Art is everywhere, if you choose to look.
Lately, as the weather becomes a slightly more pleasurable each day, I am taking the opportunity to get back out on the streets of Toronto to observe what really happens here.
Last Thursday, on the way to an appointment, I was fortunate to notice something I had never seen before.
Just about any day you’ll find Ross Ward hunched over on Yonge Street tending to his art. The ‘Birdman of Toronto’ has been a fixture on these streets in various locations for well over a decade, and during each day he crafts, and sells, palm-sized birds.
Once only a hobby — this is now more than whittling — Ward carves out shapes of common birds from reclaimed wood. There is always a piece in progress, and always a small flock for sale on his concrete workspace.
Perhaps in our day-to-day journeys, we don’t look close enough at all the people. We don’t often observe enough to see art just happening here and there on our landscape. I’ve wandered this street how many times and only last week did I notice the man. I saw him again on the weekend.
Appreciating the beauty of his work, I bought a bird as a gift for someone . . . or maybe a souvenir for myself to one day remember my time in this city.
Couldn’t we all use more memorable hand-made art?
As It Happens
Posted on May 9, 2019 by j.g.lewis
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The residue of yesterday, and the implications of what will happen later in the week, can only disrupt common and crucial thought.
Let’s focus on today.
Go day by day through the week.
One day at a time, don’t let your mind get caught up in what may never happen.
Deal with what happens, as it happens.
Don’t get ahead of yourself or become mired in the backlash of bad decisions; any day. But especially today.
Be guided by what is important, what is immediate, and not by what is pending.
Now.
05/09/2019 j.g.l.