It’s after Labour Day but it’s still hot enough to be July. I tried to walk for a while today but I didn’t last. Air conditioning is my best friend this afternoon. But all was not lost. Even though I was only out for a short time, I walked along Croft Street and discovered that the south end (south of Vankoughnet) has been cleaned up and repainted. If you don’t know Croft Street, it’s a street in name only. It’s more like an alley in that it’s narrow with a lot of garages on it….but it’s also a lane that now has a number of residences on it. I guess you could call it a hybrid, a little bit alley and a little bit street.
What I really like about the street art here is that there is a cohesiveness to it. It’s not all the same but it all works together. Do I dare call it designer street art?
below: A couple of murals that existed previously were left untouched. On the left an oldie and on the right a new coat of paint.
below: As well as a bright and cheerful coat of paint (and the occasional white wall!), the lane has been decorated with planters made of cement blocks and old plastic barrels.
The south end of Croft Street is at College Street. There once was a mural on a wall at the corner of Croft and College that commemorated the fire of 1904. Almost three years ago I blogged about it. (3 years!) John Croft died in that fire and it was for him that the street was named. Anyhow, that mural is still there although it’s been hidden behind someone’s ugly tagging for more than a year. Today it is also behind scaffolding.
below: Part of the John Croft mural that no longer exists.
And now, because life (or, my life) is rarely linear, I’m going to jump around and look at the other end of Croft Street. North of Vankoughnet there seemed to be an animal theme in street art that I saw.
below: birdo bunny with his ears at attention.
below: The memorial to Monty the cat is still there, again for at least 3 years, but now it’s someone’s little patio. In case you are unfamiliar with this wall I have added a transcription of the poem written in Monty’s honour.
Did you know our Monty the cat?
King of Croft and all that
(Ask your dog. Ask your cat)
Did you give him a pet
Once you had met?
Or tickle his soft silken tum tum?
Did he tell you his tale in articulate meow
And share his affection with a rub of his brow?
His loss here has left us really quite blue
But remembering all of those of YOU
Who knew how to share a sweet kindness true
Who would pause on the way,
In midst of each day,
To offer wee beastie
affectionate feastie
In Memory of Monty
Thank you!
below: Unicorns vs Monsters. And the winner is?
below: Three cows standing in a field…. on a wall.
below: No animal here…. but it must have been here recently and left its paw prints behind.
below: An angular fox, or rather a triangular fox
below: More animals but I’m not sure if it’s art, or if someone has a lot of watering cans they’re trying to keep organized. The bottom yellow one is probably not a pokemon, right? Of course I could be missing something – it wouldn’t be the first time!
below: Leaving the animal theme behind, mind over matter.
below: 74B likes grids. The metal stripping on the brown door has been there for at leasat three years but the coloured stripes on the garage are more recent.
below: All stories and all blog posts need an ending so I’ll stop here. The end.
Love this, but am curious: have the Great Fire of 1904 murals (south end) been totally obliterated? I can’t believe you’d ignore them, & I fear the worst since last time I walked there, they — complete with image of John Croft, the fire’s one victim and person for whom the little street is named — they, I repeat, had been heavily vandalized. Grr grr. You can see my own most recent Croft St post references on 14 April 2015…
The mural was on two sides of a building. The back side with its bright colours is still there. The side wall with the story of John Croft was vandalized a while ago (soon after Nov 2013 when I saw the mural and took pictures of it). The building that the mural is on is now under renovation and there is either scaffolding or a fence in front of the alley side of the building. I didn’t take photos this time because of the fencing and because I have blogged photos before. Does that answer address your concerns?
Not concerns! Curiosity & a desire to be brought up to date!
[…] commemorating the fire of 1904 – it is long gone. In between then and now, the south end of Croft was spruced up with colourful murals and planters in 2016. These are a few pictures that I took as I walked […]
[…] a problem which has also affected street art on the garages further north along Croft Street. Lovely artwork and creative grafitti are ruined by amateurs or those who don’t care about […]