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  2. Graffiti in Toronto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graffiti_in_Toronto

    Graffiti in a Toronto alley in 2005. Graffiti was well established in downtown Toronto by the early 1980s. [2] By the mid-1990s, many graffiti pieces and tags were observable in various alleyways and other outdoor areas around the city, with a book collection of some of those works (the book also viewable digitally in PDF from the “Tags & Pieces” footnote link below) appearing in 1997. [3]

  3. Graffiti Alley, Toronto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graffiti_Alley,_Toronto

    Graffiti Alley, Toronto. Coordinates: 43°38′52″N 79°23′56″W. Part of the alleyway in 2013. Graffiti Alley, officially Rush Lane, [1] is a three-block, 1-km [2] alleyway in Toronto 's Fashion District, known for hosting street art. [3][4][5] Lonely Planet has called the site "possibly the most popular place to check out street art in ...

  4. Toronto Municipal Licensing & Standards Division - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toronto_Municipal_Licensing...

    Municipal Licensing & Standards Division (MLS) is a municipal body in Toronto which grants licenses and permits for certain activities under the city's jurisdiction including by-law administration and enforcement services. Other areas under the MLS's purview including targeted strategies to address graffiti, noise, business inspections, parks ...

  5. Legal wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_wall

    Legal walls or open walls,[1] are public spaces where graffiti is allowed by any member of the public. Legal walls started in Scandinavia, [1] and the first legal wall was likely the klotterplanket ("scribble board") in Stockholm which opened in 1968. The wall was repainted white every morning by a civil servant. [2]

  6. Lower Simcoe Street underpass murals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lower_Simcoe_Street...

    Coordinates: 43°38′37″N 79°23′4″W. Murals were unveiled along the Lower Simcoe Street underpass in Toronto, Ontario, in 2019. [1] Lead artist Tannis Nielsen worked with Indigenous artists to create the artworks. [2] According to Muskrat Magazine, Gchi-twaa-wendan Nibi ("Honour the Water") on the eastern wall is dedicated to the Water ...

  7. List of public art in Toronto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_public_art_in_Toronto

    The following public artworks have been installed in Toronto, Ontario, Canada: 2015 Pan American Games cauldron. 48th Highlanders of Canada Regimental Memorial. Adam Beck Memorial. Afghanistan Memorial. The Arrival ( Apprehensive Man, Jubilant Man, Orphan Boy, Pregnant Woman, and Woman on Ground ), Rowan Gillespie. The Audience, Michael Snow.

  8. Canadian Volunteer Monument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Volunteer_Monument

    The memorial in 2019. 43°39′45.6″N 79°23′36″W  /  43.662667°N 79.39333°W  / 43.662667; -79.39333. Location. Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The Canadian Volunteer Monument[1] (also known as the Canadian Volunteers Memorial) [2] is installed in Toronto 's Queen's Park, in Ontario, Canada. The memorial was dedicated in 1870.

  9. Notre Place Monument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Notre_Place_Monument

    The sculpture in 2023. 43°39′37″N 79°23′28″W. /  43.66028°N 79.39111°W  / 43.66028; -79.39111. Location. Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Notre Place Monument, also known as Notre place (English: Our Home), is a monument in Toronto 's Queen's Park, in Ontario, Canada. Unveiled in 2018, the monument features a public space and a ...