28 Dec 2023

7 Wellesley Cottages

 

Location: 7 Wellesley Cottages
Date photo taken: 6 March 2022

Stumbling across the Wellesley Cottages is akin to suddenly finding yourself in Narnia. That might seem a little extreme but hear me out. The way to the cottages is not obvious. True, there is a small street sign denoting Wellesley Cottages on Wellesley east of Parliament which marks the entranceway, but only the truly curious or those with some prior knowledge are likely to be lured in. It's just an access after all, but at the end sits a little laneway out of time, containing seven 19th century cottages. A small detached building like this one sits at either end of the lane, in between which sit a row of 5 adjoining workers cottages. Originally approximately 400 square feet each, they housed carpenters, labourers, a clerk and a tinsmith. Now they generally boast modern interiors with carefully disguised extensions, and list for what you'd expect a house in this affluent neighbourhood to fetch. This one, No. 7 is particularly interesting. Not so very long ago, it seemed out of place on the street. It sat alone at the end, small like its neighbours, but covered in wooden shingles and lacking the distinctive steep gable over the door. One publication referred to it as "an unkempt runt of a building". A renovation around 2010 that significantly extended the living space also returned the facade to its previous historic appearance. Thanks to Google streetview, 2009 view, you can see the difference for yourself. 

21 Dec 2023

Prancing reindeer

 Installation of a large prancing reindeer, in glitter silver. In an interior mall-like space

Location: Royal Bank Plaza South
Date photo taken: 16 December 2023

Happy holidays! 

15 Dec 2023

Lantern of Love and Peace

 

a large colourful sphere patterned with flowers and lit from within. Arches in background, covered with lights

Location: Nathan Phillips Square
Date photo taken: 14 December 2023

This year the Cavalcade of Lights in Nathan Phillips Square includes a number of softly glowing Chinese lanterns. Most are large spheres adorned with flower patterns, like the ones pictured here, but there is also a much larger, more intricate dragon boat. The lanterns were hand crafted by artisans from Zigong in China’s Sichuan province. They're presented at City Hall thanks to a partnership with Woodside Square Shopping Centre in Scarborough. Last year they hosted a large outdoor Lantern Festival and they've brought it back this year. While you can visit during the day, the lanterns are lit from 4:30 to 9 pm daily. 

7 Dec 2023

Water tower

 Old water tower standing next to brick industrial building

Location: 224 Wallace Avenue
Date photo taken: 3 October 2013

This vintage water tower stands on the property of the former Ward Street Works, one of three factories operated by the Canadian General Electric Company in Toronto. The factory opened in 1922 and now both the tower and the building, which has been converted to new uses, are included on the City of Toronto Inventory of Heritage Properties.

30 Nov 2023

Metropolis

 Section of a wall art installation made up of various sized nails creating an overal impression of central city with surroundings


Location: City Hall
Date photo taken: 1 April 2015

Just inside the main doors of Toronto City Hall, on the east wall, is this large scale work by David Partridge. It's really worth a visit. This image shows the central portion, and it really doesn't do the piece justice. 

The winner of an art competition held in 1974, this "nailie", as it is sometimes called, is the artist's interpretation of a great city, or metropolis, with its central core, its ravines, and its suburbs. It's called a nailie because it's constructed of over 100,000 individual nails, made of different materials and hammered to differing depths. The effect elicits comparisons to both the topography of a city, and to the individuals that inhabit it. As an added bonus, the durable materials allow for perhaps greater interaction than a piece of public art would normally afford. William Denton, as part of "Listening to Art", even drops a coin down through the nails and records the sound as it pings its way to the bottom (jump to about 10:50 to catch the sound).

23 Nov 2023

Dumpster Fire

 Mural on a brick wall. Cartoonish raccoons cavorting around a dumpster fire while a large white mouse or rat looks on

Location: 48 Pelham Avenue
Date photo taken: 7 December 2022

More awesome raccoon antics courtesy of Emily May Rose, paired with the work of Erika James. The wall was done in 2021 as part of a Laneway Jam organized by KJ Bit Collective and supported by the Canada Council and the Ontario Arts Council.

