Magic Carpet Ride
A series of five ground murals were painted for The Toronto Carpet Factory to bring character and life to the outdoor patio. Brand colours were used to inspired these fun and playful carpet designs.
Abstract art uses visual language of shape, form, color and line to create a composition which may exist with a degree of independence from visual references in the world.
A series of five ground murals were painted for The Toronto Carpet Factory to bring character and life to the outdoor patio. Brand colours were used to inspired these fun and playful carpet designs.
This Bell box is a modernist twist on furniture design to invoke feelings of optimism about the flourishing of home furniture businesses in the area.
This Bell box visualizes the diversity of Asians and South Asians of Agincourt.
“Our Relations” is a community-engaged sculpturesque mural in Vanier neighbourhood of Ottawa that fused Indigenous and multicultural aesthetic representing the neighbourhood.
This was a collaboration between the lead artist Kseniya Tsoy, Anishnaabe artist Mark Seabrook and an installation artist Tito Medina, who are newcomer, Indigenous and refugee artists respectively.
This mural was funded by the Diversity in the Arts Program of the City of Ottawa and the Vanier BIA.
Bell Box Murals Invitational 2021
Bell Box Murals
Ground mural for Church Village and Cafe TO
Bell Box mural for Duke Heights BIA
Bell Box murals project for Scarborough
Lansdowne Underpass, Toronto
Organizer: Women Paint, Arts Etobicoke
Sponsers: StreetARToronto, Steps Public Art
Measurements: 12’x12’
The mural, painted using spray paints, depicts a lone tree growing from the rocks, against a sunset background. The home owner had seen and admired my mural in the Euclid Ave. laneway the previous year. He wanted a northern Ontario scene painted on his garage door, as a surprise birthday present to his wife. Private commission.
Open Studio Contemporary Printmaking and the City of Toronto’s StreetARToronto (START) Program have collaborated to celebrate Open Studio’s 50th anniversary.
StART Support provides materials for the creation of graffiti art and art murals on properties with a history of repeated graffiti vandalism on walls exposed to city streets.
Artist Nick Sweetman in partnership with the David Suzuki Foundation, Street Art Toronto, and 38 other artists transformed a tagged laneway into an outdoor gallery dedicated to drawing attention to the importance of our native pollinators like butterflies.
Artist Nick Sweetman in partnership with the David Suzuki Foundation, Street Art Toronto, and 38 other artists transformed a tagged laneway into an outdoor gallery dedicated to drawing attention to the importance of our native pollinators like butterflies.
Artist Nick Sweetman in partnership with the David Suzuki Foundation, Street Art Toronto, and 38 other artists transformed a tagged laneway into an outdoor gallery dedicated to drawing attention to the importance of our native pollinators like butterflies.
Artist Nick Sweetman in partnership with the David Suzuki Foundation, Street Art Toronto, and 38 other artists transformed a tagged laneway into an outdoor gallery dedicated to drawing attention to the importance of our native pollinators like butterflies.
Artist Nick Sweetman in partnership with the David Suzuki Foundation, Street Art Toronto, and 38 other artists transformed a tagged laneway into an outdoor gallery dedicated to drawing attention to the importance of our native pollinators like butterflies.
KJ Bit Collective partnered with StreetARToronto to transform this community laneway into a giant canvas of graffiti and mural art. KJ Bit organized 75 artists to paint garages in two live-paint jams. The initiatives were well supported by local residents who now enjoy their revitalized laneway. KJ Bit are Jieun June Kim and Erika James.
Bee Connected captures the theme of bees pollinating flowers as a source of connection between plants. Bees visit 50 to 100 flowers during one collection trip, creating an invisible link from one to the next. They are the source of so much beauty, as well as nutrients. Every peony, every pepper, every tulip, every tomato. These tiny winged critters do so much for our planet. I wanted to give them some recognition, while making people think about the stunning creatures that they are.
This mural honours the Botwood Volunteer Fire Department.
This series of murals along Dundas Street West created as part of a cultural exchange celebrates the relationship between Canada and Chile and, in particular the cities of Toronto and Valparaiso.
These artworks share first person perspective stories that speak to the rich ongoing history of the site as home to many diverse plant and animal species and cultural communities, beginning with the Indigenous peoples of Tkaronto and Turtle Island. The Lansdowne Underpass Art Project creates a collaborative artwork that honours this site by telling stories of those who have and continue to live on, play on, build community on, struggle on, learn from, grow in, paint, immigrate to, contribute to, and tend to this land.
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