News   Apr 18, 2024
 697     0 
News   Apr 18, 2024
 6.3K     2 
News   Apr 18, 2024
 2.4K     4 

Toronto In Art

The Star Theatre wasn't destroyed in 1907. Fred Stair was still running it, and Reverend R.B. St. Clair got into a nasty legal case after he drafted a rather too descriptive report of a show called "The Darlings of Paris" there in 1912. The case went to the Ontario Court of Appeal in 1913.

Thanks for the reference. Great article on the trial in the torontoist.com:

https://torontoist.com/2013/07/historicist-the-darlings-of-paris/

20130720StarTrialPics.jpg
 

Attachments

  • 20130720StarTrialPics.jpg
    20130720StarTrialPics.jpg
    137 KB · Views: 1,318
I saw the Jack Bush show at the National Gallery last weekend. Bush was a commercial artist in Toronto for years before becoming known for his abstract work. He did his share of paintings in and around Toronto.

View attachment 41730
Ward Sketch, 1929

View attachment 41731
King West, 1930

View attachment 41732
Hoggs Hollow House, 1929

View attachment 41733
Hoggs Hollow Bridge, 1943

View attachment 41734
North York, 1943

View attachment 41735
North York Market, 1943

View attachment 41736
Parking, 1941

View attachment 41737
Swansea, 1943

View attachment 41738
Untitled House, 1943

Awesome paintings.
Thanks

Mario
avangardphoto.com
 
Reviving this thread with one of my favourite paintings of Toronto, "Lights of a City Street" painted by Frederick Marlett Bell-Smith in 1894:

things1-lights-of-a-city-street.jpg


Owned by HBC, here is a description from their web-site:

Lights of a City Street is an incredible view of the intersection of King and Yonge Streets, full of unprecedented realism and detail. According to a clock on the main building located on the southeast corner, it is 4:58 p.m. The streets have been dampened by a light rainstorm passing through the city. Looking east, passengers board two of the new streetcars on the King route. In order to capture the temper of the times, Bell-Smith has replicated all of the names of the local businesses which have taken up residence at this busy intersection. We can clearly see the offices of the shipping company, Cunard S.S. Line, situated on the northeast corner, facing King Street.

If the faces of the numerous pedestrians milling about in the picture seem incredibly life-like, this is no accident. Bell-Smith set out to create a documentary atmosphere by incorporating real people with whom he was familiar, both professionally and personally. The helmeted policeman, draped in his rain cape and directing traffic, is Constable John William Redford from the Toronto Police Force. Redford was a regular fixture at the corner of King and Yonge, routinely directing traffic as depicted in the painting. Upon retiring from the force, he worked as a security guard for the Simpsons department store on Queen Street at Yonge. Two other significant people are portrayed elsewhere: the gentlemen being swamped by newspaper boys is the artist himself, and the man seen raising his hat in greeting to the women passing by is Bell-Smith’s son, the Reverend F.M. Bell-Smith.

 
Reviving this thread with one of my favourite paintings of Toronto, "Lights of a City Street" painted by Frederick Marlett Bell-Smith in 1894:

Okay, so that is just wonderful. With hints of pink in the sky.
Of note: "The painting graced the walls of HBC’s executive offices for some years before being moved to the Arcadian Court foyer. In 2012, the painting was moved to the Main Floor of the Queen Street store, facing the elevators."
Must go and see if it is there still.
~Ed D.
 

Back
Top