The work in the foreground is by Victor Fraser.
The Labyrinth in the background is by me.
The work in the foreground is by Victor Fraser.
The Labyrinth in the background is by me.
My pass-through Street Labyrinth painted on Kensington Avenue . . .
The gaps in the arcs of this Labyrinth I painted on Kensington Avenue reveals where wheels of motorized vehicles most often roll.
Kind of like Desire Lines but for vehicles instead of Pedestrians or Cyclists.
This little one’s mom asked if her kid could run/walk the Labyrinth before I had completely finished painting it.
Who am I to get in the way of Awe & Wonder ?
He smiled the entire way into the centre and back . . .
Nice angle capturing all the Labyrinths I painted on North Augusta Avenue . . .
Jazz Musician Richard Underhill with one of my Kensington Market Street Labyrinths in the backdrop for this portrait . . .
Augusta Avenue is a one way street with northbound traffic flow from Dundas Street West to College Street in Downtown Toronto.
If one is new to the city or a visitor, and travelling by vehicle or public transit streetcar, they may look south and miss Kensington Market altogether.
I’d like to think my painting of “# K E N S I N G T O N M A R K E T” and my painted Street Labyrinths beyond them changes that . . .
Looking south down Augusta Avenue with the “# K E N S I N G T O N M A R K E T” and Street Labyrinths I painted and re-painted this past Pedestrian Sunday . . .
I wasn’t able to finish making this intersection Street Labyrinth the way it needed to.
Hopefully, during the remaining 2019 Pedestrian Sundays in Kensington Market, I can return to repaint and renew . . .
As hoped, my painted “# K E N S I N G T O N M A R K E T” is becoming a Tourist-worthy memory opportunity . . .
My now long-gone Bellevue Square Park Wading Pool Labyrinth tops this Quintych of panoramas around Kensington Market.
Nice surprise to see it appear again online!