28 Mar 2018

Rabbits


Location: Queen Street at River
Date photo taken: 30 January 2018

These two rabbits are part of a new mural which appeared last summer along the Queen Street facade of the Toronto Humane Society building at River Street. The artist, Uber5000, got up close and personal with the different types of animals that the THS cares for when he volunteered to help decorate the two meet-and-greet rooms in the building. Those rooms now each sport a doggie portrait. The outside is more inclusive, featuring, in addition to these rabbits, cats, gerbils, and a turtle, along with the dogs.


21 Mar 2018

Lineal Order

Image of an outdoor work of public art featuring a statue of a man in in only a coat, with his shadow on the wall behind him

Location: 71 Simcoe Street, near King
Date photo taken: 3 June 2014

This gaunt figure stands outside of the Symphony Place condominiums on Simcoe Street. The man, cast in bronze, is dressed in a nondescript overcoat and nothing more. Across from him, unseen in this picture, is another bronze figure, this time of a child, similarly clad in just an overcoat. The figures are timeless and one can't help but wonder what they are meant to evoke, standing as they do on the doorstep of this luxury condominium. The installation is by George Boileau.

14 Mar 2018

No Shoes

Large outdoor sculpture consisting of large red girders with large wooden poles suspended from them

Location: Mill St. and Bayview Ave.
Date photo taken: 20 October 2017

This monumental sculpture adorns the southern edge of Corktown Common, the park that anchors the new West Don Lands community near the Don Valley and Lakeshore. Composed of painted girders and natural wood poles, its materials are a perfect match for the neighbourhood which lies close to both a natural corridor and industrial lands. It was a surprise to me then to learn that this piece was actually commissioned for the International Sculpture Symposium in High Park held in 1967. The work was restored and moved to Corktown Common in 2013, with the help of the sculptor, Mark Di Suvero. Here's a great shot of it sitting in High Park in 1967, from the City of Toronto Archives.



7 Mar 2018

Sugar Beach

Image of 3 large pink sun umbrellas at Sugar Beach, people sitting in white Muskoka style chairs on a sunny day

Location: At the foot of Lower Jarvis, south of Queens Quay
Date photo taken: 19 February 2017

Sugar Beach, located across the slip from the Redpath Sugar factory, is one of Toronto's newer and already most iconic parks. Half of the park is given over to a beach space complete with comfy chairs and 36 lovely pink umbrellas. The other half of the park is a plaza designed for hosting programmed and more spontaneous events. The two halves are bisected by the Waterfront Promenade. Even in the winter, Sugar Beach has its appeal. On a sunny day like this one, the water looks spectacular and the sand under the umbrellas glows pink. This weekend, the park will once again host Sugar Shack TO, a free event with live entertainment, a marketplace, a specialty bar and of course, some sweet treats.