Yesterday started damp and grey but then flipped to bright and sunny. Almost spring-like even. So off to the beach I went.
Well, not that kind of beach. It does look warm though doesn’t it? Yesterday it was more like this:
below: Looking towards Lake Ontario from Kew Beach Ave. Lots of trees and lots of what looks like grass but is more like mud. Squish, squish as I walked gingerly across the water logged ground, trying to keep my shoes clean.
The goal? To check out this year’s warming stations art installations. Lots of others had the same idea as it turns out. Some kids, some dogs, but that’s okay.
below: Interacting with “Nest” both on the outside…..
below: …. and on the inside. Like all the other warming stations, this one is built around a lifeguard station.
below: The structure is covered with netting-like fabric on the inside and webbing on the outside. It was designed by a team from Ryerson University – Adrian Chiu, Arnel Espanol, and Henry Mai.
below: A sign of the times, a pink pussy hat makes its appearance as “Pussy Hut”
below: “What’s all the fuss about?”
below: A large square made of many pieces of hanging red fabric, anchored at the bottom with plywood. This is “Obstacle” by Kien Pham.
below: “Revolution” by a design team from OCAD university. It consists of 36 vertical red poles with conical metal pieces that twirl. You can look through them or speak through them, or just walk amongst the red poles.
below: Red!
below: “Rising Up” by University of Guelph, School of Environmental Design and Rural Development. The design was inspired by the topography of the Don Valley.
below: Ooops! One has blown over and collapsed already (it was quite windy). Ironically it was called “Wind Station” (designed by Paul van den Berg and Joyce de Grauw). When it was first constructed, it was in the shape of a nuclear cooling tower and you could go inside. The little plastic windmills continue to blow in the wind.
below: Not everyone was looking at the warming stations.
below: This is ‘Make Some Noise’, designed by Alexander Greiss and Jorel Heid. Apparently it is based on based on the intonarumori, an invention of the Italian futurist Luigi Rusollo in 1914. An intonarumori generates noise. Rusollo envisioned noise music replacing traditional forms of music but he was not successful and none of his contraptions survived.
below: This is one side of the box. The red is a handle that can be turned thus generating noise. I don’t think that it was working. Each side had a handle and a black speaker.
Stay warm!
You had the same idea I did. I was down at the beach earlier in the day and it was rather quiet with only a few people around.
The wind installation had been completed removed with a sign saying it was under re-construction and there were a couple of guys working on the giant noise box. From their conversation, I got the impression they were disabling the handles.
I was completely fascinated by the installation by the OCAD team. I really like the way it looks and it’s too bad it can’t stay on the beach.
I’m glad to hear that the windmill structure is being rebuilt. I saw a few picture of it before it collapsed and it looked quite interesting, especially from the inside.
I was quite disappointed to find it missing. I had looked up the stations before I left and it was one I really wanted to see.
Oh well, it gives me an excuse to go back I guess.
planning to visit them tomorrow with my Tuesday Walking Society partner – glad to know they are still up (or maybe just some of them…) – thanks for the preview!
Let me know if the one that had collapsed has been rebuilt!
not yet… and we also couldn’t find the sign for Rising Up
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