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  #141  
Old Posted Aug 30, 2016, 6:28 PM
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I love murals on otherwise looked over spaces. This one is right by my loft. It's called "Creative Spirit".
posted on:https://susandrysdale.com

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  #142  
Old Posted Sep 1, 2016, 8:13 AM
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Originally Posted by Vorkuta View Post
I'm a fan of this one from Festival Inspire Moncton 2016:

Very cool mural but that street seems excessively wide haha. 7ish lanes going one way!
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  #143  
Old Posted Sep 1, 2016, 8:13 PM
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Reminds me of Granville Street in Van.
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  #144  
Old Posted Sep 2, 2016, 5:19 AM
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Halifax's newest art is "The Last Steps" war memorial on the waterfront near Sackville Landing. There are footprints "burned" into the boardwalk leading up to this arch which represent the last steps Canadian soldiers took before setting sail for Europe during WWI.


Halifax Developments Blog (Photo by David Jackson)
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  #145  
Old Posted Sep 2, 2016, 5:30 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TorontoDrew View Post
I love murals on otherwise looked over spaces. This one is right by my loft. It's called "Creative Spirit".
posted on:https://susandrysdale.com

https://susandrysdale.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/InstagramCapture_6f6efe60-e7bb-4c0b-b444-df7cb8821541-1024x1024.jpg[/IMG]
That isn't real art. It's just a bad popular culture image, visual kitsch. All emotionally suggestive and no real intellectual content, historical significance, or social commentary.

Last edited by Architype; Sep 2, 2016 at 8:46 AM.
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  #146  
Old Posted Sep 2, 2016, 2:26 PM
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Originally Posted by Architype View Post
That isn't real art. It's just a bad popular culture image, visual kitsch. All emotionally suggestive and no real intellectual content, historical significance, or social commentary.
If that's what floats your boat, then friend, Winnipeg is your nirvana. You can get beaten on the head with "historical significance" and "social commentary" like this on nearly every corner.

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  #147  
Old Posted Sep 2, 2016, 5:48 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dmajackson View Post
Halifax's newest art is "The Last Steps" war memorial on the waterfront near Sackville Landing. There are footprints "burned" into the boardwalk leading up to this arch which represent the last steps Canadian soldiers took before setting sail for Europe during WWI.


Halifax Developments Blog (Photo by David Jackson)
I like the concept but don't like the arch. It could just as well be in a mall food court advertising fish and chips. It should have more gravitas than some lighthearted blue colour with generic font. Make it stone or rusted steel and it would have more of an effect.
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  #148  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2016, 1:22 AM
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I don't know how many of you posters are familiar with the Corydon Ave strip in Winnipeg but I thought I'd post this, as for a public art form, I believe they've missed the boat with these...Probably would have added them to another popular thread here..



http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manito...enue-1.3125241

.Ahh, every artists eye is unique in some unfathomable and subconscious form, difficult to explain or sometimes articulate to others..
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  #149  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2016, 1:38 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cyro View Post
I don't know how many of you posters are familiar with the Corydon Ave strip in Winnipeg but I thought I'd post this, as for a public art form, I believe they've missed the boat with these...Probably would have added them to another popular thread here..



.Ahh, every artists eye is unique in some unfathomable and subconscious form, difficult to explain or sometimes articulate to others..
bring back bears on broadway!
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  #150  
Old Posted Sep 4, 2016, 7:21 PM
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Hamilton-based sculptor Brandon Vickerd’s permanent exhibit, Wild Life was inspired through his observations of deer and foxes inside Thunder Bay’s downtown cores.

“It began to strike me that this is really a great urban centre that actually has incorporated nature into its core,” Vickerd said.

“When you come across these animals in the urban centre, it’s a bit surprising at first but then you realize they actually share the same space as us. So these pieces are about creating a conversation about how the urban centre is shared with nature and humans.”

Vickerd added he hoped the element of surprise and humour in his art when onlookers notice the creatures with human bodies would provoke a conversation about shared public space beyond the human family.

