Perception of memory through art at Pleasure Dome
If you’ve found that the film or art you view is easily forgettable, Pleasure Dome’s Welcome to the Memory Palace put on a film event where all the pieces revolve around memory. Pleasure Dome, an…
If you’ve found that the film or art you view is easily forgettable, Pleasure Dome’s Welcome to the Memory Palace put on a film event where all the pieces revolve around memory. Pleasure Dome, an…
A city-wide closure due to the coronavirus pandemic leaves public art designers and planners — many of whom already had commissions and plans in place for upcoming art in the city — wondering how to proceed with an outdoor future that’s so uncertain.
A Centennial College international student has come up with a creative way of funding his studies using his Instagram account.
Gooey, messy slime has invaded the tidied, refined, and sophisticated world of adulthood. And it’s easy to make your own.
In an ode to fantasy, graduating fine arts studio students at the Centennial College Story Arts Centre are busily preparing for an art exhibition fittingly titled Reverie.
Bhavesh Mistry wasn’t sure Toronto audiences would take to such unfamiliar topics at the Forbidden Forest art exhibit in January.
Heart-shaped boxes of chocolates. Heart-shaped pillows. Heart-shaped kinetic light installations, mounted on a brick walls, powered by hundreds of LEDs. One of those is not like the others.
Cold-wax painting workshops are giving participants the chance to translate images in a more tactile way.
For 16-year old Jaden Luu, digital photography is all in the eyes. “It’s really just about letting go and seeing what your eyes like instead of thinking about where you’re placing things,” he said.
Tattoos are considered either a lifetime personal work of art or seen as a rebellious, “dirty” image on a body, but let’s face it: tattoos have become a mainstream part of society.