Monday, May 30, 2011

granville island:: upspotting

I had shot this series on Granville Island at the end of last summer and have been meaning to post them much sooner - but since this summer may be an elusive season yet, if not completely liquidized to hell, this is to remind us that it is always easier to look up when the SUN  [YO! come on back!!] is doing its great big shining thing...


silly emily...

[she was sitting nonchalantly on the edge of an awning on the Net Loft building while a throng of admirers gathered on the sidewalk below - not sure how long she hung around after being gawked at and paparazzi-ed, but haven't seen her again since...]

Monday, May 16, 2011

sidewall consign

Often I am compelled to check the sidewalls of older buildings for faded ghost signs left behind from another era or lavish markings by free spirits with lifted cans of spray paint or some other mysterious images of indeterminate origins...

 off Fraser Street...

 off East Georgia Street...

off Main Street...

off Campbell Street...
[I believe I was on gang turf as I was shooting this sign in the side alley as a racy black car with tinted windows pulled up real close and waited until I took off on my bike again!]


Saturday, May 7, 2011

concrete evidence

Like multi-barreled camera lenses or more sinister weaponry, these concrete pipes sit stacked three rows high on a dusty lot awaiting their fate to snake through some deep dank underground tunnel...

Something about the intricately messy and yet essentially functional structures of industrial sites always catches my attention, and on this deserted Sunday afternoon we had ventured down to the gritty part of the Fraser River where the sprawling Ocean Concrete Products outfit is located [near the Arthur Laing Bridge on West 77th Avenue]... 



[We admit to innocently trespassing on our bikes but we were only looking for a trail to ride along the river - really!]

Further along we came upon the decrepit remains [that only a savage eye could love!] of a home-made raft stuck indefinitely on the muddy bank...
 and presumably its owner still bunk out of this graffiti decorated metal container lodged on a concrete pad above with the same million dollar view as the macmansions proliferating up river in Southlands, [and its spacious river front deck is invitingly furnished with a table and comfortable patio chairs]...

 We "trespassed" again for lunch at the smallest picnic table ever built behind the studios at the old Celtic Shipyards while watching the mighty Fraser at work...[logs for money and the Chinese have new houses!]


Monday, May 2, 2011

eastside umbr-iage

In a frequently gray and wet city where living and non-living objects merge together into certain murky tones, the appearance of the ultimate light source creates almost blinding contrast where splotchy shadows fall onto brightly sunlit but mundane surfaces...
take umbrage with foliage and strong and intriguing patterns emerge in the most unexpected places to dazzle the savage eye...

evenly spaced in the Quest Metal Works parking lot at the corner of Venables Street and Clark Drive...

softly defined on a rough retaining wall around a playing field off Woodland Drive...

 filigreeing a blue concrete wall of a building on Adanac Street - the cherry tree about to erupt into hot pink flocculence...

fuzzy shadow play against a schoolyard wall off Woodland Drive...

Sunday, April 24, 2011

strathcona:: tree shadows

On this first warm sunny day of spring [finally!] I went in search of some fitfully artful tree shadows - and other ephemeral exuberances...
Zig-zagging through the old Strathcona neighbourhood on my bike, the flower buds were literally popping open by the minute in the bright sunshine and the abstract sillhouettes of the still leafless tree branches shifted coyly with the sun - a profusion of intricate skiagrams on textured walls and painted surfaces, animating the quaintly charming houses on these most tranquil of inner city streets...






The ethereal blue dome of the Russian Orthodox church on Campbell Street merges with a clear blue sky through a veil of darkly lacing branches and a cascade of fresh spring foliage...

The first blossoms burst into bloom on this old cherry tree and the soft pink petals riff off the fading pink portico of this building on Keefer Street...



Sunday, April 17, 2011

sullen monuments

In the graceless state of the semi-industrial eastside, I have driven by these two sites countless times and not given them too much thought...
but the recent installation of Ken LUM's pseudo-monumental EAST VAN CROSS glowing at the intersection of Clark Drive and Great Northern Way has enlightened me to examine more closely these odd and neglected "monuments" in the midst of an arid landscape of overhead Skytrain tracks and the nondescript commercial structures below...

 This monolithic stone stairway does not lead to some sacred temple or sweet secret folly, but the statuary lining the edges might have one believe that a grander pavilion perched above will reward the climb...




Turn around at the top and the view northwards is expansive across a desolate stretch of Great Northern Way and as yet undeveloped swath of prime inner city land...

 Go up the small hill [where the CROSS burns brightly] and turn left onto Clark Drive, and this strange little "square" is easy to miss tucked in as it is beside a car service garage on a non-pedestrian friendly street...
 The unornamented raw concrete structure embraces a round plaza sunken a few steps down - the perfectly trimmed shrubs have almost fully filled in the openings between the pillars, thereby obliterating the view of the mountains...

 The lonely pedestal in the center of the plaza is obviously missing a statue and the small plaque left on it only bears a mysterious date - the commemoration day of the site perhaps...
 As the skytrains swoosh by above every few minutes, the hollow mechanical sound fills this dejectedly hidden site as harshly as the half-hearted brutalist design of a monument that was once dedicated to, grandly enough, Christopher Columbus...


Sunday, March 27, 2011

opsal skeletal


The long suffering OPSAL STEEL building on the corner of West 2nd Avenue and Quebec Street has finally been stripped of its tattered wood cladding and now sits as a hulking carcass with its innards mostly gutted...
Waiting for its new incarnation as two residential towers looming over a measly token remnant of its original west coast vernacular industrial building design from 1918, this salvaged skeleton is the last of such structures that once populated the grimy end of False Creek...




The two photos below are from a series I took of the building a few years ago when reindeer still dared to land on its roof and perched there for a while...


For another recent posting about this development:: www.miss604.com/2011/03/opsal-steel-building

Sunday, March 6, 2011

mount pleasant fragments



 We walked - frequently slowing down - under a mixed bag of early spring weather cues on a recent afternoon around the eastern slope of the Mount Pleasant neighbourhood...
towards Kingsway and Fraser Street and up Fraser to almost East 30th Avenue, then down to Kingsway again, with their block after block of rather banal and gritty storefronts and restaurants operated by mostly
Vietnamese and Philippino interests, with the odd Polish deli and bakery remaining...


I was more taken in by the odd splashes of colour and art that jumped out every now and again then by the fairly benign street life of a quiet Saturday afternoon along these stretches...





and by the quirky home-made signs gently exhorting drivers to slow down in the laneways, and for those on foot to slow down and look up or sideways or downwards every once in a while...
  

Sunday, February 13, 2011

softspring

 hope springs eternal...