16 Nov 2023

Brick Obelisk

 

Colour photo showing a tall rusty-hued obelisk with intricate patterns cut from it, standing with residential high rises in behind.

Location: NW corner of Dundas & Carlaw
Date photo taken: 9 January 2021

While the artist may have chosen to name this piece Brick Obelisk, it is in fact made of Corten steel which has been cut with an intricate pattern. Lit from within by LEDs, the lines are even more pronounced at night. For those who take a closer look, and are perhaps familiar with the area's geography, some elements may begin to look familiar. Pierre Poussin, whose artist statement notes that he thinks art should be "tailor-made for the space it inhabits," overlaid maps of the area from various eras to create the pattern, and the shape was inspired by the smokestacks that once dotted this formerly industrial area. Together, they form a fitting ode to the neighbourhood's past and a beautiful addition to the intersection.

9 Nov 2023

75th Canadian Infantry Battalion Memorial

 Bronze memorial plaque mounted to an exterior plain concrete wall

Location: 70 Birmingham Street
Date photo taken: 5 September 2021

Walking along Birmingham Street in the New Toronto area of Etobicoke, I was surprised to encounter a World War II era vehicle parked next to a winding path. When I went for a closer look, I noticed that the building behind the carrier had a plaque affixed to an exterior wall. It turns out the building is the home of the Toronto Scottish Regiment, a Primary Reserve infantry regiment, which means that it's part of the Canadian Armed Forces but members serve mostly part-time while holding regular civilian jobs. The plaque is dedicated to members of the 75th Battalion, a predecessor of the Toronto Scottish Regiment. The 75th Battalion was formed during World War I and during the course of the war, over 5,500 soldiers served in its ranks. It was awarded 16 Battle Honours and one member, Captain Bellenden Hutcheson, a Medical Officer, was awarded the Victoria Cross. The home of the Regiment now bears his name. 

Text on the plaque:

France      Belgium
1916    1917    1918

To honour the memory of one thousand and eighty two officers, N.C.O.s and men of the Seventy-Fifth Canadian Infantry Battalion B E F [British Expeditionary Force] who gave their lives in the Great War. 

The 75th Overseas Battalion is perpetuated in the Canadian Militia as The Toronto Scottish Regiment. 

2 Nov 2023

Mayan mural

 Portion of an urban mural depicting a Mayan figure


Location: Symington Avenue, north of Dupont
Date photo taken: 17 November 2022

This Mayan figure stands facing north, part of a larger mural spanning the west side of the rail underpass on Symington Avenue. Between tagging and flaking, this mural, created around 2009, has seen better days, but this figure, and Isis on the south end, remain relatively unscathed. 



26 Oct 2023

Rotten Candy

 Skeleton in the yard, wearing a boater hat and holding a tray of popcorn containers filled with eyeballs

Location: Hepbourne Street
Date photo taken: 23 October 2023

Once again, Toronto yards were dressed to impress this Halloween. The giant skeletons I posted about last year have taken over a lot more real estate, and big, ropey spider webs seemed to be the it choice for many, but my favourite installation employed neither. This Halloween hawker stands outside Hepbourne Hall, one of half a dozen figures that make up their Halloween Circus. It's an incredibly detailed tableau and thoughtfully includes both a scavenger hunt and souvenirs. 


19 Oct 2023

Jarvis Street Gargoyle

 Stone dragon jutting from the side of a building, near the roofline

Location: Jarvis Street facade, Jarvis Street Baptist
Date photo taken: 17 March 2017

This is one of several dragon-like gargoyles stationed on the exterior of Jarvis Street Baptist, the large, brown-stone church at the corner of Jarvis and Gerrard. Built by the firm of Langley, Langley and Burke, it was originally constructed in 1875 and then rebuilt in 1938 following a devastating fire.






