mural but missed the art on the wire fence. Big laugh for the “Playing of …” sign!
The little things that make us smile are wonderful to find!
I’m a glutton for transit history so thanks!