Water is where and when “Wading Pool” meets “Labyrinth”.
Rolling waves of water elevate what my Labyrinths painted upon Toronto’s Wading Pool surfaces can mean.
This video is also just nice to look at and listen to.
Water is where and when “Wading Pool” meets “Labyrinth”.
Rolling waves of water elevate what my Labyrinths painted upon Toronto’s Wading Pool surfaces can mean.
This video is also just nice to look at and listen to.
Hazmat suits are optional when walking the Wading Pool Labyrinth in Christie Pits Park…?
Sometimes,
You find sunken treasure when exploring a water filled Wading Pool Labyrinth.
In this case, a sunken scooter !
Black and White photograph capturing the colourful Lines of the Roxton Road Labyrinth I painted on the wading pool in Fred Hamilton Park, Toronto . . .
Some years back in Toronto when I was RE-Painting my Labyrinth in the Wading Pool in the middle of Christie Pits Park, a father of two young boys was surprised to finally meet me.
He had a seven year old and a four year old.
His then four year old had learned to walk by using the lanes of my Labyrinth.
His older brother, who was all of three years old at the time, would spend an hour by himself walking and re-walking and re-walking the Labyrinth.
That hour of parent-free direct attention allowed the dad to focus on his youngest, helping his toddler to learn to walk.
The father told me that they as a family had been walking the Labyrinth almost everyday that they could for the past four years.
I was speechless. I became unusually self-conscious as the Father wanted to snap a photograph of me standing with paintbrush in the Labyrinth.
It was one of the most profound moments during my journey in my City of Labyrinths Project.
A skateboarder once thanked me for the Concentric Circle Arcs comprising my Wading Pool Labyrinth in Christie Pits Park.
He said it helped with depth perception allowing for situation awareness.
I wonder if same holds true for Unicyclists?
The Wading Pool which doubles as Labyrinth triples as an outdoor venue for House Music Performances . . .
During the rain, Earlscourt Park Wading Pool capturing just enough water for this wonderful black and white capture of the Labyrinth . . .
Sometimes I forget just how much time and effort was put into creating the Labyrinth Steve and I painted in the Wading Pool in Earlscourt Park, Toronto.
It’s currently Canada’s largest painted Labyrinth in number of lanes at 16 . . .
Late afternoon shadows fall upon my Roxton Road Labyrinth in Fred Hamilton Playground, Toronto . . .
My Earlscourt Park Wading Pool Labyrinth remains to date, my largest in diameter painted Labyrinth.
So large, yet still recognizable as a Labyrinth even from a good distance . . .
. . . Also eagerly awaits Labyrinth Walkers !
this wading pool eagerly awaits splashers! #Toronto St Clair/Bathurst #August pic.twitter.com/UA56jcD0M2
— Shawna Dorfman (@shawnascondos) August 5, 2017