Color Me Rad, 5 km walk/run
Downsview Park, Saturday 30 May 2015,
in aid of Big Brothers and Big Sisters
15,000 participants of all ages
color me rad
Posted: May 31, 2015 in events, peopleTags: color me rad, colours, corn starch, Downsview park, fun, kids, laughter, men, orange, people, powder, purple, race, run, smiles, throw, Toronto, walk, women
part picture, part ?
Posted: May 28, 2015 in galleriesTags: art, CONTACT, digital, experiments, film, frames, gallery, MOCCA, photographic, photography, pictures, Toronto, visual
Part Picture,
an exhibit at MOCCA,
part of CONTACT Photography Festival
Like the introduction of film photography once usurped the role of painters and engravers, the introduction of digital photography has supplanted the photographer of old. We are all photographers now. A smartphone. A little bit of software. And presto, you have a picture. Many, many bazillions of pictures. Photography excels at visually telling stories, documenting events or capturing a moment in time either with a single image or in a series of photos. The expression ‘a picture paints a thousand words’ comes to mind. Even a blurry selfie says something.
Photography has always had an uneasy relationship with art (with the fine art, visual artsy stuff in particular). This art, while also visual, often has a slightly different focus. It too aims to elicit emotions and reactions but no one expects an artwork to document or to tell a story albeit some do. But art too is in flux (and probably has been for a while). What hasn’t already been done? What rules are left to break?
So what’s a photographer to do?
Part of the description of this exhibit states: “placing photography in conversation with other artistic mediums – particularly painting and sculpture – to create hybrid works that are only part picture”.
Experiments with chemicals on photographic paper; experiments with photoshop artifacts as part of the image; experiments with how one frames or hangs a picture. What is photography anyhow?
below: close up of part of the picture from above, the one that is hung perpendicular to the wall.
Just because something is different doesn’t mean that it’s good just as not all experiments are a success but kudos to those who try. I will leave it to you to decide which category (good/bad) these pictures fall into.
urban mud hero
Posted: May 26, 2015 in events, peopleTags: #mudhero, city, climbing, dirty, fun, grimace, helping, jumping, Lake Ontario, laughter, mud, Mud Hero, muddy, obstacle course, Ontario Place, punching bags, race, racers, rope climbing frame, smiles, team work, teams, Toronto, urban
life as the shadow of vida
Posted: May 22, 2015 in graffiti and street art, public artTags: alley, birds, brunosmoky, child, colours, Dundas West, essencia, fish, fiya, lane, los clandestinos, Lula Lounge, men, mural, Nick Sweetman, people, sapiens, shalak atack, smoky, street art, Toronto, urban art, women
ivory, stone, and bone
Posted: May 22, 2015 in galleriesTags: AGO, animals, Art Gallery of Ontario, bone, faces, ivory, Manasie Akpaliapik, men, sculpture, tusks, walrus
Lansdowne billboards
Posted: May 21, 2015 in public artTags: billboards, black and white, books, CONTACT, Dundas West, Flat Death, floral, flower arrangement, flowers, Lansdowne Ave., old, photographs, Sarah Cwynar
Flat Death and Contemporary Floral Arrangements,
by Sarah Cwynar,
large photographs on billboards on Lansdowne Avenue,
Part of CONTACT Photography Festival.
below: ‘Flat Death’ at Lansdowne and Dundas West.
Black and white photos of books on four billboards.
below: ‘Contemporary Floral Arrangements’ on the corner of Lansdowne and College
The foundation for ‘Contemporary Floral Arrangements’ are 1960’s photographs of floral arrangements. Small objects such as key chains, plastic bits, buttons, spools of thread, etc are then placed on the photos, matching colour and tone.
The idea that this is an ad made of things that no one wants may be interesting in theory but in practice it’s just a pretty picture. Because of the location of the billboard, the details of the picture can’t be seen.
100 Workers
Posted: May 20, 2015 in memorialsTags: 100 workers, accidents, deaths, downtown, Front St., John Scott, memorial, safety, Simcoe Park, statue, Stewart Pollock, Toronto, workplace safety, WSIB
100 Workers,
aka WSIB (Workplace Safety and Insurance Board) Simcoe Park Workers Monument,
a monument commemorating the workers of Ontario who died in the workplace,
by John Scott and Stewart H. Pollock.
Located downtown on Front Street between Simcoe and John.
Each plaque on along the top of the wall commemorates one person, one from each year between 1901 and 1999. Deaths are from mining accidents, industrial accidents, train crashes, silicosis, asbestosis, and the like. At the end, there is one blank plaque to represent future accidents.












































































































