12 Oct 2023

Volunteer fireman memorial

 

Location: 308 Prince Edward Drive South
Date photo taken: 11 November 2021

This memorial stone, which stands in front of Fire Station 431 in Etobicoke, is a reminder of the devastation and loss of life caused by Hurricane Hazel. While hurricane season usually doesn't trouble Toronto much, Hurricane Hazel was different. It hit Toronto on October 15,1954 and stalled over the city, bringing high winds and dropping copious amounts of rain. The region had been receiving above-average rainfall before the storm hit, so the ground was already saturated and much of the water ran off, flooding the city's waterways, washing out bridges and carrying houses and people away. This stone pays tribute to five of those people, volunteer fire fighters who lost their lives in the Humber River.

The full plaque text:

In proud memory of these men of the Kingsway-Lambton Volunteer Fire Department

Clarence (Tiny) Collins
Frank Mercer
Roy Oliver
David Palmateer
Angus Small

They lost their lives in the swollen Humber River while on rescue work during Hurricane Hazel, 16th October 1954.

Erected by members of the Kingsway-Lambton Volunteer Fire Dept. and Lakeshore District Firemen. 16th October 1955

Faithful unto death.



5 Oct 2023

Bat Box

 Tall pole with a long thin rectangular box, painted black, affixed at the top. Large square screen affixed lower on the pole to catch debris dropping from the box above. Trees and grass behind.


Location: Corktown Common
Date photo taken: 19 June 2023

Walking around the eastern side of the hill at Corktown Common this summer, I noticed several of these installations. They're called rocket boxes and they provide roosting habitat for bats. Did you know that eight species of bat call Ontario home? Or that four of those eight are considered endangered? Habitat loss is one aspect contributing to their demise and these boxes help to provide a solution. That said, not a lot is known about the roosting habits of particular bat species, but several organizations are working to change that. The Toronto Zoo and the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority are two of them, working together to record and monitor bat populations and habits. The square box mounted lower on the pole contains a mesh screen which captures falling guano from the box, which can be analyzed to determine what types of bats are roosting inside. I'm not sure who is responsible for installing these particular boxes but I hope that they are well received by the locals, both bat and human alike.

To learn more about bats, check out this publication by the Toronto Zoo. In addition to general  information, plans for bat boxes, and some myth-busting, it includes some unexpectedly adorable bat portraits.


28 Sept 2023

Pigeon tracks

 Section of freshly poured concrete, marked in an irregular pattern with lines consisting of small bird foot prints

Location: Front Street East
Date photo taken: 28 November 2013

This week, a bit of unpremeditated street art. It may be hard to make out in this photo, but this section of freshly poured sidewalk features the meandering tracks of one or more pigeons. Curious as to how quickly a pigeon would have to arrive on scene to leave its mark like this, I was surprised to be told it would have to be within a few hours at most. Depending on conditions, a full-grown person can walk on concrete poured as little as 24 hours ago and not leave a mark. 

21 Sept 2023

Irene

 Small green freestanding garage with a mural or photo on the door of a classic Rolls Royce

Location: Duplex Avenue
Date photo taken: 3 July 2019

This just makes me wonder what's really in the garage. I'm going with a vintage push mower and several bags of bird seed. 

14 Sept 2023

Wilson tiles

 

Pattern of 3D lines in tiled wall alongside the subway platform. WILSON spelled out.

Location: Wilson subway
Date photo taken: 19 August 2023

When the Spadina line was built in the 1970s, the TTC engaged three different architectural firms to design the various stations. Due to the challenges inherent in the site however, the TTC kept Wilson station for itself. Which means that the tile patterns on the platform walls are likely the work of someone in the TTC design department. Kudos to them. They are strongly reminiscent of their time and still striking. 

7 Sept 2023

Water Refill Station

 Illustration featuring a waterfall, affixed to an interior marble wall, and surrounding a water bottle refill station

Location: PATH, under Bay Adelaide Centre
Date photo taken: 7 September 2023

Noticed this in PATH today and it gave me hope. It's a small thing perhaps, installing a water station, but it's enabling every person who chooses to opt for a refillable water bottle and encouraging those who are still just thinking about making the switch. Plus I love how they're trumpeting its presence with this lovely water scene. This installation is part of Breaking the Plastic Habit, a program by Brookfield Properties, which aims to influence positive change across their Canadian properties.

