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* This mural has been
destroyed. *
This mural is the result of a joint
project between The Fine Arts Studio Program, The Centre for Creative
Communications at Centennial College, Toronto and Mural Routes – the first
course of its kind to provide formal training in the development and
execution of public murals. The course consisted of two parts: Part 1: four
lectures/seminars on the context, administrative, and professional concerns
of mural painting; Part 2: 10 intensive days of hands-on, on-site training
to complete this mural.
In 2008, The Wall Art Course partnered with East
York Parks and Recreation who provided an appropriate site: a public
washroom in Taylor Creek Park (Woodbine Ave. and O’Connor Drive): a
beautiful ravine location, situated on a park path, busy with strollers,
runners, and cyclists. The mural wraps around the three walls visible from
the path. Prior to the mural, this site had been the target of frequent
graffiti tagging.
The Course also partnered with Amnesty
International Toronto to participate in
Project: Urban Canvas, a mural series
celebrating the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights by highlighting selected articles of the Declaration. In this case,
the mural focuses on Article #7: “All are equal before the law and entitled
without discrimination to equality before the law”.
The approach of this mural adopted a
“super-hero” interpretation of Article 7. The design depicts the beneficial
rule of law as heroic armoured figures; these archetypes personify the
liberating, civilising and protective aspects of a just legal tradition.
At the centre of the image, figures representing
the family of humanity dance around a torch symbolizing truth and justice,
free to celebrate peaceful civilisation under the protection from the forces
of lawlessness and chaos (represented by dragons at either end of the mural)
provided by the eternally vigilant heroes (symbolising law) that protect
them. |