LowPolygon
Senior Member
thedeepend - Loved your idea for a book jacket!
Allow me to offer another version:
nice! i love the amber colour....
thedeepend - Loved your idea for a book jacket!
Allow me to offer another version:
this one looks like a book jacket for an unwritten early 20th century "Toronto noir" Ã la Caleb Carr's The Alienist....
I have an image for the inevitable sequel book. I have been holding on to this photo for a long time, it's from March 22, 1938, of 89-93 Browning Avenue.
And finally in the third book the mysterious photographer is all alone. What could have happened to his assistant?
speaking of art installations and digging. Urs Fischer is a Swiss artist best known for digging up the floors of the galleries that show his work. his installations are quite striking....
The mysterious photographer:
Looking through the archival pictures of the Yonge subway construction, it's interesting to look at them from a purely aesthetic point-of-view, almost as an "intervention" into the normal state of affairs, like an art installation that went on too long.
A pot-pourri of pics (and captions) from the Toronto Star archives:J
Wykeham Lodge:
Caption: Original caption: Historic Block to be wrecked. Above are photographs which show the buildings to be wrecked in the block bounded by Yonge, College, Bay and Buchanan Sts. Tenders for the wrecking have been called for by the owners, the T. Eaton Co., and these close at noon today. The pictures are of: . . . a birdseye view of the whole parcel, showing the College St. armouries, formerly Bishop Strachan school, and before that Wykeham Lodge, the residence of Lady J. B. Macaulay. . . Last Published: 7/11/1928
Release: NOT RELEASED
Photographer: Toronto Star Archives/GetStock.com
the drug storefront is a great example of Art Deco design and would have been extremely au courant at the time. i love the round portal window, and the circular letter forms.
i've been trying to think of what colour the vitrolite would have been. it's likely to have been either mint green/black; pale yellow/black; light blue/black or less likely pink/black. its also possible there was a third colour, in all likelihood red. whatever it was it would have made a dramatic impression on the streetscape.