…. and up and down, and back and forth….
Riding fun at the CNE midway!
Other CNE posts
1. The end of summer (2024)
2. Into the night (2014)
3. Afternoon at the Ex (2022)
4. CNE (2013)
…. and up and down, and back and forth….
Riding fun at the CNE midway!
Other CNE posts
1. The end of summer (2024)
2. Into the night (2014)
3. Afternoon at the Ex (2022)
4. CNE (2013)
There have been previous Paste Platz posts on this site, starting with the original post just after the first artworks went up in Sept 2021. It was subsequently revisited and updated in Dec 2021. Street art is never permanent and anything at street level is subject to the whims of others who might want to deface, attempt to remove, or just add their own to the mix. Unsurprisingly, there have been more changes to the “installation” since then. Jumblefacefoto face and eye mash-ups now dominate part of it.
What has also appeared is a series of small collages underneath the faces and these smaller ones tell part of the history of graffiti and street art, especially with respect to wheatpaste. They are small and easily overlooked; you can see the difference in sizes in the photo above. Here are some of them:
Graffiti Dates
“1980s/90s
Wheat paste as an art process and medium –
Street artists adopt or incorporate wheat paste into their practice often former graffiti/stencil based artists trying to avoid further criminal charges.
1988/89 Shepard Fairy
1991 Blek le Rat
1992 Michael De Feo
1998 D’Face
1999 Faile collective
1999 Logan Hicks
other notable street artists who worked with wheat paste and paved the way include Hutch, duo Sten & Lex, Jestonorama, Christofer Chin/Tofer, Ludo, JR, and Swoon”
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caption on photo: bleu O noir, 1955, Jacques Villegle
text on paper: “Jacques Villegle, an artist involved in Nouveau Realisme, began creating artwork from ripped and torn posters he salvaged from the streets of Paris in the late 1940s.”
“Decollage is a French word meaning literally un-pasting or to unstick, and generally associated with a process used by artists of the Nouveau Realisme (New Realism) movement in the 1960s that involved making art from posters ripped from walls. The process of decollage took an archeological character and was seen as a means of uncovering historical information. The Nouveau Realistes exhibited their ripped poster artworks as aesthetic objects and social documents.”
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text: “Faile – An artist collective with graphic design roots active since 1999 who view their wheat paste street art os a development of an image process over which they will ultimately have no control, and as a frame for other people’s work. Inspired by Nouveau Realisme and The Situationists, Faile accepts and welcomes decay, damage to their work by ripping and tearing, and other people pasting over their work.”
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text (above): “Shepard Fairey – Screenprint, sticker, and wheatpaste artist Shepard Fairey became known for his 1989 “Andre the Giant has a Posse (“Obey Giant”) sticker campaign featuring the image of wrestler Andre the Giant. Fairey’s mysterious imagery was seen around the world and often confused as advertising and propaganda. Fairy intended Obey Giant and his later works to inspire curiosity with a “non-message” and cause people to question their relationship with their surroundings, society, and values. “The medium is the message.” Fairy used the philosopher Marshall McLuhans’s theory of communication and combines it with the notion of repetition, symbolism, and iconography.”
text (below): “Shepard Fairey’s historic poster of Barack Obama for the 2008 U.S. presidential election became a widely recognized however divisive symbol, challenging ideas of hope in political systems.”
text: “Swoon – Brooklyn-based artist and activist Swoon became known for her intricate engravings on recycled paper, creating elegant life-sized portraits of family and friends. Her work is about place, home, family, community, and also global issues of environment and climate change. Swoon has successfully navigated both the street art world and the art gallery setting with her only rule to be proud of the result. Her works have entered permanent collections in MoMA and the Brooklyn Museum.”
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There are also some panels featuring the past work of well known documentary photographers including two American women Margaret Bourke-White (1904-1971) and Dorothea Lange (1895-1965).
Billboard featuring “World’s Highest Standard of Living – There’s no way like the American Way” behind a line of African-Americans displaced be the Great Ohio River Flood line up at a relief station in Louisville Kentucky. ” The Louisville Flood, 1937″ by Margaret Bourke-White
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Residents of Japanese ancestry appear for registration prior to evacuation. Evacuees will be housed in War Relocation Authority centers for the duration (FDR’s Japanese Concentration Camps) Photo by Dorothea Lange, “Waiting for Registration, San Francisco, 1942”
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There are two large Elicser murals on Queen West just west of Ossington. The first is ‘Communication’ on the side of 1052 Queen West.
The text part of the mural was the work of street artist Sight.
Just around the corner, at Brookfield and Queen West is a mural that Elicser has just finished. It is a departure from his usual style – it is still a picture of a person but it is much more abstract.
This second mural is part of StreetARToronto’s New Dawn laneway project (see previous post for another mural in this project).
As an aside: The last time that google filmed this section of Queen West, the ‘Communication’ mural had been started but was not yet finished.
