Toronto Outdoor Art Fair 2018,
Nathan Phillips Square
Posts Tagged ‘images’
art at Nathan Phillips
Posted: July 9, 2018 in events, galleries, peopleTags: art, art fair, art show, artists, glass, images, looking, Nathan Phillips Quare, outdoors, paint, paintings, people, pictures, rust, sculpture, toaf2018, Toronto Outdoor Art Fair
paddling the Bentway
Posted: May 11, 2018 in construction, galleries, locationsTags: art, canoes, Carlo Cesta, construction, CONTACT, Dana Claxton, development, Embassy of Imagination, Forest of Canoes, fort york, Fountaingrove, images, Janice Qimirpik, Moe Kelly, Nestor Kruger, Ordnance Street, PA system, park, pictures, public space, railway, sculpture, snowmobile, Strachan Ave., tracks
… and vicinity
The Bentway is a new park being built under the Gardiner Expressway between Bathurst and Strachan. I walked it almost two years ago when the park was only in the planning stages. I thought that I’d take a look at it again the other day. Originally, it was supposed to be ready last summer so it’s a bit behind schedule. Surprised?
Walking south on Strachan from King, and whoa, there are changes happening here too. Cranes everywhere. Holes in the ground. How many people are employed in the construction industry in Toronto? in the GTA?
below: Looking eastward from Strachan Avenue, immediately south of King Street.
below: The view from a few metres farther south on Strachan. The metal grid covers the railway tracks and supports the retaining walls on either side. It also makes an interesting pattern. These tracks turn northward – they are used by the UP Express to the airport and GO trains to places like Georgetown and Barrie. There’s the CN Tower again – just in case you’re a CN Tower junkie like me. I can’t resist taking pictures of it, especially when I find new angles, new foregrounds.
below: Immediately south of the train tracks is Ordnance Street. Until recently it was a sleepy little dead end street of light industrials.
below: Ouch! Look at all those transformers on the poles.
below: The east end of Ordnance Street is at Strachan. It doesn’t actually end there, but continues on the west side as East Liberty Street. This is the eastern edge of Liberty Village.
Sorry, we haven’t got to the Bentway yet. If you are a Torontonian you should now have your bearings and know at least approximately where you are. Not far to go now. It’s a beautiful day and we’re walking slow!
The Ordnance Street development is on a triangle of land with one side as Strachan Avenue and the other two sides as railway lines.
below: You’ll have to take my word for it that the construction on Ordnance Street is just behind the bushes on the left. These are the tracks that run to the west and the bridge over the tracks is at Bathurst Street. By this time, the two sets of tracks have come together as they approach Union Station.
below: One of the first views of the Bentway. More construction. I was standing on Strachan when I took this picture. This is the beginnings of a new entrance to the Bentway – a large staircase down the hill from the street. The steps are wide to allow for multiple uses – a place to gather, a place for entertainment.
below: This end of the Bentway parallels Garrison Common. The Ordnance Street development can still be seen but there is also another structure being built on Garrison Common side of the railway tracks.
below: A closer look. It appears to be a ramp to a pedestrian/cycle bridge that will cross the tracks and join Ordnance Street to the Bentway, Fort York, and the streets/paths to the south. I also really like the billboards – one with graffiti and the other is empty.
below: The new rusty entrance to the Fort York Visitors Center
below: Just beyond the visitor’s center, the Bentway is closer to completion. There was a skating rink here this past winter.
below: Also here is an installation by Dana Claxton called ‘Forest of Canoes’. Colourful images of canoes on the concrete pillars. Light-wise, they are probably best seen in the morning but that’s not when I was there.
The Bentway follows the shoreline of Lake Ontario that existed before landfill was used to create a space for the railway lines. Canoes were once an essential means of transport. Now their images sit on concrete pillars that hold up the Gardiner Expressway where thousands of cars pass by every day.
below: In the bottom left corner of this picture is what looks like a bluish blob. My apologies to the artist for calling it a blob but I’ll blame it on the lack of light and therefore, the lack of detail, in the photo. This is another art piece. It is ‘Future Snowmachine in Kinngait (Colossus)’ by Janice Qimirpik, Moe Kelly, Embassy of Imagination, and PA System. Embassy of Imagination is a collaboration between PA System (Patrick Thompson and Alexa Hatanaka) and youth in the Cape Dorset community of Kinngait. This sculpture started with small playdough models of snowmobiles made by Qimirpik and Kelly. They were then scaled into a larger than life sculpture.
