Signs of Spring

The best thing about Toronto this time of year is the sheer amount of activity surfacing throughout each pocket of the city. This past Saturday I spent the day outdoors, beginning my weekend with a Jane's Walk of Trinity Bellwoods, West Queen West and Lower Ossington. A really interesting tour, we learned about the gentrification of the neighbourhood, the ubiquitous Victorian bay-and-gable homes that line the residential streets, and the important street artists who've made their mark on the hidden laneways throughout the neighbourhood. Jane's Walks are great opportunities to explore a new part of the city and learn the history behind Toronto's many diverse communities. I highly recommend checking one out this spring.

After finishing the Jane's Walk at the Toronto Flower Market in Shaw Park, I headed to the Art Gallery of Ontario to visit the new Painting Tranquility: Vilhelm Hammershøi exhibit. Hammershøi is one of Denmark's most famous painters, best-known for his paintings of serene interiors and intimate portraits of his wife. I enjoyed the paintings of the familiar streetscapes of Copenhagen and the haunting undertones of his works. For those interested, the exhibit (which is on loan from Statens Museum for Kunst in Copenhagen) is on until June 26th. 

Next door, I checked out OCADU's GradEx 101. GradEx is an annual showcase of student work, and this year marked OCAD University's 101st exhibition. It's amazing to see the new and unique talent coming out of this school - the craftsmanship and creativity put into these final thesis works was remarkable. An overall awesome exhibition in one of my favourite buildings in Toronto.

Gladstone Grow-Op 2016

The Gladstone Grow-Op is an annual exhibition featuring contemporary artworks with a focus on landscape and urbanism. Local artists, designers, and landscape architects are encouraged to submit works that "cultivate curiousity" and explore the dichotomy of the natural environment and urbanized landscape in our world today.

Some of my favourite works from this year's exhibit were Little Pharm by Kara Stone, a project in which the artist reused her anti-depressant bottles to grow different plants and see which flourished (an apt metaphor); and All Night Blossoms Fell by Wabi-Sabi Collective, a beautiful installation of unfinished paper flowers caught in time as they fall to the floor.

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Gladstone Hotel
1214 Queen Street West
Toronto, ON
M6J 1J6