Showing posts with label hart house. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hart house. Show all posts

Monday, March 9, 2020

Tuesday Treasures Around the World

Tom the backroads traveller hosts this weekly meme.
Travel Tuesday
Our World Tuesday
Image-in-ing
My Corner of the World


Toronto ON

Continuing with tours of the University of Toronto.


Image Source - Wikipedia
All other photos are mine - I didn't have a photo of the building.

Hart House is a student activity centre at the University of Toronto. Established in 1919, it is one of the earliest North American student centres. Hart House was initiated and financed by Vincent Massey, an alumnus and benefactor of the university, and was named in honour of his grandfather, Hart Massey.

Hart's grandsons' Vincent and Raymond also became famous in very opposite ways. Vincent became the Governor General of Canada in 1952 and Raymond was an actor.

Conceived as a place for cultural, intellectual and recreational functions alike, Hart House's facilities include a gymnasium, swimming pool, shooting range (presently used only for archery), theatre, art gallery, reading and sitting rooms, lounges and reception areas, offices, library, music rooms, conference and study rooms, restaurant and auditoriums.


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The Collegiate Gothic-revival complex was the work of architect Henry Sproatt, who worked alongside decorator Alexander Scott Carter, and engineer Ernest Rolph, and subsequently designed the campanile at its southwestern corner, Soldiers' Tower.





This Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada plaque can be found on the outside wall, near the northwestern corner of Hart House, off Tower Road on the University of Toronto grounds. Here's what it says:


Graham was instrumental in establishing physiotherapy in Canada. Trained in massage and remedial gymnastics, she rehabilitated soldiers wounded in the First World War and taught at the Military School of Orthopaedic Surgery and Physiotherapy, here at Hart House. In 1929, she helped create a diploma program at the University of Toronto. Her advocacy ensured that accredited physiotherapists served as officers in the military and at convalescent hospitals during the Second World War. The Enid Graham Memorial Lecture pays tribute to this founding member of the Canadian Physiotherapy Association.

Friday, July 14, 2017

Sculpture University of Toronto Part 2

July 2017 - Toronto ON

Part 1 - University of Toronto sculpture

Some more sculpture we looked at this week.

As you walk around University of Toronto you will notice the various pecuilar looking statues that are scattered around campus. There are statues and busts littered all around from venerable figures to forms of contemporary art to Canadian symbols that unite us all.

The part 1 post had several venerable figures while this week is a little more abstract.


Kells Nest by Bill Vazan





Crucified Woman- Almuth Lutkenhaus, 1976


According to theologians Doris Jean Dyke and Julie Clague, artist Almuth Lutkenhaus-Lackey sculpted “Crucified Woman” simply as an expression of women’s suffering. It was only reluctantly that she lent the sculpture to a United church in Toronto for Easter one year, unsure of whether she wanted it interpreted theologically. She was overwhelmed by the response, especially of women who for the first time, saw “their suffering, their dying and their resurrection embodied in a woman’s body,” and thereby felt God’s solidarity with the suffering specific to women.

Of course, not everyone interpreted the sculpture this way. Some saw it as heretical, too distant from the male body of the historical Jesus of Nazareth. Others saw it as too sexual, as it depicts a nude female form.

The sculpture was eventually installed in the Victoria University Emmanuel College courtyard, but not without debate and not until 1986.

This one was not easy to find, tucked away in a peaceful corner of the college, a nook to reflect in.


Neighbours” by artist Joe Rosenthal. It is made of bronze and was installed in 2001.
There's nothing like a good, gossipy catch up with a friend.





Rune - Randy, Berenicci, 2001
Definition of rune
1: any of the characters of any of several alphabets used by the Germanic peoples from about the 3rd to the 13th centuries

As applied here I would imagine it refers to information/education as provided by a university.






The following three pieces do not impress me as much, but art is in the eye of the beholder.


This was fun, though, as a day camp was using it as a shady spot from high noon.

Michael - Anne Allardyce, 1978
Commissioned by the Collegium in 1977 in commemoration of the one hundred and twenty fifth Anniversary of the Foundation of St. Michael's College.

 


Zen West - Kosso Eloul, 1980
A three-piece stainless steel geometric sculpture by the Russian-born Israeli Kosso Eloul sits in the little park that buffers St. Michael's College from the high-rise towers marching westward from Bay Street toward the University of Toronto. One long vertical section tilts against another with a horizontal bar balanced atop the precarious trinity.


Helix of Life - Ted Bieler, 1971
Aptly located at the Medical Sciences Building, it represents the double helix of DNA through its spiraling ribbons of precast concrete.




Anadyomene - Maryon Kantaroff, 1995
Anadyomene in Pliny's Natural History, an epithet of Aphrodite in a picture by Apelles, shown emerging from the sea; the word is Greek, and means ‘rising from the sea’.





Women's History Month

  She began life by ending someone else's. Not by choice — she was eleven days old. But Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin came into the world o...