The next part of the Bentway is under construction and there is still no pedestrian crossing across Fort York Blvd and is passes diagonally under the Gardiner. There is (was?) one in the plan.
below: This sculpture is on the corner of Fort York Blvd and Grand Magazine Street. It is ‘Fountaingrove’ by Carlo Cesta and Nestor Kruger, 2014. It sits above the Garrison Creek Culvert that carries the now buried creek to the lake. Like the name states, it represents water in fountains. Of course there is a white crane hiding behind it.
below: Just west of Bathurst Street
below: Getting cosy. Condos rise up right beside the Gardiner Expressway. If you’ve driven across the Gardiner, you’ll know just how close some of the buildings are to the traffic. How useful is a balcony if it’s metres away from a highway and from all those cars and trucks? They keep being built and people keep buying them.
below: I couldn’t resist all the yellow and orange bits and pieces!
below: On the east side of Bathurst is the construction of a new Loblaws. It never ends does it?
This blog may have been a bit heavier on construction photos than you were expecting, especially since the title was about canoes. There was just so much work going on in that area that it was hard to avoid. The next time that I walk this area it will probably be totally different… unfortunately new buildings are a lot duller to look at than construction sites so there may not be many photos!
making peace, on display
Posted: May 31, 2017 in events, locations, public artTags: art, Canary district, corktown commons, disarmament, display, environment, exhibit, images, International Peace Bureau, IPB, justice, Kamajor, Making Peace, memorial, Nelson Mandela, outdoor, Pankhurst, peace, photos, suffragette, trees, voting rights, women, words
‘Making Peace’ is a traveling exhibit that is being shown in Toronto at the moment. It was produced by the International Peace Bureau (IPB) and was first shown in in 2010 as a celebration of the 100th anniversary of the 1910 Nobel Peace Prize that was awarded to IPB. It’s purpose is to promote peace as well as educate and inform.
It can be seen until the end of June on Front Street East in the Canary District (by Corktown Commons, east of the Distillery District). In Toronto, the exhibit involves short four-sided pillars that line the sidewalk and each side of every pillar has a photo with a description or a quote from a famous person. There is also a temporary gallery in an indoor space ‘loaned’ to the exhibit by one of the developers in the Canary District.
below: A painting in progress by Ford Medina showing Nelson Mandela in five colours. These colours carry over into the outdoor exhibit and each colour represents the five main elements that IPB considers necessary for peace:
1. disarmament and nonviolence (purple)
2. conflict prevention and resolution (red)
3. economic and social justice (orange)
4. human rights, law and democracy (blue)
5. environment and sustainable development (green)
below: The display extends into Corktown Commons. Here the pillars are green as this is the section for the fifth element named above, the environment.
below: Photo by Ribeiro Antonio. The words that accompany this photo are: ” On 25 September 2015, the 193 countries of the UN agreed to an historic plan of action, entitled ‘Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development’. This plan contains 17 goals with 169 targets covering a broad range of sustainable development issues. These include ending poverty and hunger, improving health education, making cities more sustainable, combating climate change, and protecting oceans and forests.” If you are interested in this, there is more information on the UN website.
below: Blue is for human rights, law, and democracy and here you have an old black and white photograph of Sylvia Pankhurst (1882-1960), a British campaigner, apparently taken when she was in Australia speaking out on behalf of woman’s rights as part of the Suffragette movement. The Suffragettes (or Women’s Social and Political Union or WSPU) was founded by a small group of women in 1903, including Sylvia, but during WW1 Sylvia was expelled from the WSPU because of her pacifist views and anti-war actions. Her sister Adela shared similar views – she immigrated to Australia where campaigned against the First World War.
below: Two photos. The one on the right, of the woman holding the flower in front of the armed soldiers, was taken at a Peace March against the Vietnam War in Washington DC in 1967. The photo on the left was taken in 2001 and is the back of a Kamajor fighter in Sierra Leone. They played a role in the civil war that occurred in that country between 1991 and 2002.
below: A couple of the red pillars on Front Street with the blue sculpture, “The Water Guardians ” behind them. The images on the closest pillar are of inside the Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem as well as UN peacekeepers in Bosnia.
below: Closer to home, this pillar celebrates the work of the Toronto Parks and Trees Foundation. Working with the city as well as with community groups, businesses, and individuals, they help to increase Toronto’s tree cover.
