Sunday, July 31, 2011

granville island:: rounded up


 During these spring-like days of summer [only in Vancouver!], the living is easy and I am quite quite lazy - but I managed to wander around Granville Island one recent breezy day and take in some sculptural forms with a circular theme - starting with the lucky boy sinking into multi-scooped balls of ice cream...




 "BLISS" by Ron Simmer

 "HONKFEST" by Douglas Walker

[sorry, missed the title and artist's name]

[the titled pieces are part of a temporary exhibit "REVISION: The Art of Recycling" featuring art made from recycled, salvaged, scrounged or found materials...installed around the Creekhouse building and courtyard]

Monday, June 27, 2011

lonetree standing


 sometimes it is enough to be a lone botanical sentry stationed high above it all...
[on West 1st Avenue off Burrard Street]

 sometimes it is enough to be the one well-groomed specimen gracing a modest yard...
[at East 38th Avenue and Rhodes Street]

sometimes it is enough to be a sidewalk loner unperturbed by a neurotic stronghold...
[on Powell Street]


Monday, June 20, 2011

seaforth detailed


75 years forth and the Seaforth Armoury still commands its whitewashed and castellated presence at the south end of the Burrard Street Bridge - a protective fort and comfort zone for The Seaforth Highlanders of Canada, a Primary Reserve Infantry which celebrated its 100th anniversary last year...
It is a building that I have been curious about but never had the urge to go right up to and really train my savage eye upon until this sunny weekday morning when I was nearby and had the time [and courage!] to approach...



There was a recruiting board set up outside the large front and side entrance doors and as I rode up on my bike to peek through the grated side door window, the door opened and a friendly reservist* welcomed me in...


He was kind enough to give me a tour of the great hall and adjoining rooms and  let me take some pictures...
I am always excited to be in an older building with its original interior still intact and retaining the atmosphere from another era...
The Seaforth Armoury was designed by the long-standing architectural partnership of John McCarter and George Nairne, [who had also built the downtown art deco landmark Marine Building in 1930 and who would eventually erect the modernist General Post Office building on Georgia Street in the 1950's], with the completion date in 1936 [the Armoury is now listed as a Class A Heritage Building]...







 
within the sparse gymnasium room hangs a lone black punching bag, almost poignant in its symbolic and literal stoic-ness, while the silhouette of an armed soldier lurks above...

[I was told that the recruitment age is from 16 to 55... - so I still have "lots" of time to think about it!]


*Thank you to Michael the Reservist for his time and generous info session.

Monday, June 13, 2011

eyeing windows

Who is watching me from behind glazed house-eyes when I aim my camera at them?...
nobody has opened up their windows [yet!] to confront me for imposing my lens towards them,
perhaps because sometimes they are all too oblivious to my intrusion!

 soundproofed - and sightless...
[at "Grave Level" - by Vancouver Mountain View Cemetery off Fraser Street - where an all-day multi-band infestation rocked the house last summer - and almost woke the dead!] 

 industrialized benign neglect...
[on that artist menagerie and tourista destination, Granville Island] 

 glass-blocked intervention...
[at the aging yet still life-supporting Vancouver General Hospital on West 12th Avenue] 

 seasonal adaptive decorama...
[on the determinedly DIY Commercial Drive] 

 sandwiched and grilled...
[on the warmed-up but still crunchy part of Cambie Street off Hastings] 

ghostly belle of the ball...
[sometimes "observed" floating around the grand ballroom of the Vancouver Hotel on Georgia Street]

Sunday, June 5, 2011

marking my clark park:: part IV


 the unstinting promise of summer...

from a relinquished spring...

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...