While it was abandoned, they put up these fake widows. It helped keep squatters out, reduced the fire risk. From a distance it was a good look. Up close it seemed an odd optical illusion.
The interiors might have been impressive in 1928.
They are removing soffit and fascia. You don't realize how important it is to the design until it's gone. Flemish bond brick work faces the street.
How they built it. Looks like bird nest territory.
They've got some big saws. The right stays, the left goes.
They are protecting the right side, the part they are saving. They'll saw through everything inside and out.
They were smiling as if this was the time of their lives, which indeed it was.
Joe Dreher told me that he and his son were helping 3ttman with his Living Walls mural in Summerhill, said I should drop by.
So on August 8, I dropped by.
And that started my favorite art experience: For 8 days I watched the murals go up.
Left: Joe Dreher. Right: 3ttman, "His name derives from the French trois têtes man, or three headed man – a recurring figure in his work."
My first look at 3ttman's wall (right) and 2501's wall (left).
3ttman was on the lift sketching with a long pole.
Living Walls volunteers looked after the artists. Here are three: Joe, Vanessa, and Karley. These are the smiles I'm talking about.
The butterfly catcher wall by Matt Haffner and Laura Bell dwarfed them.
He painted more that 50 of them all by himself. When I spoke with him on this day, I felt the crushing workload he'd set out for himself. Toward the end of the week I think he relaxed a little.
Agostino dealt with a prickley deodar cedar at Triumph Lofts.
When the lift ran out of gas, they ran on battery backup.
Roti incorporated a prior mural by Jaz on The Sound Table wall.
Roti, one man with a can.
At the end Living Walls volunteers broke things down and cleaned things up.
I know they were happy, I know they were exhausted.
I know they felt an aching regret: the best part was over. In the process they bonded with the artists they might never see again. That's the way I feel and I just watched a little.
So the murals will remind me of all the people who put them up. And I'll remember my favorite art experience (so far).
Thanks Joe for the great tip. I hope to do it again next year.
Terry's 7 tips for enjoying the walls: 1. Go see them at least 3 times. 2. You don't have to know anything. 3. You don't have to think. 4. You don't have to like them. 5. You can change your mind and change it again. 6. If there are walls you particularly like (or hate), look up the artist. 7. Imagine the wall YOU would like to see. and...
8. Look at them from different vantage points if you can (2501 photographing his wall).