The $117,000 project will accompany bollards and painted planters celebrating the city’s Oji-Cree and Finnish culture along the busy commercial Algoma Street block between Bay Street and Cornwall Avenue.

http://www.tbnewswatch.com/News/392800/City_unveils_$117,000_Algoma_Street_statues

Public perception from young people was enthusiastic and supportive. Old people (especially old white people) were super fucking pissed off because that $117,000 could have fixed the potholes on the road between their house and Walmart!!!!!

And then not even 48 hours later, this happened:





http://magic999.ca/news/1050022240/1...ues-vandalized


Everyone is blaming a young person for it but I bet it was done by someone who hates taxes and wants potholes to be extinct.

These are similar to statues the same artist put up in Edmonton a year ago, but the animals featured are different.
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  #151  
Old Posted Sep 4, 2016, 10:11 PM
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I like his work. The Edmonton sculptures were also nice. The spray paint can be sandblasted off. If not the red doesn't totally ruin it for me.
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  #152  
Old Posted Sep 4, 2016, 10:13 PM
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Got to see Canmore's giant head yesterday. Really cool. They've had it I think since the mid 00's but it was my first time seeing it in person.

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  #153  
Old Posted Sep 4, 2016, 10:45 PM
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The paint has already been removed from them. The contractor that installed the statues did it for free.
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  #154  
Old Posted Sep 4, 2016, 11:25 PM
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bring back bears on broadway!

Well, how about the Bears on Assiniboine Ave.....


http://blogs.rrc.ca/
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  #155  
Old Posted Sep 4, 2016, 11:30 PM
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We had a mural festival in my neighbourhood a few weeks back. This is my favorite of the bunch. Very large and in a prominent spot.



http://www.straight.com/arts/758846/...er-main-street
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  #156  
Old Posted Sep 9, 2016, 10:01 AM
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The completed Douglas Coupland's The Golden Tree in Vancouver. My pics from yesterday.






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  #157  
Old Posted Sep 9, 2016, 3:16 PM
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So is that a cast of a real tree? Is there a story of it's significance or location?
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  #158  
Old Posted Sep 9, 2016, 4:45 PM
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Originally Posted by O-tacular View Post
So is that a cast of a real tree? Is there a story of it's significance or location?



http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/britis...tree-1.2570131
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  #159  
Old Posted Sep 9, 2016, 6:39 PM
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Thanks!
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  #160  
Old Posted Sep 24, 2016, 2:02 AM
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Finalists for Stanley Cup Memorial on Sparks at Elgin in Downtown Ottawa. This is near the spot where Lord Stanley proposed the Challenge Cup.

Quote:
Originally Posted by rocketphish View Post
There's a lot of cup in finalists' designs for Stanley Cup monument

Don Butler, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: September 22, 2016 | Last Updated: September 22, 2016 8:26 PM EDT


Based on eight finalist designs unveiled Thursday, the new Ottawa monument commemorating Lord Stanley of Preston’s gift of the Stanley Cup in 1892 is certain to include a representation of … the Stanley Cup.

Who knew?

All eight designs feature a literal or stylized image of the storied cup, awarded to the team that wins the NHL playoffs each year.

Three include virtual replicas of the cup, albeit super-sized versions. Three others offer stylized representations, some barely recognizable.

Another, submitted by Toronto’s Ja Architectural Studio and New York’s Sebastian Errazuriz Studio, is a towering monolith with an elongated cut-out of the cup in its centre.

Yet another, submitted by Intégral Jean Beaudoin and Novalux Multimedia of Montreal, consists of two curved walls, reminiscent of Toronto’s city hall.

The curved walls are inscribed with the names of Stanley Cup winners, meant to evoke the cup’s ever-expanding lower section.

The monument will be erected at the Elgin Street entrance to the Sparks Street Mall. To be unveiled in December 2017, it will celebrate the 125th anniversary of Lord Stanley’s gift, the 100th anniversary of the NHL, the 150th anniversary of Confederation and the 25th anniversary of the Ottawa Senators.

