I (Re)Painted the Labyrinth on Kensington Avenue immediate in front of Courage My Love vintage store.
You can still see a fading ghost outline remnant of my previous Labyrinth painted in White underneath the fresh coat of Green.
Previously, I painted it with the entrance to the Heart Labyrinth in front of Courage My Love, result being that you faced away from the store when entering and arriving in the centre.
That never felt right, neither visually, nor experientially.
So I waited for my Labyrinth to fade on the well driven over Kensington Avenue.
I painted it again, but this time in Green and turned around 180 degrees.
NOW my Heart Labyrinth feels like it belongs properly, on Kensington Avenue.
Thanks for making the world a better place!
— Richard Underhill (@RichUnderhill) July 25, 2021
Dog Walking beside my Heart Labyrinth passing in front of Courage My Love in Kensington Market . . .
From this side of Kensington Avenue looking towards Courage My Love,
My Heart Labyrinth looks upside down.
Next time I paint the Heart Labyrinth here,
I’ll paint it right side up . . .
Heart Labyrinth I recently painted on Kensington Avenue in front of Courage My Love . . .
Two of the three Street Labyrinths I painted today on Kensington Avenue in Kensington Market in Downtown Toronto . . .
Here is Shamez Amlani with his Bicycle atop the Heart Labyrinth I painted during Pedestrian Sunday in the Baldwin & Augusta Avenue intersection in Kensington Market.
Shamez is one of the four original Co-Founders of Streets Are For People, who championed Pedestrian Sundays in Kensington Market (and in two other Toronto Neighbourhoods as well).
He’s also my friend and has always supported the Toronto City of Labyrinths Project!
That’s me (re)painting the Heart Labyrinth in the middle of the Baldwin & Augusta “T” Intersection during Pedestrian Sunday Kensington Market . . .
That’s me painting the Heart Labyrinth in the middle of the Baldwin and Augusta Avenue Intersection in Kensington Market during the previous Pedestrian Sunday . . .
Squint closely and you might spot me sporting my blue Labyrinth shirt while painting the farthest most Labyrinth in this image . . .
Looking north on Augusta Avenue showing two of the four Labyrinths I painted here . . .