Whenever I visit my Robson Square Labyrinth, sometimes I find Street Furniture, Table and Folding Metal Chairs, right on top it.
This interferes with walking the Labyrinth.
I always remove them.
Maybe I don’t need to…
?
Whenever I visit my Robson Square Labyrinth, sometimes I find Street Furniture, Table and Folding Metal Chairs, right on top it.
This interferes with walking the Labyrinth.
I always remove them.
Maybe I don’t need to…
?
Placing Hearts throughout my Labyrinths has forever changed my Giant Outstallation Art practice . . .
They are infused with Love.
The different colours I used to paint the Labyrinth in this Wading Pool find their way through the water and its waves . . .
Creating Chalk Labyrinths on Friday and Saturday Nights on Granville Street Intersections in Downtown Vancouver . . .
Was surprised to find an entire half-block that was closed off to car traffic, yet left open for pedestrians at this year’s TaiwanFest.
Many people enjoyed exploring and experiencing my Chalk Labyrinth at the north end of Granville Street on the first day of TaiwanFest 2018 . . .
This Labyrinth I painted in Robson Square at times transforms into a stage. . .
Vancouver based K-Pop Panwiberry Dance crew atop my recently repainted Robson Square Labyrinth . . .
Childhood memories are made from moments.
Moments like this one in the Wading Pool Labyrinth in Christie Pits Park, Toronto . . .
For some reason I can’t quite yet understand, making eight sided octagonal Labyrinths have always been a struggle.
On this evening, it turned out okay. I think it was the better of all my previous efforts.
This might have been because I returned to the basics and only tried to get the measurements and the shape of it right, without improvising anything design-wise.
Many people seemed to enjoy it.
There I am, chalk drawing the Labyrinth . . .