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“One of my favorite aspects of ceramics, and the crafts more broadly, is the evolution of surfaces and forms through their constant appropriation in the aggressive exchange that occurs between individuals, studios, cultures, and time periods.” Find more on his website.
When 60 Richmond Street welcomed its first residents in 2011, the striking building – defined by a play of colourful, interlocking volumes – represented the Toronto Community Housing Corporation’s first new co-operative in 20 years. Audain Art Museum by Patkau Architects, 2016. 60 Richmond Street East by Teeple Architects, 2010.
Grain silos turned cutting-edge art venue. The Rolex Learning Centre epitomizes what the pair, both separately and in their collaborative practice, do best: non-hierarchical programming paired with a muted architecture of striking transparency and blankness. A moving monument to the Afro-American experience.
Since 2011, brothers Robert and Gavin Paisley of Chisel & Mouse have been expertly (and painstakingly) crafting evocative scale versions of notable structures and vibrant cityscapes out of plaster. Epitomizing art deco elegance on London’s South Bank, the Oxo Tower is a quiet yet evocative landmark. The Bauhaus Dessau.
2011 The First-Ever AZ Awards Gala The participants of our first edition are exceptionally worthy of praise. This temporary project, created by Plain Projects with Urbanink and Pike Projects, on the Red and Assiniboine rivers in Winnipeg as part of the city’s annual Warming Huts program, immersed us in vibrancy.
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