31 Aug 2023

Honour Canoe

 A canoe painted blue and with Indigenous-themed motifs, sitting in a garden and planted with garden plants. Stone carved with message sits in front.

Location: Bain Avenue west of Logan
Date photo taken: 14 August 2019

This canoe is a uniquely beautiful project by residents of Bain Co-op, representing their commitment to  reconciliation. It was painted by Les Harper, an Indigenous artist, with help from local children, and is planted with Indigenous healing plants. The project was a way to introduce the community to Indigenous issues and the stone in front bears the inscription below, to ensure that passers-by understand its significance.
 
The Bain Co-op Canoe acknowledges the Truth and Reconciliation Commission on the Residential School System. In a Spirit of Mutual Healing, our Canoe is in Honour of all those affected by this Experience. Painted and Planted by the Community.
June 2017

A video describing the project is available on the project's Facebook page

24 Aug 2023

Shalom II

 Sculpture consisting of three large rectangles, sitting on a grassy mound.


Location: Bathurst between Sheppard and Finch
Date photo taken: 19 August 2023

If you wander into the 27 acre Sherman Campus of the Prosserman Jewish Community Centre on Bathurst, you might spot this monumental work by Kosso Eloul. It's the third of his pieces to be featured on this blog and while all are different in finish and arrangement, all are recognizable as the work of a single artist. In his own words, Eloul was "strongly prejudiced towards simplicity" and he used geometry, which was both "eternal and elemental", to explore relationships, the precariousness of life, and the search for stability. 

According to Toronto Sculpture, this piece was commissioned by the Jewish Community Centre in 1978.

3 Aug 2023

Heading for destinations unknown

Portion of a mural depicting a hot air balloon traveling over water

Location: 1073 Bloor Street West
Date photo taken: 25 October 2015

I don't know the story behind this mural but I loved it instantly. With the colourful sky, the rolling water and the classic wardrobe, it just screams adventure. It's in a laneway, halfway between Gladstone and Havelock, just south of Bloor Street.

27 Jul 2023

Toronto Police Marine Unit

A Zodiac boat branded with police, on the water with greenery in background

Location: Toronto Islands
Date photo taken: 12 July 2018

This is one of nine different types of watercraft employed by Toronto's police force. Being situated on a lake, it should come as no surprise that Toronto has a marine unit. What I did find surprising is the size of the unit and the scope of their responsibilities. It's part of the Specialized Emergency Response at TPS and along with Sergeants, Constables, and a Staff Sergeant, it also has 10 divers, three mechanics and a cat named Porter. Its area of coverage is larger than the city itself because it has jurisdiction on the lake, stretching out from the city all the way to the border of the United States. Plus it's responsible for all the waterways within Toronto, including rivers, ponds, and reservoirs. The divers also work in the sewers. The main station is located on Queens Quay and there are three sub-stations - one in Scarborough at Bluffers Park, one on Centre Island and at the Humber River.

20 Jul 2023

Traffic Signal Box - Birds

 

A signal box on a residential street painted with colourful birds

Location: Moore Avenue at Mount Pleasant
Date photo taken: 21 June 2023
Image #19 in the Traffic Signal Box Series

Here's another signal box brought to life by the City's Outside the Box program. It was painted in 2022 by Erin McCluskey, her third signal box for the program, although her work can also be found on Bell boxes, construction hoardings and other projects around the city.  

13 Jul 2023

Two Circles

Close up view of rows of thin tiles, each with a break in the middle, forming the impression of a line

Location: Bay Adelaide Centre, East Tower
Date photo taken: 11 July 2023

While grand in scale, Two Circles is a seemingly simple installation at the Bay Adelaide Centre. As the name implies, it is comprised of two circles, identical in size and placement on the wall. The circle at the south end of the lobby is solid black, the one on the north, just an outline. Interesting enough, but it's when you get close to the work that you realize there is so much more to it. Which is where this photo comes in. The walls, which look smooth and unremarkable from a distance, are actually comprised of over 800,000 small ceramic sticks, each of which has been broken near the mid-point. That break line is visible and forms "a line drawing that is reminiscent of heartbeats, stock market graphs and sound waves", all very apt for the location of this piece, in the heart of the city's financial core.