“Earth provides enough to satisfy every man’s need, but not every man’s greed.” Gandhi
below: Homeless migrant worker, China
The exhibit continues until mid-September.
a lap around the tracks
Posted: July 27, 2016 in graffiti and street art, locationsTags: blue sky, dream, Dundas West, fence, flowers, glass, graffiti, hearts, I have a dream, images, Junction, love, lovebot, mural, paint, photographs, photos, pictures, plants, Queen Anne's lace, red, restaurant, sidewalk, street, weeds, West Toronto Railpath, yellow
But not a running, or even a jogging, track! No, yesterday’s walk was an oval-ish loop at walking pace from Dundas West station, up one side of the railway tracks and back down the other.
below: Just past the subway station I saw the mural on “The Friendly Trini’s” which is now closed. If the mural is telling the truth, they once served butter chicken, curried goat roti, jerk chicken with rice and peas, as well as drinks in coconuts and pineapples. Feeling hungry already, and I’ve only just begun my walk.
below: Also on Dundas West, the King’z Convenience and Dollar Store which sells Filipino products and delicacies is adjacent to the Slovenija meat & delicatessen. Multicultural. I regret not taking pictures of the window of the Slovenian store – juice and beer brands that were unfamiliar to me.
below: Detail, boy riding an old fashioned bike on a little hook above a door.
below: And someone has decorated their balcony.
below: Just before I reached the bridge over the railway tracks I saw these words on a wall.
below: The dream theme continues on the metal steps up to the bridge. This one was small and I almost missed it. I’m not sure if it was painted black to blend into the background, or if the painting was an attempt to “clean up” the graffiti when prying off the letters proved to be too difficult (the D is broken so maybe someone tried). Insert words about killing other people’s dreams here.
below: From the top of the steps looking south. The minimalist new Bloor GO and UP (Union Pearson) station is finished, top left of the photo. Don’t you think we should call it ‘Get UP and GO’? The street is Dundas West and yes, that mural is new.
below: Helping to hold up the bridge, west side of the tracks. He’s carrying the weight of the world, or maybe just the bridge, on his shoulders.
After crossing the bridge, I walked north along the West Toronto Railpath. The fencing along the path has all been upgraded. There used to be some spots where you could get through the fence (non-railway side) but those are gone. Between the tracks and the path there is a new clear (glass? plastic?) fence. Of course it has already been ‘vandalized’ or ‘tagged’ – choose your verb. Because I was there on a sunny afternoon, the sun was shining through the ‘artwork’ and making interesting designs. A few thistles and other weeds added some compositional elements.
There were quite a few hearts on my route, especially around the Dupont exit of the Railpath.
below: Many hearts on the fence.
below: A heart for Hex and Nish wherever, and whomever, they may be.
below: Three heart balloons on the Dupont sign. You can get a good view of the fence here.
below: Part of the West Toronto Railpath runs alongside Planet Storage, an large old brick building. There used to be a lot of street art along the side of the building but it’s all been painted over. A few tattle tale remnants remain.
below: My favorite, little details like the bright yellow giraffe looking at the clouds.
below: There is one mural on the Railpath, the back of Osler’s Fish Market is covered with a fish and fishing themed mural.
below: Fish heads in the weeds. Queen Anne’s lace, that plant with the white flowers, was growing in abundance along the path. You might know it by its other name, Wild Carrot.
below: A splash of red on a street just off the railpath.
below: The sign on the table says: “Hi! La Witch Cat here. Enjoy the space, but PLEASE do not litter. I provided a garbage can. Use it! This includes cigarette butts. Put in trash once extinguished. Thanks! XXO”. Marvellous! I sooo agree with the part about cigarette butts. Why do people who don’t litter still consider it okay to throw cigarette butts wherever they please? I smiled but I didn’t stop to rest.
below: At one point I found myself at this intersection. What is a pedestrian to do? It’s possible I walked where I shouldn’t have, or at least where foot traffic is rare. All the roads in the photo are Dundas West; it’s where the street splits as it approaches Dupont and Annette. There was a small park behind me, called Traffic Island park. The name sums it up I think.
below: A lament for the streetscape. One more line in an elegy to public spaces. The result of a half hearted attempt. Massive hydro poles on the narrow sidewalk. A large ad. A green space that needs attention. If you look carefully, you can see a plaque on a small stand.
below: This is the plaque. According to the words, this strip of land was replanted in 2001-2003 with a number of native species with the plan that they would spread and “create an oasis in the middle of the city”. It mentions three plants – Nannyberry tree, Staghorn sumac, and Bottlebrush grass. Disconnect alert.
below: On my way back to the subway station I spotted this 24 hour lovebot.