I came across these colourful sculptures at the Distillery District this past weekend. There are thirteen of them, all painted by different artists.
Artists:
Alex Garant,
AlfAlfA,
Caitlin Taguibao,
Clandestino Art,
David Anthony,
Fatspatrol,
Gosia Komorski,
Jacquie Comrie,
Jieun June Kim,
Natasha Kudashkina,
Peter Triantos,
Que Rock,
and Yen Linh Thai.
Yesterday, Sunday of the long August weekend, I was sitting on a streetcar after walking around downtown. I was in no rush; I was enjoying the scenery and the people watching. The streetcar detoured off route so I didn’t end up where I expected to. But no problem, I had my camera with me.
These photos are glimpses of life in the city as seen through a streetcar window as it passes by. Most of them were taken through glass… and often the streetcar was moving… so please don’t expect technically perfect shots!
below: Northeast corner of Spadina and College streets.
below: “The Best in Town”for banana boats! cones! sundaes! shakes!
below: Dundas at Bay. Ryerson School of Management, Best Buy, and Canadian Tire.
below: Reflections on Dundas
below: Surfacing from Dundas subway station
below: The newest mural near Dundas and Victoria.
below: University buildings at Dundas and Church – and the rebranding of Ryerson as TMU (Toronto Metropolitan University).
below: Ran out of gas, northeast corner of Dundas and Church
below: Dundas and Mutual. An old building put to a modern use.
below: The sign says it all. Every time I pass Filmores I am surprised to still see it standing. I thought that it was supposed to be torn down months (years?) ago. I was also surprised to see Filmores on sites like Expedia, Hotel.com and Booking.com. You can’t actually book one of their “straight forward rooms” on these sites, you have to call or email the hotel directly. If you want to know more than that, you’ll have to do your own research!
below: You might be able to stay at Filmores, but you can’t eat at The Love Cafe anymore.
below: Christmas wreaths on the doors of Dunhill Electric Co.
below: Dundas and Ontario Streets, Royal Oak Inn
below: Dundas and Parliament, north side
Happy trails!
“Seeing Evergreen” is an exhibit presented by Jamii Twelve older residents of the area were paired with local youth to share their stories. The results of these conversations, along with portraits of the participants, are on display in David Crombie Park on The Esplanade.
below: All the posters have a large portrait on one side
below: On the other side is a small picture as well as the words written. Posters with portraits and stories of four – Victoria, Naomi, Stella, and Carol-Anne
below: Nancy and Chet, their pictures and stories.
below: Posters with the Toronto skyline behind.
This blog post starts with donuts… who doesn’t like donuts?! Mediterranean? Well, that’s veggies on a cream cheese icing. DeSotos restaurant starting making and selling donuts as a way of surviving Covid lockdowns. The lemon bomb was delicious!
below: Living the van life? Or living in the past?
below: Unfortunately this Coca Cola sign at St. Clair and Winona was tagged over last year. The vacant lot will soon be yet another condo development.
below: Looking east, northeast corner of St. Clair West and Alberta – a new condo, one being built, and one in the very beginning stages.
below: Milking the cow on the sidewalk.
below: Dinosaurs playing in the yard.
below: And Woody, Gumby, Pokey, and their friends hanging out on the porch.
below: But Wonder Woman doesn’t approve
below: Another front yard, this one decorated with many light fixtures on poles, or hanging from a tree.
below: A bright red door and matching car beside her.
below: Most of the murals painted a few years ago in Feel Good Lane are still there. This lane runs parallel to St. Clair to the north between Atlas and Arlington.
below: Also in Feel Good Lane is a mural featuring Emily May Rose’s cute but naughty little green raccoons.
below: St. Clare’s RC Church
below: Hanging baskets of pink and red petunias across the street from the St. Clair Fruit Market with Muskoka chairs in a makeshift roadside patio.
below: El Eden Ecuatoriano – it seems like everything Ecuadorian is available here especially music and food (in an area that has a growing South American ethnicity).
below: Way up high, a mouse surveys the scene while people wait at the street car stop.
below: Hanging out in front of Buy and Sell.
below: TTC streetcar stop. All the stops have artwork across the top of the shelters.
below: A white metal railing on the porch and flowers in the well kept yard.
below: Regal Heights neighbourhood
below: A unique hood ornament!
below: Or, line up your favorite little stuffies on the front dash.
below: On a door at Wychwood Barns.
below: I’m not sure what’s happening here but it looks like an unhappy drunk llama behind bars. I wonder what its backstory is?
below: A. A. Milne’s words of wisdom: “If the person you are talking to doesn’t appear to be listening be patient. It may simply be that he has a small piece of fluff in his ear.”
below: Always look on the bright side of life. Can you say it aloud without breaking into the Monty Python song?
With thanks to Georgette and Mondo for being my tour guides on this walk!