Keeping warm at the Art Gallery of Ontario.
Below are 5 works of art that I saw recently when I decided to spend the afternoon inside instead of walking in the cold. The AGO is definitely a great way to stay warm!
below: There is a room at the Art Gallery of Ontario that is home to four large metal sculptures at the moment. Large structural pieces. These creations are the work of Sir Anthony Caro (1924-2013). They are made of discarded metal pieces. At one point in his career, he made scale models for a giant art project for Park Avenue in New York City. When the project was cancelled, he took apart the models and used the pieces to make a new series. Three of those on display here are from that series, ‘Sculpture Laid Bare’. It would be interesting to see what the Park Avenue sculpture models looked like.
In the early part of his career, Caro made modeled figurative pieces cast in bronze. In the 1960’s he started to use prefabricated steel and aluminum, sometimes in bright colours such as the example below:

Red Splash, by Anthony Caro. Image found online at source.
If they were outside, they would invite interaction. Touch them. Climb on them. In this gallery setting, there is a no touching policy. The words on the wall says that: “He [Caro] meditates on the passage of time, processes of decay, the painful realities of aging, and the future of modern sculpture.” Isn’t that why the gallery is doing their best to preserve them just the way they are?
below: ‘The Distinctive Line Between One Subject and Another’ by John McEwen, 1980. Two steel wolves looking at each other across the room. On the wall behind the wolves is ‘Folia Series #1 and #2 by Nobuo Kubota, 1976, representations of the wrinkles on the cerebellum in the brain.
John McEwen is a Canadian sculptor. A number of his sculptures can be found around Toronto. He designed the boat hull like shapes for the Victory Peace memorial on the waterfront that I mentioned in a previous blog post – down to Coronation Park. The three metal tubes outside the Air Canada Centre – the Searchlight Starlight Spotlight – are also his work.
below: More lines, this time its “Aforim” by Rita Letendre, 1975. Which lines are parallel? Is there a horizon line? If so, which one is it?
… And lastly, another reference to structure. But not structure in the 3D, physical form, sense of the word. Instead, it is a painting called ‘Number Structure II’ by Canadian artist Kazuo Nakamura (1926-2002). Nakamura graphs out number-structure patterns and calculations and presents them as art.
below: One of the structures that Nakamura used was the Pascal Triangle. This image shows the first 6 lines of the triangle. Each number is the sum of the two numbers above it. Can you figure out what the next line would be? When expanded, it contains many number sequences and can be used to answer probability questions – as well as other mathematical things that I don’t understand.
below: A small (maybe 1/8th) section of the painting … which unfortunately doesn’t give you much of an idea as to the composition of the artwork. It does though give you an idea of the detail. Some of the parts that I have omitted are triangle shapes that conform to Pascals triangle as pictured above. Is it mathematics? Is it art? Where do you draw the line between the two? Is there a line?
It’s the kind of painting that a photograph can never do justice to. It’s best seen in person. Oh yes, the answer to the question above: The next line of the triangle would be: 1, 6, 15, 20, 15, 6, 1.