Naptime!
On the Labyrinth I painted in Earlscourt Park’s wading pool . . .
Hmmm. . . don’t know I ever thought to do that myself.
Children teach me so much.
Naptime!
On the Labyrinth I painted in Earlscourt Park’s wading pool . . .
Hmmm. . . don’t know I ever thought to do that myself.
Children teach me so much.
I wonder if my repainting of this Labyrinth changed its Soundscape . . . ?
Made a Masking Tape #Labyrinth
At Vancouver Public Space Network (@vpsn) 10th Anniversary Party
| #PlacemakingWeek pic.twitter.com/8BvgdNY6qt
— HïMY SYeD (@LabyrinthsDOTca) 16 September 2016
I recently re-painted my Labyrinth in the Wading Pool in Bellevue Square Park in Kensington Market.
You can also see some of the Design Motifs I also repainted.
The wading pool surface however has become decrepit and no amount of repainting can solve that.
At some point, the park itself will be remade, revitalized.
Unknown if the wading pool will survive at all.
Until then, you can still walk my Labyrinth . . .
Maybe the Toronto Minotaur did this ?
Please call us as we may require more info. ^ga
— 311 Toronto (@311Toronto) September 4, 2016
The Labyrinth I recently Re-painted in East Vancouver.
The Labyrinth Maker’s house is in the background. He painted it white.
I did not know anything about the Labyrinth nor its Maker until he walked out of his house and said hello while I was repainting.
His name is Jerry. A grandfather, who for several years now, with help from a grandkid of his has annually repainted this Labyrinth with white paint.
He hadn’t yet gotten around to doing that this year.
He was happy that I had taken it upon myself to Re-paint the fading white design lines.
Strathcona Linear Park is a 1970s consequence of the City of Vancouver tearing down three houses in a north-south direction on Hawkes Avenue, in anticipation of the never-completed Project 200 Freeway.
Eventually, Jerry got tired of seeing this patch of paved grey in Linear Greenspace beside his house, and he painted his Labyrinth.
His chosen design comes from the Canvas Labyrinth belonging to Christchurch Cathedral in Downtown Vancouver.
Jerry, seem uncomfortable whenever I said it was his Labyrinth. He said it belonged to everyone.
Including me, the Labyrinth Maker from Toronto who took it upon himself to repaint it . . .
Wait-a-minute…
That‘s not a Minotaur!