Posts Tagged ‘Nathan Mabry’

Infinite games, repeating games – both kinds of games can be seen in Yorkville.  For instance, we can start with the infinite…..

below: Sculpture by German artist Willy Verginer, titled “The Infinite Game”.  It’s a boy all in white kneeling on 4 dark grey teddy bears.  Meaning?

in courtyard at 80 cumberland, a statue by Italian artist Willy Verginer, a boy all dressed in white is kneeling on 4 grey teddy bears

below: The words, “Life is a Repeating Game” are a predominant part of this piece by James Verbicky.  The whole artwork is a large circle.  Circles, we go around in circles don’t we?  Plus, circles make cycles which we repeat over and over again.

artwork in a gallery window, horizontal stripes, painted in abstract, with words life is a repeating game

Yes, this post is about art.  More specifically, it is some of the works that caught my eye as I walked around the Cumberland-Yorkville area.  Some are in galleries or in their windows;  some are on the street.

below: “Hercules”, by Joe Fafard (the same artist who is responsible for the piece where Vincent Van Gogh’s head is inside a square, located on Dundas Street directly across from the Art Gallery of Ontario).  No attempts at being profound here but there is nothing wrong with whimsy.

flat metal sculpture, outline with small number of lines outlining details, of a cow, with title hercules, by sculptor joe fafard, located in front of mira goddard gallery in yorkville

below: Francisco Valverde’s riot of colours in vertical stripes in an artform that he calls Histograms.    There is an image in the background that is then covered with resin stripes of different colours.  The title of this piece is “Apricity”.

below: “Cosmic Dust” by Chinese artist Zhuang Hong Yi.  He produced this artwork by using acrylic paint on rice paper which has been mounted on canvas.  The paint is added last. .  The rice paper is folded and added to the canvas before the paint is applied.

artwork called cosmic dust, three dimensional, on wall, folded rice paper that is painted and then stuck on board or canvas

below: Three paintings, oil on board, on a gallery wall – painted by Ron Bolt.  They are images of rock formations that have been shaped by the ocean, and they are titled, Sea Carvings 1, 2 and 3.

paintings, oil on board, by Ron Bolt, on display at Loch Gallery, images of stones by the sea, abstract looking, 3 paintings side by side

below: d|azur A blue and white mural by Toronto-based artist Dahae Song on the corner of the Four Seasons Hotel.  It’s title is “d|azur”.

large artwork

below: This is “Raptor” by Nathan Mabry.  Something like ‘Toronto Raptors meet the Toronto Blue Jays’ vibes going on here.

Large blue bird, metal sculpture, title is raptor, by nathan mabry, in yorkville

below: Large black and white photographs by Deana Nastic in the windows of the Izzy Gallery

black and white photo, large, in window of izzy gallery,

black and white photo, large, in window of izzy gallery,

below: Another gallery window, another female image but that is where the similarities end!  Betty Boop and a collage of pop culture references such as The Beatles, Marilyn Munroe by Andy Warhol, bazooka chewing gum,  Pac-Man, the Starbucks logo, and more.

in a gallery window, collage art, featuring very large image of betty boop

below: Art on the streets, specifically on hoardings to hide a construction site.

artwork on hoardings and under scaffolding, beside sidewalk and around a construction site, multicoloured ovals, oriented vertically, on black background, by Peter triantos

below: Big coloured ovals on a black background, by Peter Triantos.

artwork on hoardings and under scaffolding, beside sidewalk, around construction site, multicoloured ovals, oriented vertically, on black background, by Peter triantos

artwork on hoardings and under scaffolding, beside sidewalk, around construction site, people, with lots of purple and orange tones

below: Slightly different from all the other image here, but still art in my opinion.  This image is from inside the Cumberland Terrace, a shopping center that has always struggled and is now facing demoltion (or total makeover, not sure what the plan is).  The interesting tile design on the wall was defaced by a line of Bell telephone booths. I wonder how long it’s been since someone made a call here?

tile mosaic design, interior wall of cumberland terrace, black and white stripes and a yellow and orange circle in the middle. Four phone booth mounted on wall

below: Gallery clutter.  He’s watching you watching him.  What does he see?

bookcase in a niche in a wall in an art gallery, painting above it, many small images in frames on the shelves, and a portrait of a man in front of it

