Recording a music video atop the Robson Square Labyrinth . . .
Recording a music video atop the Robson Square Labyrinth . . .
Look closely at the White Labyrinth.
There is a mix of thin outlines and wide finished lines.
I was still in the process of painting the White Labyrinth.
The white dots and shoeprints are from people walking on my wet paint . . .
The Red Heart Labyrinth I had finished painting and it was dry, so no red shoeprints.
Images and captions like this one reassure me that the Labyrinths I make and place around the city are important and appreciated . . .
Looks like Pokemon Go Spinda Pattern 7, a walking panda-rabbit with its opposite direction Spiral Designs, found its way to my Labyrinth Pier location along False Creek South Seawall in Vancouver . . .
… É o projeto da minha Cidade dos Labirintos!
Para criar pelo menos um Labirinto a uma curta distância de todos os residente de Vancouver!
You may make out from this image that the red paint of the second most outer concentric circle has been peeling off randomly.
I’m waiting for most of the red to disappear before re-painting it red again, this time with several coats so it lasts a bit longer.
On the way to the library, I spotted a labyrinth (a #medieval centering / #meditation device) that someone had painted on the street. #mindful pic.twitter.com/YgpQJcILOZ
— Moss Whelan (@Moss_Whelan) November 2, 2018
In the top left pocket of the picture, you can just make out the red colour arcs of my Heart Labyrinth I painted beside this larger Orange one.
So that’s it for my Spyglass Place Labyrinth.
The grass reveals a ghost outline of my former quintile, seven lane Labyrinth.
I had built this Labyrinth by placing stones I took from underneath the Cambie Bridge.
The middle of the Labyrinth, I chose it because there was a large flat stone embedded in the ground, and once you would arrive at the centre, you could stand on it.
Some time after I had made this, I came back with oil based paint sticks, and outlined a red heart on that flat stone.
That meant after you walked the Spyglass Place Labyrinth and arrived at the Centre, you would find a heart there.
So, if my Labyrinth was to disappear through entropy, the way for it to go, would be as a giant heart.
Seen from the Cambie Bridge in Vancouver, just north of Olympic Village Station.
Dear Vancouver!
On Friday Evening, November 2 2018 between 6 p.m. and 8 p.m., we’re having a Pumpkin Parade !
What is that exactly?
We bring our Carved Pumpkins from our doorsteps, window sills, and front yards to a neighbourhood gathering spot, McLean Park, at the corner of Heatley and Keefer in the Strathcona Neighbourhood.
We then enjoy the artwork of our neighbourhood!
Hopefully there will be enough pumpkins to create an outline of a Giant Jack O’Lantern which we can all enjoy together!
Please spread the word and see you then!
Still Wondering and need more?
Read here : City of Labyrinth Pumpkin Parade video story from 2011.
" Vancouver Pumpkin Parade & Giant Jack O’Lantern Labyrinth! "https://t.co/KWEUaezwdi
This Friday Nov 2 2018, 6-8 p.m.
Bring YOUR Pumpkins to
McLean Park, Strathcona Neighbourhood, Vancouver
| #vanparks🏞️#pumpkinparade🎃#Labyrinths🍥
#Vancouver🌆#eastvan #dtes #strathcona pic.twitter.com/aX0HvJlEYl— HïMY SYeD 🍥 City of Labyrinths Project (@LabyrinthsDOTca) 30 October 2018
If you look closely in the top right, you may recognize my red Heart Labyrinth.
White Labyrinth still in progress . . .
My “Labyrinth Pier, Vancouver” project location now has three painted Labyrinths.
This white colour design is a pass-through Labyrinth.
You can see from the first image it is still a work in progress.
I’m waiting for a break in the rain, long enough to allow my painting the thin outlines with at least one full coat using a full width roller brush.
The orange colour of this first of several Labyrinths to be painted onto this pier really pops at night.
Enough to stop runners in their tracks to snap a pic!