6 Jul 2023

Petro Canada full service booth

 Photograph of the pump area of a full service gas station. Between the pumps is a rounded booth, presumably for full serve attendants to shelter in

Location: Bayview & Moore
Date photo taken: 6 November 2022

I love finding retro elements across the city, remnants of history and earlier design aesthetics. Which is what I thought I'd found at this gas station on Bayview. It turns out that what I took to be a 50s or 60s era service booth was one actually installed in 2013 when the gas pumps were upgraded. Perhaps the styling is deliberately retro, a nod to the heyday of the full service gas station, which is itself a bit of an anachronism.

29 Jun 2023

You're like, really pretty

 


Location: Distillery District
Date photo taken: 19 June 2023

Over the last few years, bit by bit, the nighttime city has been getting brighter and more colourful thanks to a proliferation of neon-style LED signs. Once a more rarified being, neon signs used to be a beacon for those looking for the it place to be, but the new technology makes them decidedly more attainable and as a result, much more common. Now you're as likely to see one at your local coffee shop or ice cream parlour as you are at the latest hot spot. This one is outside Miss J Lash Lounge in the Distillery.

22 Jun 2023

Ship in a bottle

 Colourful along the length of a small building. Features a building silhouetted inside a bottle, colourful clouds surrounding.


Location: Marie Curtis Park
Date photo taken: 5 September 2021

There's a small building tucked away in a corner of Marie Curtis Park, near the Lake Promenade entrance. Once upon a time it probably blended into the scenery, but now its hard to miss thanks to four large, vibrant murals created by local graffiti artist Luvsumone in 2016. All four images draw inspiration from the lakeside location and I just love the twist put on this one. For me, the dark silhouette of the ship is almost ominous, but then the colours pull me back to happy.

15 Jun 2023

Careful Infrastructures for Reassembled Lands (No.2)

 Laser cut text-based metal sign on the waterfront.


Location: Waterfront promenade
Date photo taken: 22 October 2022

In 2022 Waterfront Toronto and the Waterfront BIA announced the appointment of Lisa Hirmer as their new artist-in-residence. Her mandate was to "create meaningful, experiential encounters with the community, activate underutilized spaces along the lakefront, and draw new audiences to the waterfront." One theme of the residency was climate change. Hirmer took the opportunity to collaborate with writers to create a sign project for the waterfront promenade and this is one of the resulting pieces. This particular text is by Sangamithra Iyer and it was fabriated by Ocel Metal Fabrication.

1 Jun 2023

Laneway garage mural

 

Mural painted on a garage, featuring a woman wearing a flowered hairband, with her eyes closed. Waves, and cabbages and buildings surround her

Location: Jefferys Lane
Date photo taken: 1 June 2023  

Walking Toronto's laneways, you never know what you're going to find. A pick-up basketball game maybe, or a gorgeous lilac in full bloom. Or a garage covered by a lovely mural. This is the work of Kingston, Ontario born artist Oriah Scott.

18 May 2023

First World War uniform

 

Early armed forces uniform on a mannequin in a display case

Location: 426 University Avenue
Date photo taken: 8 November 2018

Did you know that Toronto has literally dozens of museums? As today is International Museum Day, I thought I'd feature an exhibit from one that is perhaps lesser known. This is an Artillery Dress Uniform on display at the Royal Canadian Military Institute Museum (RCMI) on University Avenue. RCMI is an independent member-supported organization but their museum is open to the public, by donation, and tours can be arranged on request. Their collection has over 12,000 artifacts and archival materials, including the seat from World War I flying ace Baron von Richthofen's plane, making it one of the largest museums of military history in Canada. 

11 May 2023

Purple cat

 colourful mural of a cat painted on a brick wall

Location: Laneway near Davenport and Uxbridge
Date photo taken: 7 December 2022

For today, a splash of colour. This kitty is part of a larger wall featuring the work of three different artists. This is by Jieun (June) Kim and while this picture doesn't do the colours justice, it gives you an idea of her glorious, trippy style. 