I am going to end this post with three artists (from different eras and different backgrounds) who have portrayed their Canadian experiences in their paintings.

below: First is the oldest, Dutch born and European taught, Cornelius Kreighoff (1815-1872), whose “A Trip to Town” (1865), is one of his many scenes of life in what is now Quebec.   Kreighoff was a fairly prolific artist during his time in what is now Canada.  He first moved to the Montreal area about 1846.  At one point Ken Thomson (the newspaper/magazine publisher) owned about 200 paintings, many of which are now at the Art Gallery of Ontario.

painting by Cornelius Kreighoff in a fancy gold coloured frame, title is A trip to town

below: Lawren Harris (1885-1970), of the Group of Seven, painted  “House in the Ward, Winter City Painting No. 1” (Toronto) in circa 1924.   A snow covered street scene with not a car in sight! Just lovely old trees and red brick houses.

painting of a city street in winter, snow covered leafless trees, a red brick house, painting by Lawren Harris of the Group of Seven

below: And last, William Kurelek (1927-1977) “The School’s Woodpile” 1972, mixed media on board. Kurelek, son of Ukrainian immigrants, grew up on the Prairies during the Depression.

Previous posts about Yorkville Art:

1. The Yorkville-ification of Street Art.
2. A Yorkville meander with Captain Canuck

 

old factory buildings in Liberty Village, with a connecting bridge between them that is over the street

Arty things around Liberty Village


small alley with a building on the right side with panels at street level that are decorated with murals

closer up view of murals in an alley

Back in May 2020, 14 benches in public places throughout Liberty Village were designed/decorated by different artists.

below: ‘Gathering’ by Patrick Li

a black metal bench with cut outs in red, of L and V shapes on the back piece
below: “Home of Innovation” by Jieun June Kim

a bench in Liberty Village with the back piece decorated in houses in primary coloursbelow: Red pigeons in front of a new condo – by Los Angeles-based artist Nathan Mabry.  If you step back and look at it from the right angle, the large red parts look like a pigeon as well.

Red metal sculpture in front of a new condo development in Liberty Village, with red metal pigeons on top of the shapes

below: ‘Perpetual Motion’ by Francisco Gazitua

a large white metal sculpture in a park in Liberty village

below: “In Memory of Omi and Opa” by Thelia Shelton

A black metal bench between the sidewalk and street, the back of the bench has yellow figures all holding hands

below: “Love Conquers Our Differences” designed by Christiano De Araujo and produced by David Ogilvie Engineering

an apartment building across the street, a bench on the sidewalk in the foreground.  The bench is red with a picture on the back of a man and woman yelling at each other and a red heart in the middle

street in Liberty Village, one utility pole is painted in turquoise with red triangles and the word Love written in cursive

metal bicycle rack with a large paste up of urban ninja squadron t bonez wearing white briefs and nothing else, also no head

below: Brightly carpeted stairs behind one of the old brick buildings typical of Liberty Village

a bright pink and orange carpet on the stairs leading to the second storey behind an old brick building in Liberty Village

below: mural by Jarus

mural of a woman sitting drinking coffee except the top part of her head and face are missing

below: One smart mural.

large mural that is the word genius

billboards and graffiti

turquoise metal box with liberty village words on a street

below: Grominator watches the dancers

grominator graffiti on a metal box beside sidewalk, a cherry picker lift machine parked beside it, under an overhang that says loading dock.  Mural of black people dancing on the wall behind the lifter.

black and red metal bench in front of a two storey beige brick wall with a large number 60 painted in black on it

below: It’s not easy these days but “smile, enjoy now”.

black and white picture of a woman in a white hat and white fluffy scarf on hoardings with blotches of yellow and blue, also blue writing that says smile enjoy now

you can have it all written in red on reflective hoardings

below: “Can” by Michelle Cieloszczyk, 2017

large sculpture of a crushed metal can, grey, beside a pile of snow on a pedestrian walkway in Liberty Village

decorative birdhouse with red roof with a string of lights and a fake cardinal or two

two yellow metal bumpers at the end of the railway tracks, left over from a real railway line, ends in park by a fence along another, real, train tracks, graffiti on the walls beyond the tracks, houses beyond that

Time for coffee!

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exterior of Coffee Shop Loiue with sign in window above door that says this is a coffee shop

exterior view of a window that had clear plastic on it.  plastic is ripping and peeling