Yesterday the Portuguese community in Toronto held their 29th annual Portugal Day parade. It was a lively, happy occasion. Hundreds of people lined Dundas Street West between Lansdowne and Trinity Bellwoods Park to watch the parade. They showed their Portuguese colours with flags, banners, hats, soccer shirts, and lots of red clothes! Young soccer players demonstrated their skills. People of all ages wore traditional dress from different parts of Portugal as they walked and danced along the parade route. There was music too – bagpipes, marching bands, and music to dance to.
up and down, old and new, at Yonge and Bloor
Posted: June 11, 2016 in locations, old buildingsTags: Bloor, condos, construction, development, downtown, facades, glass, reflections, Yonge
Standing on the corner of Yonge & Bloor, looking south…. On one corner, a tower almost finished and on the other corner a tower another just started. 1 Bloor East and 1 Bloor West.
below: 1 Bloor East (7 photos)
below: The beginnings of an overhang at street level, NW corner of the building.
below: The podium level as seen from the SW corner of the building.
below: The full height of the building is more easily seen from farther east on Bloor Street.
below: As seen from across the street, under the protective covering over the sidewalk.

below: Once upon a time the old Stollerys store stood on the southwest corner. Today it is a construction site wrapped in hoardings covered by a mural of a forest scene. I’m not sure what they’re trying to say or who they’re trying to fool. Oh well, it looks pretty for now.
below: If you look behind the hoardings, you will see that all the buildings except one have been demolished. No hole has been dug yet so it’s going to be a while before this tower is completed. And when it’s completed it will be Toronto’s tallest condo building at 72 storeys.
Two blocks north, at Yonge & Yorkville, there is another hole in the ground.
below: The doors and windows of the old brick buildings on Yonge Street are boarded up. These buildings date from the 1860’s.
below: Peek around at the back and you’ll see that the old stores have been demolished but their facades have been saved. Again, this project is in it’s early stages and again, it’s going to be a tall one. This time, 58 storeys tall.
below: The stores have been stripped of their signs and decorations. It looks a bit desolate at the moment but it will be interesting to see just what the developers do with the facade.
below: No one can argue that the old buildings were in good shape. At least there is an effort being made to preserve the front of the buildings. Preserving some of our history is important and I think that the old architecture adds visually to the look of the street.
As I walk back down Yonge street towards Bloor, a sign catches my eye. Another development proposal sign – Toronto’s most common sign I think. This one is for a 64 storey building at Yonge and Cumberland. Anyone feeling a touch of vertigo at the moment?
Frank Kovac lane
Posted: June 8, 2016 in graffiti and street art, locationsTags: alley, alleyway, animals, bear, bees, blue jay, blueberries, camera, community, doors, faces, fences, figures, fox, garage doors, graffiti, ivy, lane, monsters, mural, Nick Sweetman, painting, photography, photos, raccoon, street art, urban wildlife
Frank Kovac Lane is a short alley just south of Christie subway station. Some of the garage doors were painted with murals in past years and, as usual, there were plenty of tags. Recently, the lane was the scene of a community mural painting session thanks to the 4th Toronto Rangers (Girl Guides), StreetARToronto, artist Nick Sweetman, and some local residents. Now some of the tags are gone and more importantly, some more garage doors are home to bright and cheerful murals. A few of them are included here.
below: At the north end of the lane is this large, colourful mural by Nick Sweetman.
Two large blue bears have found a plethora of honey. Will the bees share?
below: The new murals continue the animal theme, “Urban Wildlife”, starting with this fox.
below: A common Toronto animal, a raccoon, beside a red fire hydrant.
below: A blue jay eyes some blueberries.
below: Several monster faces have lived in this alley for a while and they still remain.
This one looks like he needs a hair cut.
below: This graffiti is actually on Harbord Street but I couldn’t resist taking a picture of it
– a camera and an “oh snap”
alleyway of dreams
Posted: June 7, 2016 in graffiti and street art, locationsTags: alley, alleyway, animals, bees, colours, community, cows, donkey, fence, garage, garage door, giraffe, graffiti animals, lane, laneway, murals, Nadia Hakime, pigs, rabbit, rhino, rhinocerous, shapes, street art, tiger
The Alleyway of Dreams is an art project begun in 2012 that aims to spruce up and add some colour to a lane near Danforth and Main. I walked the alley yesterday and this is what I saw.
below: A large mural by StreetARToronto, caring hands and large bees in Bee Haven. (2 photos)
Artist Nadia Hakime has painted several animals on the garages in fences in the alley.
below: In the barnyard, four cows and three pink pigs.
below: A blue rhinoceros with a horn that resembles a flowering tree.
below: This giraffe thinks you’re standing on your head. His world is a very upside down place!
below: A cute little bunny and a friendly blue dog ready to make friends.
below: A majestic looking tiger.
below: Humphry the donkey turns to look.
below: Grapefruits on the left and peaches? apricots? on the right.
below: A wonderful blue chameleon is smiling at passers by, painted by Steven Micallef.
below: A ‘Starry Starry Night’ shed, thanks to Vincent Van Gogh and artist Nadia Hakime.