4 May 2023

Metropolitan Apartments

 

Three story brick building with stone detailing. Camera shop with bright yellow signage on ground floor.

Location: 89 Queen Street East, just east of Church
Date photo taken: 14 July 2021

The Metropolitan Apartments, located on Queen Street where it meets Dalhousie running north, opened around 1910. Built with 15 apartments, it replaced several earlier wooden structures that housed businesses including two barbers, a shoemakers and book shop. Now this location is about to undergo some serious densification. A proposal has been submitted to build a 701 unit condo tower on a parcel including this property and several others fronting on Church Street. The intention is to maintain this structure as part of the podium of the new 60 storey building. I don't think this development has a name yet, but I think that something starting with R should be given serious consideration. For reasons I have been unable to discover, the keystone on the arch above the door features a small carved R . 

27 Apr 2023

Legendary Goalies

Life size bronze statues of wo hockey goalies in full gear outside Scotiabank Arena

Location: Maple Leaf Square
Date photo taken: 30 January 2021

As part of their centennial celebrations, the Maple Leafs decided to bring some of the most loved and respected players from the franchise's history out to meet the fans. Over the course of four years, fourteen life-sized bronze statues of Leafs greats were added to an installation on the west side of the arena. Johnny Bower, on the left, was one of the first to be added to Legends Row, in September 2014. He won four Stanley Cups during his career with the Toronto Maple Leafs, playing for them from 1958 to 1970. Turk Broda, on the right, spent his entire career with the Toronto Maple Leafs, playing from 1935 to 1951.

21 Apr 2023

Berry buddies

 Mural painted on side of a garage. Features a mouse standing on a snake's head to pick berries, with flowers and leaves. On a black background.


Location: Laneway north of Dundas, just west of McCaul
Date photo taken: 4 September 2018

I wanted something spring-like for this week and have opted for this mural by Sarah Cannon (@nightarcade). With the plucky mouse figure and its unlikely partner, it just makes me happy. It's yet another mural in the laneway transformed back in August 2018 by a WomxnPaintTO event.




13 Apr 2023

Beware: red-winged blackbirds

 warning sign affixed to a fence, marshy grasses in background. features images of a bird with red capped wings.

Location: Corktown Common
Date photo taken: 12 October 2021

Living in Toronto, most of us have been conditioned to recognize robins as one of the early signs of spring. In terms of feathered harbingers of nicer weather to come, I would also put forward the red-winged blackbird. While perhaps less evenly distributed across the city than robins, they are very common in Southern Ontario and just as distinctive. If you spend any time in parklands near water, you have likely seen them. Their bright red epaulets make them highly visible, and they're pretty loud as well. If you hear one in the spring, I advise you to not to stare. As the sign above notes, "Birds may exhibit aggressive behaviour protecting their young." Showing too much interest may lead to a close encounter. As someone who has experienced this first hand, it's not an experience I care to repeat. If you hear a red-winged blackbird, especially in the spring, I suggest you try to remain as non-threatening as possible: stick to the path, keep moving and do not stare or actively search out the nest.  

6 Apr 2023

Lapin

     

A large outdoor sculpture of a pink rabbit. Made from overlapping strips of material.

Location: Stackt Market, Bathurst Street
Date photo taken: 14 September 2019

It doesn't deliver chocolate eggs, but I thought this fellow was a pretty good stand in for the Easter Bunny. It's by Quebec artist Laurence Vallières who normally creates her largely animal-inspired sculptures out of cardboard. This particular one however was created with wood and the white corrugated plastic known as coroplaste, allowing it to stand up to both the elements and to its admirers. She originally created the work for the 2019 edition of Montreal's MURAL Festival, where it sat on the street, a glowingly bright white. The pink paint job was done when it was relocated to its new home in Toronto later that summer.