…. that was where I walked yesterday but before I leave, a few small details. Ciao!
from The Esplanade to Union
Posted: May 13, 2016 in events, locations, public artTags: art, buildings, city, CN Tower, construction, construction Berczy Park, downtown, Front St., images, Market St., Paul Raff, photography, public art, railway, shoreline, Shoreline Commemorative, THe Esplanade, Toronto, train tracks, Union station, urban, workmen
On Friday morning, my original goal was to find ‘Residents of the Esplanade’, a CONTACT Photography Festival outdoor exhibit at David Crombie Park but it was such a beautiful morning that I didn’t stop there. I found more than just the ‘Residents’.
Forty years ago, May 1976, the site plan for The Esplanade neighbourhood was approved. Since then, it has become home to a very diverse group of people. And it is those people that this installation celebrates on the 40th anniversary of the founding of the neighbourhood.
Crombie Park runs along the south side of The Esplanade between Berkeley street and Lower Jarvis. The installation consists of a number of small white rectangular pillars with the picture and story of person on either side.
People were out enjoying the morning; school kids were playing basketball at recess.
Flowers were blooming.
below: Looking towards Lower Jarvis Street and downtown Toronto.
below: One street beyond Lower Jarvis is Market Street. It dead ends at the railway tracks. The long structure on the right is a parking garage.
below: After a small backtrack up Market Street, I went through Conger Coal Lane to Church Street. I don’t think I have walked this way before. The lane was named in commemoration of the Conger Coal Company whose yard and wharf was nearby. It was one of the many companies that provided Toronto with coal back in the day when coal fueled the city. It was started in 1870 by Mr. P.D. Conger. In 1913, Sterling Coal company bought Conger and the name was changed to Conger Lehigh Coal Co.
below: A very old photo of the Conger Coal Company dock at the foot of Church Street, back when Church street ended at Lake Ontario
below: Tucked into a corner on Church street immediately south of Front Street, is an art installation by Paul Raff called ‘Shoreline Commemorative’. A topography of limestone forms the base of the work. A glass ball representing the line between sky and water sits on top of a tripod that tries to evoke a land surveyor’s tripod. The words on the wall say “For 10,000 years this was the location of Lake Ontario’s shoreline. This brick wall stands where water and land met, with a vista horizon”
below: Continuing the lake theme, a little fish out of water, jumping over the entrance to a condo.
below: From the lake theme to another common theme in the city, construction. Spring is the beginning of construction season and here Berczy Park is being upgraded. In the background a new condo is being built but as we all know condo construction ‘season’ never ends. In fact, the challenge might be to find a place in this city where there isn’t a condo being built.
below: I walked past the never ending Front Street construction. Construction in front of Union station seems to be finished, but this stretch of Front Street just west of the station is still being worked on. There have been fences here so long that I can’t remember a time when they weren’t here.
tiff and the toilet paper
Posted: May 12, 2016 in events, public artTags: Bell Lightbox, CONTACT, downtown, french fries, globe, images, King St. West, Long Weekend, looking, passerby, people, photography, photography festival, razor blade, running shoes, Scotiabank CONTACT, sidewalk, smelling, TIFF, toilet paper, Toronto, typewriter, walking
It’s common to see posters pasted on walls so finding movie posters on the walls of the tiff Bell Lightbox didn’t strike me as unusual. I walked past this display until I noticed the sign that marked this as a CONTACT Photography Festival installation. Fake movie posters, many designed with a touch of humour, that look just like the real thing.
below: The installation, titled ‘Coming Attractions’ covers the corner windows and wall space. The posters were designed by ‘Long Weekend’ which is a collective of artists working out of Winnipeg. They were made from ads and illustrations from old books and magazines.
On the other side of King street, and just a but further east, is a series of eleven large images taken from past editions of ‘Toilet Paper’, a biannual magazine founded by Maurizio Cattelan and Pierpaolo Ferrari. They hint at advertising and they blur the line between fantasy and reality.
below: Muhle is a German company that makes shaving products and one of their blades looks identical to the one in this picture.
If you like these images, you might also like Toilet Paper’s website.
