Showing posts with label hockey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hockey. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Art Deco architecture across Canada – sneak peak!


This Sunday afternoon (March 25), Tim Morawetz is delivering an illustrated lecture entitled 'Art Deco Architecture Across Canada' as part of the Roaring Twenties Lecture Series at the Bata Shoe Museum in downtown Toronto.

Ceiling of Marine Building lobby, Vancouver, 1929
During the talk, Tim will showcase several dozen Art Deco buildings from coast to coast, including:
Hambly House, Hamilton, 1939
* Halifax's Bank of Nova Scotia
* Montreal's best Deco Roman Catholic Cathedral
* Toronto's legendary Maple Leaf Gardens
* Hamilton's newly restored Hambly House
* Winnipeg's best Moderne high school
* Calgary's dismantled York Hotel
* Vancouver's spectacular Marine Building
    This talk is a chance to preview some of the buildings that will be featured in Tim's upcoming book to be published later this year.

    Lecture tickets are $16, which includes Museum admisison and a short tour of the Roaring Twenties exhibition following the lecture (free for Bata Shoe Museum members). Pre-registration is required; call 416-979-7799 x240 or email programs@batashoemuseum.ca.

    Sunday, October 3, 2010

    Art Deco shimmers in Battle of the Blades

    Last year, the Battle of the Blades 'figure-skater / hockey-skater combo' TV show took place at Maple Leaf Gardens, the ultimate Art Deco ice palace (1931; Ross & Macdonald, with Jack Ryrie and Mackenzie Waters).

      Georges Laraque and Anabelle Langlois with classic lotus-leaf Art Deco decoration behind.
    But this year, despite the fact the show now originates from a brand-new, custom-built set in a giant production studio, the show's designers have retained the Gardens decor. (Read more from National Post columnist Peter Kuitenbrouwer about the creation of the show's set in the Pinewood Studios Toronto.)

    Stone 'balconies' accentual recessed vertical strip windows
    For instance, the sides of the hall are adorned with crisply fluted vertical piers topped with the Gardens' signature zig-zag details.

    More boldly,  there are decorative screens around the ice surface that feature  timeless Deco lotus leaves.

    To me, the fact this shamelessly populist reality TV show is putting Art Deco front-and-centre is the best proof that this style truly resonates with the general public!

    Notice the bold zig-zags and horizontal stone detailing on the Gardens' facade.