30 Mar 2023

Heavenly Waters


Mural on the side of a peaked industrial building. The mural features whales

Location: Queens Quay, west of Jarvis
Date photo taken: 30 August 2020

Starting in 1981 Robert Wyland began painting large scale murals, dubbed Whaling Walls, around the world. This is one of two that he created in Toronto, although the second one, at the ROM, is now listed as extinct. This one can be found on the north wall of the sugar shed at the Redpath Sugar plant on Toronto's shoreline. It was created in 1997 and it's a bit special in that it was co-signed by Robert Hunter, the Canadian environmentalist who co-founded Greenpeace and spent years campaigning against commercial whaling. 


23 Mar 2023

Mario Water Level

 Mural painted on a large cement box. Mural mimics the look of a Super Mario video game, with Mario swimming around.

Location: Behind the Pam McConnell Aquatic Centre, Dundas Street East
Date photo taken: 20 February 2023

Regent Park is only part way through its redevelopment but already it has tons going for it. Now even Mario and friends are making an appearance. In October 2022 the two large cement structures behind the pool complex at Dundas and Sumach were brightened up with images inspired by the Mario Brothers video games. While all of the murals stick close enough to the game esthetic to be strongly nostalgic, I love this one with its more whimsical take on Mario and his swimming costume. This does sit behind the aquatic centre after all. Thanks to Alex Simku and Tanya Giannelli for this bit of fun.

9 Mar 2023

Wolves of Bay Street

 Sculptural panel featuring a carving of two howling wolves, seating, with a moon in between them. Panel now sits in a park setting.


Location: Guild Park and Gardens
Date photo taken: 9 April 2022

These two howling wolves are the work of Canadian sculptor Jacobine Jones. Born in England, she  received classical training in London before making Canada home in 1932. Within a year of arriving she was working on architectural commissions as well as creating art in her own studio. This panel, which became known as the Wolves of Bay Street, was one of several she created for the Bank of Montreal's new building at the corner of King and Bay Streets. When the building was demolished less than 30 years later, the panels were salvaged and now sit, with many other old architectural elements, in the Guild Park and Gardens in Scarborough. 

Note: Some of Jones' work remains at the corner of King and Bay. Across the street from the Bank of Montreal sits the The Bank of Nova Scotia building. Inside the grand banking hall hangs a large sculptural mural by Jones, the largest in Canada at the time it was installed.

2 Mar 2023

Divine Femininity

Colourful garage mural featuring a women with dark braided hair, sunburst of alternating blue and orange beams radiating out from behind her

Location: Laneway south of D'Arcy, east of Beverley
Date photo taken: 4 September 2018

In honour of International Women's Day next week, I'm sharing yet another fabulous mural from the Womxn Paint's laneway event back in 2018. This one is by Désiré Betty, and believe it or not, it was her first mural and her first time working with spray paint.

23 Feb 2023

Old Man Winter

 

Long mural in blues and whites, of a long haired old man with beard and moustache, breathing out swirls

Location: 313 Pharmacy Avenue
Date photo taken: 5 August 2022

The West Scarborough Neighbourhood Community Centre at the edge of Byng Park is decorated all around with colourful murals. It wasn't until I got home and was looking through the photos that I realized that the north wall is devoted to the seasons. I present this one in honour of the snow that has finally fallen.

16 Feb 2023

Love letters to St. Lawrence

Poster affixed to a pole. Has the red and blue edging seen on Air Mail envelopes. Contains a message about how wonderful Young People's Theatre is and a bit about the history of the building it resides in.

Location: Corner of Front and Frederick streets
Date photo taken: 16 February 2023

The  St. Lawrence Neighbourhood Association marked its 40th anniversary on February 14, and to celebrate, it fully embraced the Valentine's Day vibe by putting up 10 oversized love letters around the  neighbourhood. Each describes a wonderful thing about this part of the city, like this one, posted outside the Young People's Theatre.

Community members, visitors and tourists were also invited to write their own letters, describing what they like best about this, the oldest part of the city. The goal was to generate 1000 letters which would then be hidden around the neighbourhood "to spread the love and share the gratitude so many have" for this area. The idea comes from Toronto writer and arts educator Lindsay Zier-Vogel, who first created the Love Lettering Project back in 2004. 