All eight designs feature a literal or stylized image of the storied cup, awarded to the team that wins the National Hockey League’s seemingly endless playoffs.

The cash budget for the memorial is about $2.8 million, according to George Hunter, president of Lord Stanley’s Gift Memorial Monument Inc., the non-profit charitable organization that is sponsoring the monument.

The Department of Canadian Heritage is contributing about $2.15 million of that, with the NHL and the Ottawa Senators each putting in $250,000 and the City of Ottawa supplying the land and a $50,000 contribution.

In addition, volunteers, board members and other supporters are providing about $1.3 million in work in kind, Hunter said, including $250,000 in services from the Senators.

Hunter said a media report Thursday that potential corporate donors backed off because they couldn’t get their names on the monument was “totally incorrect. That never was the case.”

He said there was discussion with Canadian Heritage at one point about whether such recognition for corporate sponsors — normally verboten on federal monuments — might be possible.

“What we were saying to them was it would make some sense if there was some ability to recognize corporate and other sponsors,” Hunter said. “But that was a very preliminary discussion. We certainly hadn’t talked to any potential donors at that point.”

While there was interest from some corporations in participating, they eventually declined. “It was more the timing of the thing,” Hunter said. “It had nothing to do with any demand that we recognize people, or our refusal to do it.”

Models of the finalist designs, chosen from among 40 entries by a jury, will remain on display Friday in the Âjagema Gallery at the Canada Council for the Arts, 150 Elgin St. They can also be viewed on the competition website, lordstanleysgift.com.

Members of the public are invited to email comments to hello@lordstanleysgift.com until Oct. 7. The winning design will be announced on Oct. 25.


Here is a brief description of all eight finalist design:

Coupland/Leinster/Mills



The design presents a stylized, elongated cup tilted on a 45-degree angle. Through the use of a visual trick called foreshortening, viewers will be able to find a “sweet spot” that allows the image to be seen as the classic current cup.

Covit/Nguyen/Norr



The design is centred on a large chaliced form, monumental in scale, that evokes the original cup. It sits on a granite surface with rounded corners that resembles a rink. Thirty-nine black granite disks, each engraved with the name of a Stanley Cup finalist team, are scattered across the rink.

Intégral Jean Beaudoin + Novalux



Described as a Nordic fountain by its Montreal creators, the curved transparent walls of the monument are embedded with the names of every cup champion and will be able to accommodate future champions to the year 2109. “Water clouds” will be used to freshen and clear the walls in the summer and to create an ice film in winter.

Ja Architecture and Sebastian Errazuriz studios



The designers describe their work as an “Arch of Light” — a new and contemporary Arc de Triomphe around a silhouette of the modern cup. As sunlight passes through the silhouette, it will create an outline in light of the cup on the monument’s floor, slowly shifting into position to align with an outline of the cup cut.

Trutiak/Pellettier/vanderGaast



A 20-foot-tall stylized depiction of the cup, with a larger-than-life sculpture of Lord Stanley holding his original cup in his hands. A young boy and girl face off in front of him.

North Design Office et al



A 6.1-metre-tall stylized cup, made of polished stainless steel, with nine visible bands of varying size, representing the cup’s physical growth over the years and its current nine-part configuration of engraved segments.

SPMB/1×1 Architecture



The monument consists of 15 large hands hoisting a six-metre-long cup. The illuminated words of Lord Stanley announcing his gift of the cup appear on the sides of the cup, in both official languages. The names of all Stanley Cup winners are engraved on an adjacent black granite surface called the “Field of Champions.”

Studio West et al



Lord Stanley, depicted in bronze, hold a replica of his original cup in his right hand. A larger-than-life depiction of the modern cup is embedded in a nearby wall, just above a three-dimensional relief of cheering fans. Visitors will be able to position themselves in front of the cup so they appear to be holding it aloft in photographs.

dbutler@postmedia.com
twitter.com/ButlerDon

http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-...y-cup-monument
More on the concepts and renderings here;

http://lordstanleysgift.com/competition/finalists/
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