5th annual yogathon at Yonge Dundas Square
#riseforacause | #yogathontoronto | #riseforacausetoronto
The first time I saw the latest art installation in the Canary District I was in a car and only got a quick look at it. I couldn’t figure out what the mess was all about. It wasn’t until I went back on foot to take a closer look that I could appreciate what the artists were trying to do.
Located at Front and Bayview is the ‘Garden of Future Follies’ by Hadley Howes and Maxwell Stephens (Hadley & Maxwell and the Studio of Received Ideas). It is a sculpture garden and there are 7 sculptures in this garden. Each sculpture is a mashup of pieces from different sculptures around Toronto. Aluminum foil ‘molds’ were used to replicate portions of over 80 different monuments and architectural features. These portions were then put together in a whole new way.
From an interview with the artists:
“Sir John A. Macdonald’s nose is assembled along with the eyes of artists Frances Loring and Florence Wyle, the chin of Dr. Sun Yat-Sen, and Northrop Frye’s hair; Jack Layton’s smile is one of seven that grace a figure lounging atop a reconstituted mantel from the library at Osgoode Hall; a bell from St. James Cathedral’s famous collection is perched on a cannon from Fort York; while nearby a suitcase from the Memorial to Italian Immigrants acts as a plinth for a collection of hats from various bronze heads.”
Now you can play spot the pieces! But you won’t find any hockey sticks.
So far I haven’t seen anyone taking selfies here but I think it would be a great spot for them!
below: No one will ever call it beautiful, playful yes, but not pretty.
Walking around the block, sort of, near Ossington and Queen.
North from Queen Street, west side of the alley
East side of the alley
Turning, now behind Queen Street West
Where the alley meets Brookfield Street
On Brookfield Street at Queen Street West
below: The red line marks the alleys in which the above photos were taken.
Piliriqatigiingniq
This mural is on the south wall of Hosteling International on Church St.,
and in a parking lot on Court St.,
just north of King St. East and across from St. James Cathedral.
Painted July 2015
This project was a collaboration between Mural Routes and the Nunavut Arts and Crafts Association. Artists were youth from Cape Dorset as well as graduates from Toronto’s Oasis Skateboard Factory: Latch Akesuk, Audi Qinnuayuaq, Cie Taqiasuq, Parr Etidloie, Julieta Arias and Moises Frank.
Graffiti and/or street art on the north side of the railway underpass on Bloor St. West between Dundas West and Perth Avenue. It is also by the Bloor GO station and where the West Toronto Railpath crosses Bloor Street.
Painted April 17, 18 and 19, 2015 by 26 artists led by Cruz1
This was spudbomb was added a few days later.
This was another StreetARToronto project.
Located at the northwest corner of Regent Park Blvd and St. David St.,
(which is south of Dundas East and east of Sackville)
painted on the wood hoardings around a construction site.
This wall was painted as part of The Patch Project
PATCH = “Public Art Through Construction Hoarding”
Unfortunately, one photo that is missing is one of the section of the wall that is a large section that says “Conquer Adversity with Diversity”, the title of this work.
More information on The Patch Project