Current Studies, Paper Planes
Posted: May 3, 2016 in events, galleriesTags: allan lambert galleria, Brookfield Place, colour, CONTACT, current study, images, paper airplanes, photography festival, photos, Scotiabank CONTACT, Sjoerd Knibbeler
‘Current Studies’ and ‘Paper Planes’
Two different series of photographs by Sjoerd Knibbeler
Allan Lambert Galleria, Brookfield Place
At ground level there are six large freestanding ‘walls” arranged in line, three at each end of the atrium. Each ‘wall’ is covered by two images, one on either side. They are photographs that are the result of Knibbeler’s experiments to “ shape, encompass, and capture air currents.” This is the ‘Current Studies’ part of the installation.

Suspended from the ceiling are a set of photographs of paper airplanes, the ‘Paper Planes’ part of the installation. Knibbeler photographed paper airplanes that he made using information that he found online. He chose military planes that were never produced.
#CONTACT16
Aude Moreau, sky, city, and a bit of a rant.
Posted: April 29, 2016 in galleries, public artTags: art installation, Aude Moreau, conceptual, CONTACT, contemporary, gallery, helicopter, images, Los Angeles, night sky, outdoors, photography, power plant, Toronto, Toronto skyline, tree
I usually take a dim view of conceptual art largely because the importance given to the “words on the wall” has eclipsed the consideration given to the artwork itself. Mediocrity in technique or creativity hides behind big jargon words and convoluted language in the artist statement. Often the concept that the artist claims to be exploring is at odds with the end product.
When the art doesn’t live up to words that sound learned and meaningful then it degrades the work and makes the artist, and those curating the exhibit, seem pompous and out of touch.
For example, if you read that certain videos by an artist “cast a hitherto unexampled light on the conventional North American city”, what would you expect to see? Would you expect to see a video shot from a helicopter as it circled a city at night? A video that looks familiar to anyone who has flown over a city after dark. That’s what you get with Aude Moreau’s ‘The End in the Background of Hollywood 2015’ now showing at The Power Plant gallery. I don’t have a photo of it but I do have a picture of three of her other photographs also on display.
below: From left to right (discounting the small picture farthest from the camera): 1. ‘Untitled (Hollywood Sign)’ 2015, 2. ‘LAPD (Los Angeles Police Department)’ 2015. It’s a picture of a tiny helicopter in a large grey sky. and 3. ‘Waiting for Landing’, airplanes lined up as they approach LAX airport. Unfortunately, the words on the wall then go on to say, about these three images, “These demonstrate visual strategies that act upon the symbolic representation of the city and the spectacular dimension of the film industry.” Oh my.
And with that I left The Power Plant gallery. Growling silently to myself and shaking my head with a mix of disdain and and frustration. Imagine my surprise when once outside I encountered another of Moreau’s photographs. A very lovely one.
below: A picture of the Toronto skyline by Aude Moreau mounted on an exterior wall at The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery. A picture with visual impact.
below: You can play “spot the building” and test your knowledge of Toronto geography. You can line up the DBRS building, the Hilton Hotel and the Canada Life building on University Avenue along with the Sheraton Hotel on Queen street. The blue addition on the AGO is farther north on Dundas. Can you think of where the photo was taken? Apparently, it was taken from Toronto Fire Station 315 at College Street and Bellevue Avenue. It was taken just after sunset but when there was still enough light in the sky to reflect off the taller buildings. Moreau makes the city sparkle.
I must have seen this picture very shortly after it was installed. It is part of the CONTACT photography festival that starts this weekend but there was no accompanying sign, no words that attempted to a explain the image. Perhaps that was for the best. In fact, I now have the CONTACT catalogue with their description of the artwork but I think I won’t read them. I’d rather enjoy the picture just the way it is.
pillow fight!
Posted: April 4, 2016 in events, peopleTags: cameras, crowd, dodging, fun, hitting, images, kids, laughing, men, nathan phillips square, outdoors, outside, people, photographers, pictures, pillow fight, spectators, throwing, women



































































































































