If you missed the letter-writing parties, you can still get in on the celebration. Just find one of the love letter posters, take a photo and post it to Instagram for a chance to win a $100 gift certificate. Full details are available on the Association's Facebook page.

10 Feb 2023

Garage Heart

Free standing garage with a mural painted on its front. A heart is central to the design.

Location: Cayley Lane
Date photo taken: 7 January 2023

This painted garage is definitely the highlight of Cayley Lane, which otherwise doesn't have much going on. Presented here in honour of Valentine's Day. 
 

26 Jan 2023

TD Rabbit

 

Illuminated sign on a tower on top of a building. One side features the TD Bank logo, the other a rabbit.

Location: above Bay and Front Streets
Date photo taken: 25 January 2023

The TD sign, now such a visible part of the city's night sky, first appeared in 2000. That was when TD Bank purchased Canada Trust and took over their building at 161 Bay Street, replacing their logo with the TD shield. At that time, the four sides of the sign were made up of a collection of 325 green and white neon tubes. In 2020, a major renovation was begun to convert the sign to LEDs which made the sign both brighter and more energy efficient. It also allows the display to be programmed to show things other than the logo. Like this rabbit, which commemorates the start of the Year of the Rabbit in the Chinese calendar.

19 Jan 2023

No Exit

No exit sign with additional clarifying text. Leafy street in the background, with fall colours

Location: South Kingsway and Morningside Avenue
Date photo taken: 11 November 2021

As someone who considers walking a hobby, I've always taken No Exit signs with a grain of salt. Unless I'm in a hurry, I usually don't mind risking a bit of backtracking, just to see where the road leads. That's not to say that I don't find the single-minded focus of the signs annoying. At one point I even considered making little Ampelmännchen decals to slap on signs that provided incorrect information to pedestrians, but discovered I was too short to apply them. Now, thanks in large part to the efforts of Walk Toronto, a pedestrian advocacy group, the City of Toronto has changed its approach to these signs. Starting in 2021 they began installing versions which provide greater clarity regarding the types of egress possible. With over 450 locations of inaccurate signage identified by Walk Toronto, its likely going to take a while to switch them all, but every new addition makes a difference. 

12 Jan 2023

Architectural Timeline

Bench on the edge of a park. Seat is made of short wood slats. Back is a sculptural bronze piece, a cut-out silhouette of a city scape


Location: Near the north east corner of Church and King
Date photo taken: 19 July 2020

St. James Park, spreading north and east beyond the Cathedral Church of St. James at King and Church, is one of the larger green parks in the heart of the downtown core. Starting in 2018 it underwent a revitalization. As part of the plan, each of the four corners of the park, dubbed the entry plazas, were given special attention. This new bench sits at the south west corner of the park, near the front entrance to the cathedral. The back support features a depiction of various architectural elevations from the area through time, rendered in bronze. It's the work of artist Scott Eunson. 

5 Jan 2023

Baldwin Better Built Bungalow

Exterior front view of a small yellow brick bungalow in Toronto

Location: 58 Dewey Drive
Date photo taken: 21 March 2017

This tidy bungalow on Dewey Drive probably looks very much as it did when it was first built back in the early 1950s. The "cut-stone front under picture window" and "sidewalk to curb" mentioned in a November 1953 advertisement from the Toronto Daily Star are still clearly evident, although the "gravel drive" has been paved. Interior highlights listed included modern L-shaped living and dining room, 14-ft kitchen with loads of cupboards, including broom closet, lino-tile floors to purchaser's choice of colors, ceramic tile counters and splashback, 4-piece ceramic tile bathroom with double medicine cabinet, electric light fixtures, stove cable, fruit cellar, steel beam construction, divided basement, and economical hot air heating. With all that, the 6-room, 1.5 storey bungalows could be had for $2,650 down, and a total price of $12,090. Other enticements to move to this new subdivision, dubbed Maryvale Gardens, included spacious lots, paved roads and sewers paid for, plus a short commute to Toronto.