#alleywayofdreams
The Alleyway of Dreams facebook page
kids and community, around Woodbine
Posted: June 7, 2016 in graffiti and street art, locationsTags: alley, community, construction, Gledhill, history, hoardings, kids, lane, murals, painting, past and present, school, street art, students, Woodbine, Woodbine subway station, youth
This post is about community involvement and the murals that result. They aren’t great art and they weren’t meant to be. They are about the stories we tell about ourselves and our communities. They brighten our public spaces and enrich our neighbourhoods.
The first is a series of murals painted by Gledhill Public School students. There are murals by the graduating classes of 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2011 in a lane near the school.
Just to the east, Woodbine subway station is undergoing much needed renovations and expansion. Some of the hoardings around the construction site have been covered with three murals. They were painted by: Haley G., Sasha K.S., Francis H., Melika W., Tristan C., Savannah P., Adrina P. and Anna-Lisa A as well as Jim Bravo and Andrenne Finnikin as part of the ‘City on the Move, Young Artists in Transit’ mural project.
The first mural is a juxtaposition of past and present, people playing beside the creek. The creek, trees, and birds are all the same. There is now a city in the distance and clothing we wear has changed, but we still enjoy the outdoors like our ancestors did.
Above ground, a fair, an amusement on a summer day. Below ground, the subway is being built.
And last, woodpeckers in the trees as well as a poem by George Elliott Clarke who was the Poet Laureate of Toronto 2012-15. It describes the murals and is transcribed below.
The poem on the last mural:
Seeing Beauty, at Woodbine
Citizens, let’s pasture ourselves in parks
And gardens, so skyscrapers mingle with trees,
And we recover Native faith, Settler
Hope, to savour birds’ trills and swoops, fording
Creek and times past, to touch us, where we stand.
Once was pleasure in a street fair – ice cream
And lollipop, but also in strolling
Or rolling down to work, shirt-sleeves rolled up,
Dawn light unfolding, That’s what’s visible.
(Underground, a steel vein branches, roots, and throbs.)
Torrential leaves stacked up towers, now fallen,
Last Fall, Birds tap into the standing logs
Winter planted. Spring rain well refreshes
The city. Now, young artists tap dreams –
Drafting Beauty – to which all say, “Bravo!”
by George Elliott Clarke
dancing in the square
Posted: June 4, 2016 in eventsTags: arms, ballet, crowd, dance, event, happy, kids, legs, outdoors, people, Sharing dance, Yonge Dundas Square
beauty and the billboard
Posted: June 3, 2016 in events, public artTags: ads, art, attention, beauty, billboards, CONTACT, Mickalene Thomas, parking lot, people, photography festival, portraits, questions, Spadina, street advertising, women
This is another post about an exhibit from the CONTACT Photography Festival. I know that it’s now June and CONTACT was in May, but I wanted to post these photos. I actually took them early in May as you can probably tell by how many clothes the people in the pictures are wearing. They’re certainly not dressed for the warmer weather we’ve been having lately. I have had trouble deciding what to write in this post.
There is a parking lot at the NE corner of Front and Spadina with some billboards in it. Maybe you saw them as you drove or walked past but maybe you passed by and missed them. There are so many things on the street vying for our attention and a billboard is just another piece of street ‘furniture’.
For the month of May, an installation titled ‘What it Means to be Beautiful’ by Mickalene Thomas occupied a number of billboard spaces at the above mentioned corner. All the images are portraits of women and are “shown within the context of street advertising, where women are constantly bombarded with narrow notions of female beauty.” A sample of the billboards:
Part of the reason that I hesitated to write this post was the fact that the iphone 6 ad campaign was on at the same time. It was a campaign that used photos taken with the phone and the ads were very visual and used very few words. In my opinion, they are more eye catching and visually appealing than Thomas’s work. I found a few of them to show here (below). I know that there were many more but unless I was consciously looking for ads, I didn’t notice them as billboards are one of the things that I block out as I walk. That led to a few thoughts about what catches a viewer’s attention on the street – Faces? Colours? Contrast?
There is more going on in Thomas’s photos and collages than just visual appeal but I still question the validity of asking the viewer to look at them in the context of street advertising. Is it fair to compare her images to ads produced by, and in aid of, a large corporation? Would it have been better to exhibit her work in different form or a different place? I don’t have the answers for those questions. Do you?
And now I will go back to ignoring billboards as I walk.

































































































































